4.6 • 836 Ratings
🗓️ 8 September 2023
⏱️ 43 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Sohrab is a founder and editor of Compact: A Radical American Journal, and he’s a contributing editor at The American Conservative. He spent nearly a decade at News Corp. — as the op-ed editor of the New York Post and as a columnist and editor with the WSJ opinion pages in New York and London. His first appearance on the Dishcast addressed what he sees as “the failures of liberalism.” This time, we debate his new book, Tyranny, Inc.: How Private Power Crushed American Liberty — and What to Do About It.
For two clips of our convo — on whether low wages are worth the low prices they create, and how hedge funds destroy companies — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: debating the rhetorical use of “coercion”; how the private sector isn’t truly private; “scheduling precarity” — when bosses restrict shifts; how unpredictable shifts harm kids; byzantine contracts; the Hollywood strike; AI and human likeness data; how workers and bosses aren’t symmetrical; Adam Smith wanted labor protections; Hayek and Friedman supported the welfare state; the dominance of private equity firms; turning newspapers into ghost papers of syndication; Wall Street’s obsession with cash flow over investment; remembering that workers are also consumers; the cost of clothing is nothing compared to the past; the sheer variety of the free market; when workers can’t afford the products they make; why half of fast-food workers rely on welfare; a low-wage job is better than no job; why Sohrab champions the New Deal, the Wagner Act, Tripartism and Sabbath laws; my upbringing in a stagnant, state-run economy in England; Thatcher and Blair as capitalists who spent a ton on public goods; sectoral bargaining in Europe; the miracle drugs of Big Pharma; the Silicon Valley Bank collapse; declining life expectancy in the US; the opioid crisis; Trump’s vacant policy agenda; and Sohrab supporting Hawley/Vance/Rubio but also giving credit to Biden for his economic and trade policies.
Browse the Dishcast archive for another convo you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Freddie deBoer on his new book How Elites Ate the Social Justice Movement, Vivek Ramaswamy on his vision for America, and Leor Sapir on the evolving treatment of gender dysphoria. Please send any guest recs and pod dissent to [email protected].
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0:00.0 | The Hi there. We're back. It seems like forever. |
0:32.7 | I want to thank you all, first of all, for all the emails you sent and all the love I got after |
0:41.8 | Bowie suddenly passed away. |
0:44.5 | She was special to this little dish. |
0:47.8 | She's on the page. |
0:50.9 | And as I know, as you know, we were very close and it was a very sudden and very |
0:55.2 | strange event, watching your own little dog have a heart attack. Not a great day in my life |
1:02.3 | or night. And thank you for being patient, letting me take an extra week just to kind of absorb |
1:08.6 | that and deal with it and try and rebounds. Chris too loved |
1:12.5 | her terribly and but thank you that's all I want to say thank you for letting me take the time |
1:18.2 | thank you for caring thank you for being the best readership listenership I can imagine ever having you are. I am so grateful. And that's, |
1:31.8 | that's, that's, that's, that's my theme right now gratitude for you and for this little |
1:36.9 | experiment where to keep going. And we have a phenomenal season lined up of the dishcast. Coming up just a few, we have a phenomenal season lined up of the dishcast. |
1:46.4 | Coming up just a few, we have Predidivur. |
1:50.2 | I've never had on the dishcast before on his new book, How Elite's Aid the Social |
1:54.0 | Justice Movement. |
1:55.7 | Leor Sapir, who's done amazing work in uncovering and understanding the shifts and changes in the treatment of children with gender dysphoria over the last decade or so, knows more about it than almost anyone I know and has written about it with a level of compassion and, I think, |
2:19.6 | moderation. That's a model for discussion of the subject. And Ian Baruma, an old friend of |
2:26.2 | mine, former editor of the New York Review of Books, who's coming on to talk about the |
2:30.6 | collaborators, his new book, Three Stories of Deception and Survival in World War II, |
2:36.6 | all really fantastically interesting and smart people. And speaking of which, of whom we have back |
2:45.5 | a rare return to the discast, but he's absolutely indefatigable and irrepressible. |
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