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Honestly with Bari Weiss

Why Men Seek Danger

Honestly with Bari Weiss

The Free Press

News, Society & Culture

4.6 β€’ 7.8K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 16 March 2023

⏱️ 66 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When most people think about war, they think about senseless killing, brutality, violence and horror. But when journalist Sebastian Junger thinks about war β€” even though he has witnessed firsthand how war is all of those things β€” he also thinks about meaning, purpose, brotherhood and community. It's why, he posits, so many veterans actually miss war when they return home. As Junger argues, war gives people all of the things that religion aspires to impart to people and often fails. War, he says, delivers. Junger was a war correspondent for many decades. His reporting on the front lines of Afghanistan was captured in his best-selling book, War, and was made into an Academy Award winning documentary, Restrepo, which follows a platoon of U.S. soldiers in one of the bleakest, most dangerous outposts in Afghanistan. Through his raw, unfiltered, on the ground reporting, perhaps no one has done more to illuminate the full picture and reality of war. One of those realities is that men seek and need danger. They have a deep desire to prove their valor. They find community and meaning in crisis. And yet, much of the Western world lives without any kind of high-stakes, high-risk danger at all. It is, of course, a great blessing we don't live in constant crisis. But our comfort, safety and affluence, he argues, come with unexamined costs. So for today, a conversation with Sebastian Junger about reporting from the most dangerous regions of the world, his new book Freedom, what it means to be human, and how danger is inextricably tied to living a meaningful life. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm Barry Weiss and this is honestly.

0:05.0

When most people think about war they think about senseless killing, about brutality, violence, and horror.

0:15.0

My guest today says war is of course about all of those things,

0:21.0

but it's also about something else. It's about meaning, purpose, brotherhood and community. And it's

0:31.4

why he argues that so many veterans actually miss war when they come home.

0:39.0

Sebastian Younger was a war correspondent for many decades.

0:45.0

His reporting on the front lines of Afghanistan was captured in his best-selling book,

0:49.0

War, and was also made into an Academy Award-winning documentary called Restrepo,

0:54.0

which followed the lives of an American platoon in one of the most dangerous

0:58.1

outposts in Afghanistan.

1:00.0

Through his raw, unfilteredtered on the ground reporting, perhaps no one has done more to

1:07.7

illuminate the full picture, the full reality of what war is. And one of those realities that he has spent a lot of time

1:16.2

trying to demystify is why human beings, particularly men, are attracted to war,

1:23.4

why they may even need war,

1:26.0

or at least some kind of high risk, high stakes,

1:29.2

extremely dangerous undertaking.

1:32.4

And perhaps one of the reasons may be the key reason. dangerous undertaking.

1:32.6

And perhaps one of the reasons maybe the key reason that men are so at sea in modern life is that

1:38.8

that kind of danger has been mostly eradicated.

1:43.0

At the heart of all of Younger's work,

1:46.0

his books, Fire, Tribe,

1:48.0

the perfect storm which was made into a movie starring George Clooney,

...

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