There's something about picking up the vibes from a person, from their body language, from how they look at you. That's import and i feel i'm better live, and probably they are too. I don't think that to the audience, the podcasts that are happening where somebody isn't in the room are, on average, worse. And part of that is that i find it much harder to concentrate. Question there's just a preference for being in person where human animals, a lot is lost. Maybe what is lost is not that important, but in terms of itfeels on the other side of it, working for mackenzie.
In his
new book, Ezra Klein argues that polarization in America has become centered on partisan political identities, which has subsumed virtually every form of identity, be it where we live, what team we root for, the church we attend, or any other. This stacked form of polarization thus carries much more weight and is activated by a wider range of conflicts than before.
But is polarization really such a pressing concern? If it’s all merged into one form of identity politics then aren’t we just polarizing more efficiently? Over what percentage of GDP are we more polarized today versus in the past?
Tyler posed these questions to Ezra and more, including thoughts on Silicon Valley’s intellectual culture, his disagreement with Jonathan Haidt’s Moral Foundations Theory, the limits of telecommuting, how becoming a father made him less conservative, his post-kid production function, why Manhattan is overrated, the “cosmic embarrassment” of California’s governance, why he loved Marriage Story, the future of the BBC and PBS, what he learned in Pakistan, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded December 27th, 2019 Other ways to connect