
Razib Khan's Unsupervised Learning Richard Hanania: his break with the Right and the rise of kakistocracy
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Jan 16, 2026 Richard Hanania, a political commentator with a Ph.D. and author of *The Origins of Woke*, discusses his evolving views on populism and his new book *Kakistocracy*. He explores the rise of anti-Indian nativism, the impact of social media on political discourse, and the consequences of populism for Jewish conservatives. Hanania reflects on personality traits linked to success and debates the effectiveness of authoritarian regimes compared to democracies. The conversation touches on cancel culture and the implications of the James Damore memo.
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Post-2012 Coalition Realignment
- The Republican coalition has shifted: college-educated suburbanites moved left while white working-class voters moved right since 2012.
- This compositional change explains why political discourse now feels more polarized and intellectually imbalanced.
Hanania's Shift From Endorsement To Disillusion
- Richard Hanania recounts endorsing Trump while expecting residual 'zombie Reaganism' to constrain policy excesses.
- He describes being surprised and disappointed when appointments like RFK and tariff shifts revealed a hollowed-out party.
Experience At The Abundance Conference
- Hanania describes attending the Abundance DC conference and meeting cross-ideological figures, noting it offered an 'ideas-based' bipartisan space.
- He found the mix of Republican and Democratic elected officials refreshing compared with internet-driven factionalism.




