Speaker 3
might be on to something in that both he and sar attended kose's lectures, and koze has a kind of end of history thesis. But more to the point, this class consciousness. It's like, if you go out and just, like, convince people, as if that's the way, like, human existence works. You need to be convinced of things before you act. That's wrong here.
Speaker 1
Oh, yes, that's that's like, especially, and especially in the second passage that you had us read, right? Like that. That's like the main thesis of those pages.
Speaker 3
Ye. So people are going to react to
Speaker 1
things that affect them. They're not going to react to ideas. And
Speaker 3
this is, i think, well, what we can we can tell ar aremark, s twitterr friends. You don't just convince people and then they suddenly act in
Speaker 1
a certain way. They're not going to be, i love the they're not going to revolt because
Speaker 3
you told them ideas. That's not how, that's not how this whole thing is going to work. One of pillars, firaan,
Speaker 2
saying that if we don't just hand out copies of the commonest manifesto in a factory, we're going to get a revolution to morrow. That's bullshot. If i hand out enough copies f the commonest manifesto, give me five days and we'll see the canadian state overthrow.
Speaker 3
And i wish iwouldwould all to t a hand out papers, because they don't do that. O'll just tweat at them, calling them
Speaker 1
pills. I feer, i feel like you should call this episode like marxism and why ideas don't matter. Because that's like one of your favorite things, you're re one of your favorite things to say, pills all the time. Even like yat, you'll say, ideas don't matter. Ideas don't matter. Why do you care? But ideas, they don't matter. And i feel lik here we go. Marylapontes saying, idas dyin, i wasn't the first to say it.