Youtube Curation: Public and Private Imbeciles
You are probably familiar, or at least have been exposed to the concept of 'public intellectual' other terms might be 'science communicator' or the prefix 'pop' as in 'popular' as in 'pop-psychologist' 'pop-philosopher'.
A term I've recently felt increasingly necessary is 'public imbecile' and in the case of an alarmingly growing number of 'public intellectuals' a more accurate moniker.
I wish to briefly clarify this idea though. Imagine you were obstructed by a big wall. It was plastered over and painted white and tapping on it didn't tell you anything about its underlying construction. You start to think 'maybe if I just took a run up and charged at it, I could just smash through.'
Enter the 'public imbecile' in this case a one-tonne Spanish bull. It charges at the wall obstructing you both and crashes into it head first knocking itself out and not even making a scratch or indentation in the wall.
Now you are thinking 'shit, if the bull can't smash through the wall, I'm not going to.'
The public imbecile in my view is somebody who can serve the valuable function of teaching the public humility. A public imbecile is basically a 'public intellectual' + humility.
At the beginning of the pandemic I recall Warren Buffet (one of the world's richest men, and I believe the most successful investor ever) being interviewed on the pandemic, and he is good friends with Bill Gates having willed most of his fortune to the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation (prior to their divorce and the Jeffrey Epstein affiliations) and he mentions that he was talking with Bill Gates about the pandemic and that he, Warren Buffet, just listens to people that are smarter than him like Bill.
Then he demonstrates a rare and amazing piece of discipline, the journalist asks him what Bill said and Buffet replies 'I shouldn't say, and you shouldn't be asking.'
Tom Nichols author of 'The Death of Expertise' writes to my own sensibilities when in his Politico Article he states:
And [experts] too easily fall prey to the arrogance of believing that their expertise in one subject can be applied to almost any issue—especially if there’s a healthy paycheck involved.
A temptation that Buffet, an expert investor resists when he decides not to comment on epidemiology.
One experience of the Covid pandemic years for me, has been watching public intellectuals join the esteemed rank of Isaac Newton, famous for physics, but also the go-to example of how someone super intelligent can lose their entire fortune through malinvestment.
First came the Weinstein brothers, I am speaking hyperbolically, but they almost immediately went insane. I wrote a whole thing about how Eric was rubbing me the wrong way, but by way of introducing the second video, I want to describe what happened to me with Brett Weinstein.
It was an intuition, there was something aesthetically off about he and his wife Heather Haying sitting in their studio that looks like a basement reading through the pre-print servers of medical papers to an anonymous audience distributed around the world. Their intelligence is not in question, but they exhibited enough behaviors to indicate they weren't really 'in touch' for a lack of a better phrase and that furthermore I got no impression that they had considered who their audience was.
There's a great and telling podcast clip between Tom Green and Joe Rogan where Tom puts his finger right on the nerve, that people listen to Joe, and he isn't an expert on anything but his own standup act. (He probably couldn't explain why his podcast is so succesful such that someone else could reproduce it).
So the first curation is good old Jordan Peterson who I have almost no surprise needs inaugurating into the category of public imbecile. And this needs some clarity - Peterson is from everything I've seen, a competent and ethical clinical psychologist, that he is so often wrong about religion, evolution, biology, atheism, law, the environment etc. likely because of the problems Tom Nichols describes this does not mean he is wrong about far-left progressive memes and their disastrous mental health repurcussions. I'd personally just prefer a better, more well rounded champion - like the people over at Heterodox Academy.
Peterson seems to now have been captured by his audience, the danger faced by public intellectuals and particularly, despite all the popularity, outsider intellectuals to attract an audience of outsiders sympathetic to the ostracism and marginalization efforts.
I watched all of Peterson trying to teach himself 'the Austrian School of Economics' by interviewing an Austrian School Economist because listeners had pointed out JP might be sympathetic to the Austrian School and saw many analogies.
But I have chosen his interview with a member of the Austrian School and Bitcoin evangelist to demonstrate the 'public imbecile' trap. Now Jordan Peterson, a Clinical Psychologist and teaching Academic is using his platform to talk about economics from a fringe school about crypto-currencies. I couldn't make it through this interview.
Nothing makes my eyes glaze over faster than cryptocurrency, and I have tried, I have really tried, to pierce through my own bubble and understand if there is a 'there' there at all and I shall leave in white text below the precise moment this interview lost me:
Interview 1:
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