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So to Speak Podcast Transcript - An anarchist's perspective, with Michael Malice

Note: This is an unedited rush transcript. Please check any quotations against the audio recording.
Michael Malice: I think the term free speech, people always attack me like āOh, you say youāre for free speech but youāre blah, blah, blah.ā I never say Iām for free speech. I hate that term. I think it is used interchangeably for several different concepts some of which I am 100% for, some of which I am completely against. If you and I were going to have a conversation about Apple and you were talking about something that grows on trees and Iām talking about laptops, weāre using the same word but weāre going to be talking past each other.
Nico Perrino: Hello and welcome back to So to Speak the free speech podcast where every other week we take an uncensored look at the world of free expression. I am as always your host Nico Perrino. Todayās episode looks at free speech from the perspective of one anarchist. I say one anarchist because our guest today Michael Malice, who describes himself as an anarchist without adjectives freely admits that many anarchists would disagree with some or much of what he has to say about free speech.
Michael is the author of several books including Dear Reader: The Unauthorized Autobiography of Kim Jong-Il, The New Right: a Journey to the Fringe of American Politics, The Anarchist Handbook, and most recently The White Pill, A Tale of Good and Evil. Michael also hosts the podcast YOUR WELCOME and was the subject of the 2006 graphic novel Ego & Hubris. Now before we begin today I wanted to share a few short reflections on this episode. This was one of those conversations that after it was done I just couldnāt stop thinking about.
This is probably the first time Iāve had a self-described anarchist on the show. Much of our dialogue on the show and in society at large is about how free speech works in relationship to the state. What are or should be the bounds of the First Amendment for example? But in an anarchist society, the state doesnāt exist, and free speech doesnāt really exist. Free association is the core right and people are free to place their private associations including their members of speech as they wish. Itās elegant in its simplicity but begs the question of whether there are any normative judgments people should make of these associations.
Michael and I get into these questions a little bit but since I rarely confront anarchist arguments against free speech I was admittedly more unprepared to confront his arguments than I would have liked. This episode is a good representation of John Stuart Millās truism that both teachers and learners go to sleep at their posts as soon as there is no enemy in the field.
I also generally wasnāt on top of my game as evidenced by the fact that when I was recording the placeholder introduction for this episode, I mindlessly read the title of Michaelās first book as the Unauthorized Autobiography of Kim Jong The Second rather than Kim Jong-Il. To which Michael appropriately ribbed me. The first time I came across Michaelās work in fact was when he wrote Dear Reader, The Unauthorized Autobiography of Kim Jong The Second.
Michael Malice: Kim Jong-Il.
Nico Perrino: Kim Jong-Il.
Michael Malice: Are you serious?
Nico Perrino: This was extra embarrassing given that I was first introduced to Michaelās work at a 2014 event at Cato about the very book that I mispronounced. Now Michael defines anarchism as the phrase āYou do not speak for me, with everything else simply being application.ā Perhaps my biggest regret from this conversation was that I didnāt do more to press Michael on the application of his principles to specific individual cases.
For example, I wish I had more concrete case studies at hand to dig deeper into the application of his views to things like cancel culture, the rights of people that join extremist groups such as the Klan, or to his contrarian take that nobody had their free speech rights violated during the McCarthy era. I probably should have had more concrete examples at the ready because Iām actually reading Robert Caroās series on Lyndon Baines Johnson right now.
And just finished the chapters about Leland Olds who was a man who was driven out of government by Johnson after two decades of widely credited successful service because Oldsā earlier pre-government work involved pro-labor writings which were used by politicians including Lyndon Johnson to cast him as a communist. Caro alleges that the real reason Johnson went after Olds was because Johnsonās political backers saw Olds as an impediment to their charging higher prices for energy. Now itās of course important to acknowledge that political appointees serve at the whims of the president and Congress.
And no free speech rights were violated in Oldsā case, but I would have loved to have dug deeper into whether there was any principle at stake when the government publicly smears people without adequate due process and makes them functionally unemployable thereafter as was the case with Olds. I actually wish I had included ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų President Greg Lukianoff in this conversation. Like Michael, he views the red scare periods with a nuance that is often not found in most popular discussions of those times.
Greg readily acknowledges that there were actual Soviet spies in government for example, but I donāt think he would dismiss the free speech concerns altogether. Also, unlike Michael, Greg believes cancel culture is real. That it poses a threat to free speech. He sees it as representing a unique period in American history, and heās obviously very critical of it. Gregās new book The Canceling of the American Mind which weāve discussed on this show before is devoted to making all of those very arguments. In short, it would have been fun to hear Greg and Michael unpack these two subjects.
They also both have family histories dealing with Soviet oppression. Perhaps we can get them both on the show at a future date if Michael is willing to come back. Now despite these misgivings about my contributions, my personal contributions to this conversation, I did really enjoy talking to Michael. He has a commanding knowledge of history, he is smart, he is funny, and importantly he lends a perspective to these issues that arenāt often shared in free-speech conversations.
And for that, his voice on these issues is even more important and makes all of us smarter. Now, Iāll get myself out of the way and get on to the conversation. Here is Michael Malice. You describe yourself as an anarchist without adjectives. I think that was a phrase you used on the Ruben Report.
Michael Malice: Correct.
Nico Perrino: What does it mean to be an anarchist without adjectives?
Michael Malice: Well, the black flag of anarchism comes in many colors, and youāve got the original anarchists who were communists, you have contemporary anarcho-capitalists who the an-coms donāt regard as anarchists at all. And I donāt swear fealty to any one of these schools. I think they all bring something very useful to the table and Iām not going to say one group are the real anarchists and the other group are not. And they both also have their flaws as well.
Nico Perrino: What would you say kind of is the cliff notes version of the definition of anarchism as you see it?
Michael Malice: The definition of anarchism as I see it is simply the phrase āYou do not speak for me and everything else is simply application.ā
Nico Perrino: Who are the most prominent anarchists today would you say? If you were talking to just someone who has a kind of passing interest in politics, who might they think of or know of?
Michael Malice: So, the list is Noam Chomsky is number one, Russell Brand is number two, and Iām number three. Thatās the list. Itās not a very big or impressive list.
Nico Perrino: So, the purpose of todayās conversation is to talk about free speech kind of in a world where you donāt have a government in an anarchist system. Itās not something that weāve ever considered on this podcast before. How do you view free speech in an anarchist system? Does it exist if you donāt have a state to reference?
Michael Malice: Yeah, Iām going to take a little bit of a detour because Iām a big fan of what ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų does. And Iām going to show how free speech is corralled. So, Noam Chomsky who I just mentioned a second ago has this superb quote and I want to get it exactly right. Here it is. And he says, āThe smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion but allow very lively debate within that spectrum.ā I had a comedian podcaster Jimmy Dore on my show, and he talks about if youāre watching a panel on CNN ā and I can curse, right?
Nico Perrino: Yeah.
Michael Malice: The range of opinion will go from āShould we bomb the shit out of Seria to should we bomb the living shit out of Seria?ā The view which is the Karen mother ship does this superbly well. Youāve got four old Stalinists and then you have a Republican who thinks Trump is the devil and that is your range of political opinion on the view. As my buddy Kurt Metzger said, āThereās a reason itās called The View and not The Views.ā So, what happens is when you do a show where thereās a panel, right away youāve got a preconceived topic and that topic itself is not up for discussion.
So, if you go onto a panel and you donāt agree with the premise of the topic, itās going to be a trainwreck because youāre negotiating something that isnāt up for debate. Not broadly speaking but in the context of that segment. But then also youāre just not going to be asked back. So, I bring that up here because I donāt agree with this premise at all. And weāre going to have in a friendly way a breakdown of how that is used to manipulate discourse in even a free market or largely a free market. I think the term free speech, people always attack me like āOh you say youāre for free speech but youāre blah, blah, blah.ā
I never say Iām for free speech. I hate that term. I think it is used interchangeably for several different concepts some of which I am 100% for, some of which I am completely against. If you and I were going to have a conversation about Apple and youāre talking about something that grows on trees and Iām talking about laptops, weāre using the same word but weāre going to be talking past each other, right? So, free speech is used to mean the illegality and immorality of governments to restrict discourse and communication between the citizens. And that is something that is indisputably true from my perspective.
Itās also used to mean that itās a good thing broadly speaking for as many people to have their voices heard and to run their mouths as possible. Something which Iām completely against and which makes absolutely no sense. And itās also used to mean you as someone who is vaguely or even strongly for free speech have a duty or should have a preference to hear other people out which is also something thatās completely crazy. So, youāll hear this on social media when you block someone or mute them. āOh, I thought youāre for free speech. I thought youāre for free speech.ā One is leaning to the other.
So, people take these terms, they completely remove them from context, and they throw them around like some kind of flag or shield would be more accurate to kind defend themselves. So, I donāt like that term. I donāt believe in that term. I think itās an incoherent term. And I think thereās a lot of people who I think it would be beneficial if they were completely marginalized and silenced.
And that is how free markets work which is when someone is a completely reprehensible person and Iāll leave it to the people watching this to define it in their own personal way, youāre under no obligation to hear them out or to provide them a microphone or to countenance their ideas. And it doesnāt have to be something political. Iām not interested in hearing Randi Weingartenās view on why school choice is a bad idea. The head of teacherās unions. I donāt believe a word coming out of her mouth. I think she is an evil person who is destroying the lives of many children and Iām not interested in what she has to say.
Now she legally has the right to do whatever she wants but in terms of this free speech milia that letās all put our ideas in the marketplace and come to some kind of consensus of truth and this kind of enlightenment model, I think thatās something Iām not at all interested in doing.
Nico Perrino: What do you think about kind of a culture of free expression? Sort of this idea ā and this is kind of what John Stuart Mill talks about in his 1859 treatise on liberty. He wasnāt really speaking about government censorship, but he was more speaking about a conformist culture in Victorian England that didnāt have a broader kind of Overton window of acceptable opinion that people were just too sensitive.
And thatās I think what you get a little bit of today from folks who are kind of like the people you were talking about before. I think what theyāre actually saying all be it inarticulately and maybe Iām saying it inarticulately right now as well is that there are things that a lot of people believe but they just donāt feel like they can speak up about it.
Michael Malice: Sure.
Nico Perrino: Whether itās COVID, whether itās trans rights, you name it. But they have this sense ā and we always look at the past through rose-colored glasses ā that in the past society was more open to dissenters. Was more open to playing devilās advocate. Again, we look at the past through rose-colored glasses.
Michael Malice: Itās a lie. Thatās a complete lie. It was a felony to teach women how to use birth control to prevent pregnancy from happening. And they went undercover to visit doctors as cops. Iām not talking about abortion; Iām talking about condoms and prophylactics. It was a felony to explain this to people. It was a felony to mail them information about using this to people. In the Adamās administration, the second president, it was a felony to criticize the government. The Sedition Act, the very first thing that was censored under our beloved constitution was political speech to criticize the government.
This claim that the most important thing that the First Amendment protects is political speech might be true culturally, it is completely false historically because that is the first thing that they targeted, and understandably so. There were books, Ulysses is an example, where it was illegal to mail them. And this isnāt antebellum confederacy times. This is the 20th century. And also, another thing conservatives donāt like ā Iām not saying youāre a conservative ā is that the free speech league in these early organizations that were organized to promote this kind of discourse were commies.
And not like lefties like I mean today. I mean literal communists. Teddy Roosevelt wanted people deported and he succeeded in doing so for having views that he regarded as anathema. That fire in a movie theater, crowded theater quote, was about people saying that the draft was unconstitutional. And the Supreme Court unanimously agreed that itās okay to censor that. So, this boomer kind of claim that we used to have this perspective on free discourse is a complete lie and is as a-historic as The 1619 Project. America and pretty much every culture has always and has to have some kind of censorious aspect to it.
Now there is certain pockets where free discourse is much more accepted than in others. And thatās broadly speaking a great thing. But this claim that weāre ever going to be at a place where all the ideas are on the table is not only crazy, but I think undesirable because I donāt want to have destigmatized for people to be discussing sexuality with children.
So, thereās certain things that everyone listening to this will have their own line where like āYou know what? Itās good that some things arenāt even talked about at all.ā Because once you start talking about them some people start doing them. Violence is another one. Once that becomes normalized in speech, itās not that long until people are pulling out their guns. Now in some cases thatās a good thing but itās still not a fun thing.
Nico Perrino: I think youāre right. And if you look at a far enough back time horizon you are going to find extraordinary examples of censorship. And in some cases, you donāt even have to look that far back. But a lot of the stories that we tell ourselves in America about the McCarthy era and weāre on World War I and the Shank case is what you referenced which is where the fire in a crowded theater analogy ā
Michael Malice: Who had their free speech harmed by the McCarthy era?
Nico Perrino: I mean you can look at Oppenheimer. They touch on that. They talk about how Oppenheimer lost his clearances because of his alleged communist affiliations.
Michael Malice: Yeah, but his speech was in no way infringed. He could say whatever the hell. If I go up here Iām a Klansman and you donāt want to have me on your podcast in what way is my First Amendment of free speech restricted?
Nico Perrino: No, and Iām not saying it is. But what you found during the McCarthy era were government hearings where they essentially browbeat a bunch of people for being communists. And some of them were.
Michael Malice: Right, for being members of a secret organization dedicated to the violent overthrow of the government in service of a foreign dictator who had engaged not that long before that in the genocide of millions of his own citizens. So, to portray this as somehow āOh I voted for the Green Party, and I got kicked out of my jobā is completely disingenuous. Iām not saying youāre doing that, but thatās how itās portrayed.
Nico Perrino: No, sure. Sure. And I do agree that there is not enough nuance thatās brought to the McCarthy era. But even if you take that as a justifiable reason to censor someone.
Michael Malice: How were they being censored?
Nico Perrino: Well, you can look at the college professors who lost their jobs, right? And if weāre talking about at least state power youāre talking about in many cases state universities?
Michael Malice: But how were they censored? You donāt have to say whatever you want. If Iām a chef at a restaurant I canāt go out into where the people are sitting and start delivering talks about healthcare. You canāt say whatever you want at someone elseās job. That doesnāt make any sense.
Nico Perrino: Sure, sure. And I donāt disagree with that. And that last example Iām talking about professors at public colleges and universities with tenure, in many cases losing their tenure-ship with a lack of due process. Weāre talking about state universities. And again, youāre an anarchist so you might not believe that within the context of a college or university environment that they state shouldnāt be able to punish a professor for their viewpoints or for their political beliefs or allegiances. But the case law as itās developed over the years has found that to the extent you are a tenured faculty member at a college or university campus that they canāt fire you alone for your political beliefs.
Michael Malice: But they were being fired for being members of a terrorist group. They were not being for their political beliefs by and large.
Nico Perrino: You can believe anything. The question is were you conspiring to overthrow the government?
Michael Malice: Right. No, were you a member of a secret organization? A card-carrying member. Itās not āDo you like Marx?ā It was āWere you taking orders from Stalin?ā Thatās not the same.
Nico Perrino: No, itās definitely not the same but youād have to look at any individual example to see.
Michael Malice: Thatās correct. Thatās absolutely correct.
Nico Perrino: To see if they were actually conspiring. Iām glad you bring it up Michael because this is part of the discussion around free speech on college campuses right now surrounding Students for Justice in Palestine. You have a number of chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine on college campuses right now who are chanting āFrom the river to the sea Palestine will be freeā or āIntifada.ā
And some of the arguments that in this case, the state of Florida is making is that these groups are conspiring with Hamas, or they are providing material support for terrorism because they are supporting the actions that Hamas took in Israel on October 7th. And the argument that ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų has made is that you need to show a lot more than a member of an organization is supportive of some actions that a terrorist organization has made. Is there communication between Students for Justice and Palestine about how theyāre going to support this organization? Are they providing financial support?
So, there needs to be a little bit more than just āWell they support the actions of this group.ā And thatās where due process comes in. Thatās where you kind of find out the facts of any individual circumstance. But just kind of creating a blanket exception to the First Amendment in this case for anyone who supports Hamas or is a member of the Students for Justice in Palestine I think is painting with a broad brush and creating a sort of guilt by association that weāve largely stood against in the United States. I mean do you disagree?
Michael Malice: I donāt think thatās what guilt by association means. If Iām a member of a group ā letās take it out of the Hamas situation. If the Klan is a terrorist group, the purpose of the KKK was to terrorize innocent people in order to extralegal-y impose an order and to keep them in a state of submission and fear. So, if Iām a member of a group thatās called Students for the Klan, if Iām not coordinating with the Kaln and Iām not making any exchange with David Duke or something like that and the administration says ā this isnāt something secret.
Youāre calling yourselves Students for the Klan. āThis kind of rhetoric is not acceptable on my campus.ā I donāt think thereās a question here of ā I donāt know what due process would look like because thatās not a crime. You certainly legally have every right to support and promote the Klan. Point being it is perfectly appropriate in that case ā and I want to take it away from Hamas because thatās much more ambiguous than the Klan for most people ā I think itās perfectly acceptable in that case for administrators to be like āYeah this is a line weāre not willing to cross.ā
Nico Perrino: And how do you see the Hamas situation as more ambiguous?
Michael Malice: Because I donāt know what exactly what these students in Florida are saying.
Nico Perrino: Got you.
Michael Malice: If theyāre simply saying āWe are for Palestine. We donāt believe in Israel, blah, blah, blah.ā Thatās perfectly acceptable. If theyāre saying that āWe want to help Hamasā which is a terrorist organization even if you believe the terrorism is justified, that is a very different situation.
Nico Perrino: So, if you look at the kind of toolkit I guess is what has been the topic of that conversation it more or less says that they are in kind of common cause with Hamas, but the common cause is kind of rhetorical support. It is PR support. It is marches, it is rallies, it is candlelight vigils. Do you see that as the sort of material support that is essentially becoming a part of a terrorist organization?
Michael Malice: I would have to think about it and have to look at the specific case. But I am much more in favor of freedom of association than I am in terms of freedom of speech. I think everyone has morally the right to say whatever the hell they want and everyone else morally has the right to engage with them or not as they see fit. It is the government that abrogates this freedom of association which is far more important. Because if I donāt have to ever deal with you, you can say whatever the hell you want. You can go F off to your place. Talk your talk. Have your show. And we can live next to each other peaceably. But itās governments that force people to interact who otherwise would never have to.
Nico Perrino: Normatively what do you think about freedom of speech and kind of the associated values, right? Letās say devilās advocacy talking across lines of difference, thought experimentation, are these things that you think should be advocated for within most social contexts? Do you think they produce goods within various associations?
I understand that in an anarchist society where everything is based around free association that people can do whatever the hell they want. And they can police their association however the hell they want. But then thereās a question within that association what is the normative good? What is the small T toleration that should be encouraged? Or does it depend on the association?
Michael Malice: Of course, exactly. So, we could take this out of the realm of politics. If you and I have a hamster breeding community and weāre breeding rare breeds of hamsters and long-haired and albino and someone is coming in with their politics, even the politics are perfectly banal and generic and the kind of stuff you could see on a T-shirt in the mall, itās perfectly appropriate for us to be like āDonāt come back to these meetings because thatās not what weāre about.ā
Or if itās Karen who is running the hamster group and Karen thinks itās unambiguous that literally everything has to be about how evil Trump is, then Karen will say āAll right, well what are you Trump supporter? You donāt want to talk about Trump while weāre trying to talk about hamsters?ā So, thereās no I think āshouldā. I think anarchism as applied in my view is the understanding that in incumbent on all of us to set and define our own boundaries.
And if we donāt then other people will cross those boundaries and itās going to have negative consequences on the self. And this is something I think I universal and applies to everyone regardless of their political persuasions. And I think one of the big problems, in general, is people feel powerless or are powerless to enforce their own personal boundaries. And it creates friction where some was not necessary.
Nico Perrino: Do you believe ā I mean Iām assuming not but ā something significant is lost when you donāt have public places where there isnāt that sort of boundary policing? Where people can say whatever the hell they want. Where you can have a speakerās corner in London for example. Or not really? Thatās the one thing that I think you lose in an anarchist society in the free speech sense which is just there is always someplace you can go to speak freely I guess besides in an anarchist society it can be your house or it could be your property.
Michael Malice: Or it could be social media. These are not government agencies. I mean again for quite some time until Elon bought over Twitter there was a complete corporate consensus as to COVID discussions. And everyoneās all black-pilled. āOh, weāre screwed, weāre screwed, weāre screwed.ā The point I was making is you donāt need majority. Thatās the democratic model. You only need an alternative. And as long as you have one alternative then this whole monopoly edifice collapses. And the misunderstanding in my view that most people have is the belief that markets tend toward monopoly.
That eventually itās just going to be one place where everyone has to talk. But if you look at any field, if you and I were talking 10 years ago and I said that on every supermarket there wouldnāt just be Diet Coke but Coke Zero, there would be two types of sugarless soda, Iād look like a crazy person. Itās like a punchline from a bad comic. Yet thatās the case and no one even bats an eye. So, we have in every aspect thatās not under state control, we have more choices, more outlets. Before I was born there were three networks to get the news, NBC, ABC, and CBS, three shades of progressivism, and maybe Bill Buckley makes an appearance once and a while to be the right-of-center guy.
Then you had CNN, then you had FOX News, so then there were like five headline news, whatever, MSCNBS, six. Now you have YouTube. It's infinite. And they can never get that genie out of the bottle. Before you and I were born, if you and I wanted to censor an author, all we got to do is kill him, round up all the copies of his book, burn them, and itās done.
Now I can take any book, press one button, duplicate it infinitely, send it anywhere on earth at the speed of light, and create a magic spell so that only people who know the counter spell can even read it. It sounds like science fiction but thatās the status quo. Censorship was not stopped as a result of people believing in free speech or governments, it stopped as a result of technology and that cannot be undone.
Nico Perrino: Well, the government certainly tries unsuccessfully. I mean when we saw the Twitter files come out we saw all the examples of the government trying to jawbone Twitter.
Michael Malice: Alex Jones just had to pay I think ā or heās on the hook for the GDP of France because he said, āNobody died at Sandy Hook.ā What Alex got that idea from was there was a book with that title that he read. That book is impossible to find because the author was sued correctly. The copies were all destroyed. You can't find it except if you go to archive.org itās there for anyone to download for free. So, even something as nefarious as that which is completely inaccurate and kind of malevolent in terms of the parents still cannot be stopped from people being able to access it somewhat freely and for free.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, and they tried I believe it was in the 20th century to censor that book, Hitman. Do you remember this story?
Michael Malice: No.
Nico Perrino: This was a book that was written under a pseudonym. The person who wrote it kind of started it as I believe a murder mystery novel approach. But it ended up becoming a how-to manual to kill someone. And it turns out someone did. Someone used the book, and they were able to connect it to a killing that happened. I actually think it was a couple of killings.
Michael Malice: Good lord.
Nico Perrino: And the people who were killed, their families sued the publisher of this book. And the publisher ended up settling. And actually, the publisher wanted to fight the case but the insurance company ā and this isnāt something people know ā often when lawsuits happen, you as the person being sued donāt have a choice as to how you can fight. If youāre going to use your insurance to help pay for the lawsuit, the insurance companies are just going to force you to settle in many cases.
Even in this case if you feel like you have a strong First Amendment claim that your book didnāt aid and abet in this killing. The insurance company in this case made the publisher settle. And they went through this kind of whole process to try and destroy any copy of the book that existed. But I think Reason Magazine as I saw online says there are still something like 20,000 copies out there. And you can find it on the internet if you want. It turns out that the book was actually written by, I think a divorced mother of two. Not the person you would sort of expect to write a book about how to conduct a hit.
Michael Malice: Yeah, I got into it on Twitter with somebody, and then not long after that they shot up like a tattoo parlor and a lot of other places and they had written a book where they had used the names as characters of people that they actually later did murder. And Iām like talking about literally dodging a bullet. Roman Clasky I think was his name. Itās kind of creepy when stuff like that happens of course.
Nico Perrino: I mean this is a story throughout time. When the Columbine shooting happened in the ā90s they tried to pin that on Marilyn Manson because the shooters listened to Marilyn Manson, right?
Michael Malice: Right.
Nico Perrino: But in this case, in the Hitman book case it was a lot closer. They kind of followed the script.
Michael Malice: Whatās the ā you go to their house and shoot them. I'm sorry, am I missing something?
Nico Perrino: Well, it talks about how to identify your mark and to follow them around, to learn their patterns. And I guess they had access to this book and thatās what they were reading ahead of time. I mean Iād have to look more closely.
Michael Malice: Okay. I don't think itās that hard. Okay, but maybe what do I know? Iāve never gotten in a fight or killed anyone.
Nico Perrino: Well, I mean Iām sure thatās the argument that the publisher of the book would make were they allowed to continue making those arguments and the insurer didnāt force them to settle. But you also see this argument kind of speaking of anarchy in the Anarchistās Cookbook which makes its rounds on the internet, and I think is banned in some countries.
Michael Malice: Not in the US of course.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, not in the US. Of course, although some have tried, right?
Michael Malice: Yes.
Nico Perrino: Some have tried. So, I mean what is the core right under an anarchist system? And what serves as the basis for that right? Look at the Declaration of Independence. āWe hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal.ā The natural rights theory.
Michael Malice: Sure. I think thatās the base of anarchism. I think thatās fair to say. I mean thereās different rationalizations or justifications for anarchism but the idea no one is in a position to infringe on your freedom.
Nico Perrino: And so, I would imagine then that you donāt believe in social contract theory that would ā
Michael Malice: No one does. So, social contract theory is completely incoherent and insane because it is a contract of which the terms are never made clear which you implicitly consent to, and you cannot ever leave. And itās a claim to be the basis for how governments form even though no one even pretends that any government has been formed as a result of it. Itās a complete fairy tale that makes no sense whatsoever. And itās rape culture.
Nico Perrino: This idea that you can bind those who are not even born to a sort of system that you didnāt consent to participate in.
Michael Malice: This idea that you can take someoneās consent when theyāve never said anything or implied it. And when theyāre screaming at you in the face āI do not consent.ā And then you tell them āWell, yeah you really did because youāre in the geographic location.ā Itās complete rape culture. āYou shouldnāt have come back to my house. You consented.ā Right?
Nico Perrino: Yeah, and I agree with you on this. I donāt disagree. Social contract theory I think itās something that a lot of us have to pretend to believe in because itās the basis.
Michael Malice: No, itās the rationalizations. Itās not the basis. Itās the rationalization.
Nico Perrino: Rationalization, sure. I mean the whole kind of ā
Michael Malice: Itās a complete fairy tale. No one believes it. They just like where it leads you to.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, which is necessarily going to have to be a government. I mean can you have a government realistically and practically without a belief or a rationalization or a pretend belief in a social contract theory?
Michael Malice: You can. Some people. Thereās other excuses for it. But itās really kind of this last gasp where youāre trying to pretend that youāre not imposing your will through force on other people and doing the next right thing.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, so I want to return a little bit to you were talking a little bit about Elon Musk and what he did with Twitter. I presume as a normative matter you think this is a positive thing for society?
Michael Malice: Enormously positive. Community notes is the greatest thing thatās happened. Iām dead serious. Itās the greatest thing thatās happened in probably the last 10 years culturally.
Nico Perrino: Yeah. It also can be really funny.
Michael Malice: Yes, thatās correct.
Nico Perrino: In the way that it corrects people so to speak.
Michael Malice: Yes. Wait is this show named after Hoppe?
Nico Perrino: No.
Michael Malice: Okay, because thatās his catchphrase?
Nico Perrino: Oh really?
Michael Malice: Yeah.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, I mean no. I mean we just thought it was kind of a catchy way. We discuss speech issues so to speak.
Michael Malice: Oh okay, got it. Because thatās his little catchphrase.
Nico Perrino: Oh really?
Michael Malice: Yes, itās a meme.
Nico Perrino: No, we just thought it was kind of a catchy way to subtly reference the topic on the podcast.
Michael Malice: Got it. Got it, okay.
Nico Perrino: And then we put after the colon the free speech podcast because that helps with SEO.
Michael Malice: Yeah, smart.
Nico Perrino: And again, Iām trying to just kind of get a better sense of what you think about free speech in the last 10 years. And I apologize if Iām not articulating it very clearly because I donāt talk to anarchists a lot. And so, a lot of times weāre talking about free speech in relationship to the government. But a lot of the basis for free speech and a lot of the philosophical trees whether youāre going back to John Miltonās Areopagitica or youāre going to John Stuart Mills on liberty or youāre talking about Jonathan Rauchās Kindly Inquisitors, I mean these arenāt arguments for how the government should treat speech. Theyāre arguments for how society should behave.
Michael Malice: Look, weāve run the experiment. We have enough data. Human beings are not interested in truth, theyāre interested in narratives. Theyāre interested in stories. I would recommend people read Jonathan Haidt and do some evolutionary psychology. This enlightenment idea that if you have 100 people and you put the facts of the matter in front of them like a buffet that after a little bit of going back and forth āOh maybe I like navy blue, maybe I like purple, blah, blah, blahā that theyāre all going to come to some kind of consensus that is roughly analogous to the truth is completely false.
And Iāll give you a very obvious example of this that for anyone on the political spectrum can see. For a long time during COVID, we were told to stay six feet apart from each other. Then when the COVID wave came back, whatever the second wave was, Delta, I donāt remember what it was ā they didnāt bring back social distancing. So, if it worked before why arenāt we doing it again? And if it didnāt work before why did we do it in the first place? So, this shows that people arenāt interested in truth, theyāre interested in being told what to do.
And it is human beings especially, not particularly intelligent people, and very intelligent educated people, are interested in consensus and in tribalism as opposed to being the person who says ā remember in the fairy tale the emperor has new clothes, it was a kid who pointed it out because all the adults were too invested and fearful of the power to say what they were seeing. So, there was a huge cost in every culture despite this claim of America is the bastion of free speech, of being a truth-teller. Because many people who were in power donāt like you pointing out that theyāre bad. And they were going to do things to you and your family if you do something about it.
Nico Perrino: No, I agree with that. And I agree with it, especially in the short term. For lack of a better phrase, youāre in this sort of anarchist period and often those who are trying to create a pull of orthodoxy or enforce sort of conformist thought will win in the short term particularly when people are scared. But I think in the long run ā and Iād be interested to hear your perspective ā truth does tend to win.
Michael Malice: Yes. But thatās not the democratic thing.
Nico Perrino: In what sense? But it is a sort of marketplace of ideas thing. It can only win if the ideas are allowed to be put forth, right?
Michael Malice: Letās suppose you are the government, you have a toll bridge, and Iām a private organization. I have a toll bridge as well. And your bridge is going to be not only more expensive, itās going to have potholes and itās going to open less. As the consumer, I donāt need to know the intricacies of the free market versus the state or economics, things like that. All I see is cheaper, more efficient, more expensive, and more of a pain. So, people will come to the right conclusion. Theyāre not going to understand or need to understand whatās going on in the background. Itās usually above their pay grade and in any case not of interest to them.
Nico Perrino: Yeah. The book you reference, or think are referencing from Jonathan Haidt is The Righteous Mind.
Michael Malice: Correct.
Nico Perrino: And his kind of elephant rider theory of how people get to their political beliefs. But I do think the marketplace of ideas theory of freedom of expression I think has always been oversold.
Michael Malice: Yes.
Nico Perrino: But I do think ā and one of the things that our president Greg Lukianoff often talks about as being a more compelling argument for free speech is what he calls the looking glass theory, but it also elsewhere referred to the informational theory which is itās just always important to know the world as it is.
Michael Malice: Important to whom?
Nico Perrino: To us.
Michael Malice: Whatās us? Who is us?
Nico Perrino: Me, right?
Michael Malice: Okay, speak for yourself.
Nico Perrino: But yeah, I mean for anyone, right?
Michael Malice: No, not for anyone.
Nico Perrino: Your outputs are only as good as the data that is input.
Michael Malice: Do you have lawyers?
Nico Perrino: A lawyer, yeah.
Michael Malice: Yes, so when it comes to the law what I think is completely irrelevant Iām going to shut my mouth and do what my lawyer tells me. And I might ask them questions but in any case, I donāt have to be a legal scholar or a lawyer, I will defer to them. And itās appropriate in many cases for me as the layman not to know what the hell is going on and to be deferential. Now this is something that is weaponized in terms of āTrust the experts. Trust the science.ā But itās not at all the case that itās useful for everyone to have an understanding of everything.
Nico Perrino: Perhaps not in every case but I think the best way to understand the world is to learn as much about the world as possible. And not just learn what people believe or that might end up being true, but what people believe that is false. You canāt fix a problem unless you know that problem exists. So, the analogy weāve used before is you can censor but then you donāt know what those people believe.
So, you either donāt know the truth that they might have spoken, or you donāt know the falsehood that they might have spoken that also is a signal that also tells you something thatās important to know. Perhaps that thereās a problem to fix or a mind that needs to be changed. So, censorship in that sense is like breaking the thermometer. You donāt know what the temperature is anymore but itās still 45 degrees out.
Michael Malice: Thatās all true but the point is not only do most people not want to understand the world, they donāt want to even understand themselves. The number of people who are even interested in empathy let alone practice it, by which I mean the ability to see issues through other peopleās perspectives is astonishingly low. And the number of people on social media ā and people by the way on social media are going to be smarter than average because of the written medium.
So, right away itās going to take a little bit of intelligence to even step your foot in the door ā they just want to divide everything into in-group and out-group. And you see this all the time. āOh, you sound like a liberal. Oh, you sound like a Trump voter.ā And once youāre slotted into that box, in their minds thereās nothing further for them to hear from you. So, theyāre not interested in understanding things at all. Theyāre interested in perceiving things whether itās in-group or out-group and thatās enough for them.
Nico Perrino: I want to talk about some stories now. Stories that youāve told in some of your writings because weāve been talking a little bit about theory here. But Emma Goldman who ā
Michael Malice: Sheās right there.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, I canāt see who those people are on it.
Michael Malice: Sheās all the way on the left. Thatās where she belongs.
Nico Perrino: Michaelās pointing to a big it looks like a poster-sized picture of his book The White Pill if youāre listening in the podcast version. But Emma Goldman was persecuted here in the United States.
Michael Malice: Oh yes.
Nico Perrino: Was exiled, right? I mean she has a free speech story to tell not just here in the United States but also she took the free speech argument to Lenin too.
Michael Malice: Directly. Personally, yep.
Nico Perrino: Personally. And called him out for what she thought was an abandonment of the ideals of the revolution. To which Lenin said, āWell, there canāt be any free speech in the revolutionary period.ā
Michael Malice: Yeah, itās a bourgeois extravagance.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, do you want to talk a little bit about her story?
Michael Malice: Well, sure. I mean again conservatives really have a very bad idea of history and they think weāll weāve always fought for free speech. Again, the first free speech groups were organized to fight for the rights of radicals by which I mean communists ā this is before 1917 ā to promote their ideas which were heavily censored either through the market which I donāt really regard as censorship and obviously through governments.
And at a certain point after Leon Czolgosz who said he was inspired by Emma Goldman killed President McKinley and Teddy Rosevelt became president, they basically made it a law that if you were a leper or syphilis or an anarchist, we donāt want you here. And Teddy Rosevelt here āAnarchism is worse than slavery.ā And at the time there were actual slaves still alive in the United States. Point being they went, and they retroactively removed the citizenship of the man she had married so he wasnāt a citizen and therefore she was no longer a citizen.
And then itās like all right. And there was something called the Red Ark which a very young J. Edgar Hoover was in charge of. And they rounded up a bunch of radicals, put them on this ship, and they said āAll right, you guys like free speech? You guys like socialism? You all can fuck off back to Russia.ā And they deported them and shipped them away. And the reason sheās on the cover of The White Pill and the reason I talk about her and her partner in literal crime Alexander Berkman as much as possible, they were hard-core lefties.
As hard as it gets. Emma Goldman gave a speech in Union Square in the early 20th century, and she said, āGo to the capitalistsā, I donāt remember what word she used āAnd ask for work. And if they donāt give you work, ask for bread. And if they donāt give you bread, take bread.ā Her point being you donāt have a duty to starve and itās perfectly appropriate to take what you want to feed your family in the era where so few have so much and so many have so little. So, her leftie credentials could not be beat. They tried to kill Frick who was Andrew Carnegieās right-hand man. Shot him. Didnāt succeed in murdering him. Berkman did a long time in jail as a consequence for this.
So, these were in many ways the godparents of Antifa. And Antifa love Emma Goldman. They go to the Soviet Union, they see whatās going on there, horrified. And Goldman explicitly says āLook Iām for violence. Iām for revolution. Iām for slitting throats. But you slit throats for the sake of the workers. You do it to bring about this era where you have freedom of association, freedom of speech, where everyone is working tougher for the sake of a society.ā And when she fled Russia with Berkman he wrote a book called Bolshevik Myth. She wrote a book called My Disillusionment in Russia which later it split in half called My Further Disillusionment with Russia.
And she goes to England and all the lefties are there āRed Emma, yay.ā Theyāre applauding because sheās so out there and sheās such a radical. And she goes āThis isnāt what weāre for. This is worse than the Czar.ā And when she started her speech it was a standing ovation and when she was finished you could hear a pin drop because they didnāt want to hear it. Because all they wanted to hear āThis is the society of the future. Weāre the smart ones. Weāre the good ones.ā And people who had never stepped foot outside the United States felt comfortable lecturing to her that she didnāt understand what was going on in the newfound Soviet Union or what became the Soviet Union.
Nico Perrino: Did you ever see that movie, itās the epic I think by Warren Beatty.
Michael Malice: Reds?
Nico Perrino: Yeah.
Michael Malice: No, I havenāt. I saw the clip with her in it.
Nico Perrino: Yeah. Well, yeah sheās in it. And some of her disillusionment with the Soviet Union is featured in that film. But one of the interesting things about that film just kind of as an aside is Roger Baldwin who was one of the founders of the ACLU is in that. And it kind of shows just how close the kind of anarchist socialist communist community was.
Michael Malice: And Margaret Sanger too was in there. Yeah.
Nico Perrino: Yeah. And the reason I watched it is because Ira Glasser who used to run the ACLU is on our advisory council. He said, āIf you kind of want to understand that community at that time, Reds got it just perfectly right.ā
Michael Malice: There was a woman named Mabel Dodge Luhan who had an apartment. And the building is torn down and now itās the building that I believe the apartment building in Mad About You. Point being she had a salon. Not a hair salon, like a salon in the old sense where people got together to meet once a week. I think it was Thursdays. And John Reed who I think Warren Beatty plays in Reds described her as a complete simpleton dumb girl because she went there, and she never talked. Mabel Dodge Luhan. And the point is she was one of these ā thereās contemporary people nowadays, I canāt think of anybody off the top of my head ā but these rich ladies.
A real housewife who thinks theyāre just so badass because theyāre friends with these radicals. And thereās no one at home but they think itās cool that Ibram Kendi is at their house or something like that. āOh my god, Iām so out there.ā So, she had these salons, and Bill Haywood the big union guy, Sanger is there, Emma Goldman, Jack Reed who Mabel Dodge Luhan had a long affair with, theyāre all in there together cross-pollinating. So, this New York City village era of that period really was this kind of punching-above-its-weight scene and where modernism really was born.
And Mabel Dodge Luhan who I just mentioned to you, she also was helpful in bringing in what was called The Armory Show which was a show in the Armory in New York City where it was the first time that European modern art was displayed in the States including very famously Duchampās Nude Descending a Staircase which is not representational. So, all the newspaper cartoonists had a fun time making fun of it, but she was really this very important although personally highly unimpressive figure. And it was a lot of cross-pollination.
And Iāve got to tell you thatās one of the reasons Iām very excited that I currently live in Austin because maybe itās not the same exact thing but thereās a lot of cross-pollination here between the crypto people, the podcasters, the comedians, the biohackers, the white people stuff like Whole Foods and cold plunges. Everyone is here and theyāre interacting and itās really punching above its weight.
Nico Perrino: I think itās overstated often but people talked about the rise of Silicon Valley being somewhat like the rise of Florence during the Renaissance. Thereās value I guess of people who are creative and innovative just being in the same place.
Michael Malice: Right.
Nico Perrino: And it does seem like people are moving to Austin and itās getting some of the same network effects that you get from everyone being in the same place. You see a little bit of it with Miami as well. And Silicon Valley is still the place in tech. Hasnāt been eclipsed yet I donāt think. But I was going to ask you about kind of your thoughts on Austin. So, Iām glad I got them. But I wanted to ask you just kind of for your concluding thoughts on Emma Goldman because we started the podcast talking about the Red Scare. Do you think Americaās decisions to ā
Michael Malice: That was the second Red Scare. The first red scare is what rounded up Emma Goldman.
Nico Perrino: Sure, sure, sure. And you kind of took issue with how I described the Red Scare. Do you think what happened to Emma Goldman in the first Red Scare was appropriate in the sense of her connections to communism and revolutionary politics or whatever?
Michael Malice: I don't know what you mean appropriate. She was not a member of any organization taking orders from a foreign power. I donāt know if thatās called treason or sedition, whatever it is. So, that is one major difference. The other big difference is again the government under McCarthy sent no one to jail. These people got fired. So, theyāre advocating genocide, and their cost is you might not be able to be a screenwriter anymore. I have very little sympathy for that. And the fact of the matter is they just changed their names and they became heroic in terms of Hollywood. And they were lying.
Alger Hiss was this big example of this where he was very high up under FDR and he was exposed for being a member of a Stalinist party, giving US government secrets to a country that had just recently starved millions of Ukrainians to death for no reason. So, this Hollywood version of the McCarthy era that these people were just innocent victims who just had a different point of view is just a complete lie.
Now it is possible, and I would actually lean toward this, that the government has no place investigating something like this. And that thereās certainly an argument to be had for that. But to act like these people were all innocent lambs who just had their lives ruined because they flicked the wrong lever at the voting booth is completely untrue. And Iām not saying that you said that but Iām just saying thatās the popular perspective. And Iām just going to say one more thing.
Nico Perrino: Sure.
Michael Malice: It just speaks to how dishonest it is because the McCarthy era which is the one time in America where lefties were canceled, is regarded as the second worst thing to ever happen except for slavery. And if you think about it in those terms itās just like thatās the worst thing that a bunch of screenwriters lost their jobs?
Nico Perrino: Yeah. And I wanted to ask you in that sense you mentioned canceled. What do you make of this whole cancel culture debate currently?
Michael Malice: I donāt like that term because everyone listening to this, there are people that they wouldnāt hire because of their views. The thing with cancel culture is that a lot of times giant media outlets are demonizing for a tweet that they made in high school which is completely disingenuous is the problem. But if it turns out that someone is secretly a rapist or a murderer and you find out and then you donāt want to have them on your network anymore, I think thatās perfectly appropriate. Itās being framed I think as a false alternative.
Either anyone can say and do anything they want or āOh my god this is horrible.ā There are times when itās appropriate to cancel someone but the times that are presented as appropriate by the corporate press are almost always inaccurate. And Iāll just say one more thing just to pull back the curtain for people listening to this ā and this is kind of a dirty little secret that conservatives, not saying youāre a conservative, donāt like to talk about ā a lot of these people who were canceled werenāt canceled for the ostensible reason. They were canceled because theyāre dicks and just assholes behind the scenes.
And when the shit hit the fan no one had their back. Alex Jones is really nice guy. Iām pals with him. And then the reason he got uncanceled is because heās a nice person. Thereās other people who were canceled and remain canceled. Itās not because of what they said or did, itās because no one wants to take a bullet for them or run interference for them because theyāre nasty.
Nico Perrino: Yeah. Well, I mean you need to look at any individual case of course.
Michael Malice: But youāre not going to know publicly which is which. So, Iām saying a lot of people who are canceled unfairly, yes the ostensible reason is unfair but thatās not the real reason. The real reason is everyone is glad to be divested of them.
Nico Perrino: Letās say that the real reason is more or less the truth. I mean how do you look at again getting back to the normative the can versus should? Of course, all these private enterprises, these private institutions can and have the free association right to fire whoever they want. But should they? And how should we think about whether they should or should not?
Michael Malice: Iām going to interrupt you because I donāt believe in democracy so I donāt believe the idea that every one of us is in a position to tell someone Iāve never met how they should run their company. That is crazy to me. So, if youāre telling me you shouldnāt fire this athlete because they said something offensive, you donāt have access to my budget sheet. You donāt have access to my investors. You donāt know what Iām seeing in the back end because maybe my big funder is telling me āIf you donāt fire this guy Iām pulling the plug on the whole organization.ā
If I have that gun to my head maybe I donāt think what he did or said was that bad, but I don't have a choice. We saw this during Black Lives Matter where the head of whatās that gay exercise organization? Cross Fit. When the head of Cross Fit was like āWeāre a gay exercise organization. We have nothing to do with this.ā And he lost his job as a result of this. Point being because he was sticking out among everyone else like a sore thumb. So, some of these companies may not even be a fan of whatever is going on but as soon as you stick your head up you become a target.
Now thatās not something thatās positive but the point being itās really for us sitting here on our asses to be like āWell, you shouldnāt have put up that BLM square.ā But itās like if I hadnāt Iād be fired. And itās really easy to say to someone āWell, fine you should be fired.ā Maybe Iāve got a wife and kids to take care of. So, this is the moral calculus that I think everyone has to engage with on their own. And itās really unfair in my view for us to sit here and judge someone else when they donāt have all the facts.
Nico Perrino: Did you judge the old regime of Twitter? Did you have a perspective on that when it was deplatforming people or twisting itself into pretzels to justify for example deplatforming Donald Trump and as we saw on the Twitter files?
Michael Malice: I was judging what they ostensibly said was the reason. Because if their argument was āThis guy is dangerous and what heās saying can foment violence.ā Twitter is not a monopoly. So, that reasoning I had an issue with because itās false. Because if you have a president in their view who is fomenting violence, it is extremely important for all of us to hear what he has to say. Because if this is done secretly thatās a bigger problem than knowing heās saying publicly so we can prepare for it.
Nico Perrino: Yeah. And I agree with you on that. And I think when weāre trying to judge whether public or private institutions are living up to ostensibly what they claim to. For example, Twitter claims to be the public square. Well, if youāre eliminating a portion of the public because they engage in wrong think, as you judge it, well youāre not living up to what you claim to be.
Michael Malice: Correct.
Nico Perrino: The local community group that doesnāt want the person who kind of shit posts on the neighborhood community group every day and shares information that is irrelevant to most of the community members, thatās different than Twitter. And posting for anyone who might want to come to your feed or for whom your post comes up in the algorithm. So, it sounds like I have a better understanding now of kind of how you look at that issue. It just depends on the association, it depends on what they hold themselves out to be, it depends on what they promise or contractually promise in their terms of service for example. But even Elon Musk doesnāt always enforce his policies.
Michael Malice: Thatās right.
Nico Perrino: Consistently.
Michael Malice: Thatās right.
Nico Perrino: Particularly in the early days when there were the journalists getting deplatformed. It seemed to start to work itself out a little bit. But I want to ask kind of as a way to close up about the Soviet Union.
Michael Malice: Sure.
Nico Perrino: Youāve written a lot about it. And tie it back to the conversation we were having about Emma Goldman in a way. Emma Goldman delivered that speech that you referenced in 1924 in London where she describes the nature of the new Soviet workersā paradise. Falls on deaf ears but Solzhenitsyn 1973 publishes The Gulag Archipelago, and it makes waves. What happened? What changed? Were people just ready to hear that argument? Hear those stories now?
Michael Malice: This is a very long answer and I talk about it at length in The White Pill. One of the big things that changed is that Stalin died. And then I think it was 1956 Khrushchev, who was Stalinās successor, delivered what he called the secret speech. Well, first of all even before that Stalin made a pact with Hitler. And Hitler back then was Hitler. So, Iām a lefty, and all my left Iāve been like āAll right maybe I have issues with the Soviet Union but they're basically the direction I want us to go. Blah, blah, blah. Thatās a much better model than the United States.ā
Youāre shaking hands with Hitler? Okay, for a lot of people, itās a wrap. I was completely wrong. Iām out. So, that was a very big moment for lots of hardcore lefties and even moderate lefties were like āThis is so beyond anything Iām comfortable with that Iām not hearing anything else you have to say.ā So, it was a whittling-away process. But again in ā56 ā I think it was ā56 ā Khrushchev gave a secret speech. Itās called secret speech because there was no foreigners allowed and it was just the party cadres and I think it was three hours, six hours. It was some very long period, and it was in the middle of the night.
And heās like āAll this stuff they were saying about Stalin is true. All these people that were forced to confess in these trials were innocent. And they were tortured. And the orders came directly from Stalin. This personality cult is completely incompatible with Marxism, Leninism.ā And he just went down. And theyāre sitting there, and they canāt say āOh this is Western capitalist propaganda.ā Heās sitting in Stalinās seat literally. So, that was also a big moment where theyāre like āOh shit we canāt just handwave this away as the bourgeoisie or the capitalists try to make us look bad.ā Theyāre like āOkay, this actually was true.ā And that was a very big reckoning point.
And the thing is when Stalin died they closed down the gulags to an enormous extent. So, a lot of these former prisoners, I think they were sworn to secrecy largely. Well, good luck with that. Now were reintegrated into Soviet society and they had families, they had friends. And you had thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people who saw it firsthand, who lived in it who came back a complete wreck from when they had been vanished for absolutely no reason. And they had their testimony. Youāre not going to say these are all foreign saboteurs. So, that was also a big moment internally.
And also, in 1953 when Hungary tried to have a rebellion and the Soviet Union sent in the tanks. 1968 the Prague Spring and the Russians and several other countries invaded Czechoslovakia. These were moments where you canāt handwave it away and be like āOkay itās just crazy Emma Goldman.ā Or āOkay this is dictatorship but itās just temporary. It will be over soon.ā This was 50, 60 years after the Russian revolutions and the Bolsheviks.
Nico Perrino: Iāve got a poster here in my office. It says, āThey coined the term politically correct 50 years before the West caught on.ā And itās from the museum of communism.
Michael Malice: Thatās in Prague. I have magnets from that place on my fridge. They said you couldnāt get detergent at the store, but you could get brainwashed.
Nico Perrino: I mean thatās something youāre an expert on is just the suppression of thought and belief and speech in authoritarian countries, in the Soviet Union, in North Korea. Can you just kind of walk our listeners through what itās like to be a person living in those societies? I think itās hard for us Americans to really understand. I mean youāve visited North Korea.
Michael Malice: I mean itās like having an affair versus being married.
Nico Perrino: Sure.
Michael Malice: Itās not analogous.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, of course. But I guess what Iām trying to say you have Yeonmi Park whoās come out of North Korea. I mean she would know it better than you, but most people donāt get into North Korea. They donāt see what itās like.
Michael Malice: I didnāt see what itās like really because again Iām a tourist. So, the reason I wrote The White Pill or one of the reasons, the back cover is an Ayn Rand quote where she says when she was testifying around the house on the American Activities Committee in the 40s before McCarthy was in the Senate, she goes āItās almost impossible to convey to a free people what itās like to live in a totalitarian dictatorship.ā Now Iām sure lots of people if not everyone listening to this is sick of woke stuff, and woke this, and woke that. And you turn on Netflix. I was just watching Master of the Universe, which is a cartoon I grew up with, with He-Man.
The character is named He-Man and now instead of it being about He-Man and Skeletor itās about Teela, her black girlfriend and Evil-Lyn are the protagonists. So, even a show called He-Man has now become about a strong female who donāt need no man. The point being you and I can sit and laugh about this, or we can write articles complaining about it. Iām sure, I havenāt looked at the message board, the He-Man fandom, there are a lot of people who are like āThis is bullshit, blah, blah, blah.ā A lot of people are like āDespite this itās good.ā A lot of people are like whatever. We can have a discussion.
We cannot wrap our heads around what itās like if literally everything was in the vein of politics and a certain specific vein of politics. We cannot wrap our heads around the idea that if weāre sitting at home talking to our friends, the odds are quiet head one of the people in the group are going to be a spy for the government and theyāre going to turn us in. We have no idea what this is like. When people in the states are complaining like āOh itās just like Soviet Russia.ā Sure, there are aspects. We cannot imagine what itās like for it to be that thing 24/7 365.
Every song, every TV show, every magazine, every newspaper, every public conversation has to be through this very specific vein. We cannot imagine what thatās possibly like. And writing the book made me so much more grateful for my family taking me out of Soviet Union Ukraine when I was so young because I still cannot wrap my head around what it was like for them having to live through this for decades.
Nico Perrino: I had a friend growing up and his grandfather weād visit his farm. Itās not the same thing but it makes me think of he fought in World War II, and he said, āYou just canāt know the horrors of war unless youāve lived it.ā I mean movies can give you perhaps a sense but itās not the same.
Michael Malice: Of course not, the smells alone.
Nico Perrino: Sure, yeah. I was listening to Dan Carlinās Hardcore History. I donāt know if youāve ever listened to that podcast.
Michael Malice: No, I know what it is though.
Nico Perrino: Yeah, and he did one on the Ghosts of the Ostfront which is the eastern front. And he talks about the smells in there. And then just walking in fields where you just see dead bodies under ice as far as the eye can see. And itās gripping in audio format and horrifying. But to just actually live it and see it. I donāt know. I just donāt know. You hope no one ever has that experience. At the same time, one of the ways to ensure they never have that experience is for them to understand the experience through the eyes of people that have been there I guess. But itās not the same. Do you think that North Korea is as close to Orwellās 1984 as any society in human history?
Michael Malice: Not at all because they donāt have electricity. So, the thing with 1984 is everything is under surveillance. Thereās cameras everywhere. You have a radio in your house that you canāt turn off. All this other stuff. They donāt have electricity in North Korea so itās not Orwellian in that. I mean this is where Rand comes in because Randās big point about thereās the joke about what do the socialists use before they used candles? Lightbulbs. In North Korea during the ā90s when Kim Jong the Second took over from his father the great leader Kim Il-Sung.
Kim the Second Son, excuse me. They had polio come back. So, you canāt advance if everything is under the thumb of the state. So, itās not Orwellian in that sense at all. Although itās much more medieval in terms of just the brutality and the kind of serfdom of the populace as opposed to this kind of ā because in 1984 theyāre living in cities and things are pretty clean.
Nico Perrino: Sure. How does the surveillance happen in North Korea?
Michael Malice: So, everyone in North Korea is slotted into some group. So, it could be your apartment building, your class, your factory. And once a week they have something called sessions for something life. I forget what itās called. Point being I have to get up once a week in front of my colleagues or neighbors and I have to say what I did wrong, and I have to say what someone else did wrong too. So, I have to say āI saw Nico was chewing on a pen and he ruined the pen. And that pen was something that we could all use.ā And then you will all be rated and then everyone has to have something to say every week.
So, not only does everyone have to self-confess, they have to have something to snitch on their colleagues or friends, or neighbors in front of everybody else. So, thatās why thereās no possibility of kind of getting together and trying to plot to overthrow the government because this is taken even more seriously. Itās not like in America where the rules donāt apply to the elites. This is taken even more seriously at the top. So, theyāre even more ruthless in watching each other and having something on each other to try to undermine one another.
Nico Perrino: I guess I have to ask because weāve talked about the Soviet Union and Ukraine. What do you make of the whole current situation?
Michael Malice: I think we have very little useful information. And the only thing I am sure of ā and thatās by design ā everyone has access to the same newspapers, so you donāt want your opponents to know what your lines are and where you stand. I donāt have any particular insight into this region. I said this at the time and now I think itās become ā not that itās such a great insight but I think now itās become kind of understood that it seemed very clear that there was a gun pointed at the back of Zelenskyyās head telling him not to take any kind of deal.
And now itās coming around where theyāre like āAll right weāre going to have to take some kind of deal.ā And I understand because you donāt want to validate foreign invasion and aggression. This was the lesson of the Falklands that Thatcher had to fight. But point being Iām scared in some ways itās going to be analogous to the Korean War where basically you have this big loss of life and everything for what?
Nico Perrino: Yeah. And then you just get this line drawn and an armistice that lasts what? In the case of the Korean War over half a century.
Michael Malice: And I was talking to Konstantin Kisin who runs the Triggernometry podcast, and he was much more pro-Ukraine and escalating things. And Iām like āMaybe Iām being naĆÆve but is it your view that if Putin literally conquers all of Ukraine that heās going to have some kind of genocide and start just slaughtering millions?ā And heās like āNo.ā Iām like āOkay, if thatās not the case this completely takes it out of the realm of Sadam and Kuwait where Sadam killed so many of his own Iraqi citizens or a Hitler situation or a Pol Pot situation.ā
If weāre talking about resources and what language they speak and who whatever so on and so forth, that to me although itās not nice is really night and day compared to maybe the Balkans or something like that, weāre going to start exterminating people by the thousands or hundreds of thousands for literally no reason. But Iām not here to speak on behalf of anarchism because I think many anarchists would disagree with much of what Iāve said. I just want to be clear about that.
Nico Perrino: Oh really?
Michael Malice: Yes. I think anarchists as a rule are much bigger fans of democracy not in the political sense but in the sense of everyone having their two cents and contributing together. Iām much more elitist in many ways than the typical anarchists. And they would regard that as antithetical to anarchism.
Nico Perrino: So, these are the people who build collectives and anarcho-communists?
Michael Malice: Yeah, but also just think a lot of an-caps I think I would kind of split company with them on some things as well. So, I just want that to be clear that this is my perspective and not ātheā or āaā anarchist perspective per se.
Nico Perrino: Got you.
Michael Malice: Itās just an anarchistās perspective.
Nico Perrino: Sure. An anarchistās perspective. Well, Michael Malice I appreciate an anarchistās perspective. That was Michael Malice. He is the host of the podcast YOUR WELCOME and is the author of several books including most recently The White Pill: a Tale of Good and Evil. Before we sign off I want to thank everyone for filling out the recent So to Speak listener survey. Producer Sam Niederholzer and I are reviewing the feedback. And we hope that youāll start seeing some of your guest and topic recommendations appear on the show here in short order.
If you have any additional feedback beyond the survey weāre always available via email at our email address So to Speak at thefire.org. Also, I wanted to flag an exciting new development. On the day that we recorded this episode, which was January 19th we broke the top 50 on Apple Podcasts overall podcast charts. Peaking I believe at number 43 right behind This American Life. We even reached number seven in the news category just behind Megan Kelly and Pod Save America. Pretty cool stuff. I want to thank you all for making this podcast what it is and for keeping me going for seven years now.
It's amazing to think that weāve been going for that long. Almost eight years actually now that I think about it. We started the podcast in April of 2016 so yeah weāre almost at eight years. Holy cow. This podcast is hosted by me Nico Perrino and it was produced by Sam Niederholzer and myself. It was edited by my colleague Chris Maltby. To learn more about So To Speak you can subscribe to your YouTube channel which is linked in the show notes.
Most of our episodes including this one feature video of the conversation. You can follow us on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook. And if you enjoyed this episode please consider leaving us a review on Apple Podcasts or Google Play. Reviews help us attract new listeners to the show. And until next time I thank you all again for listening.