The 2021 Holberg Debate on Identity Politics: J. Butler, C. West, G.Greenwald and S. Critchley.

The 2021 Holberg Debate: "Identity Politics and Culture Wars"
Starts at 3:00.
Does identity politics as it is currently manifesting itself offer a suitable avenue towards social justice, or has it become a recipe for cultural antagonism, political polarization, and new forms of injustice?
Panel: Judith Butler, Cornel West, Glenn Greenwald.
Moderator: Simon Critchley
Judith Butler
Judith Butler is an American philosopher and gender theorist whose work has influenced political philosophy, ethics, queer theory, rhetoric and literary theory. She is the Maxine Elliot Professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Program of Critical Theory at the University of California, Berkeley, as well as the Hannah Arendt Chair at the European Graduate School. Butler has written more than 20 books, and her best known works are Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (1990), Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of Sex (1993), and Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative (1997), in which she challenges conventional notions of gender and develops her theory of gender performativity. Butler argues that being born male or female does not determine behaviour. Instead, people learn to behave in particular ways to fit into society. What society regards as a person's gender can be seen as a performance made to please social expectations, rather than a true expression of the person's gender identity.
Cornel West
Cornel West is an American philosopher, political activist, social critic, actor, and public intellectual. West is presently Dietrich Bonhoeffer Professor of Philosophy & Christian Practice at Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. He has previously held professorships at Harvard University and Yale University. West focuses on the role of race, gender, and class in American society and the means by which people act and react to their "radical conditionedness". A socialist, West draws intellectual contributions from multiple traditions, including Christianity, the Black church, Marxism, neopragmatism, and transcendentalism. He has written 20 books, and among his most influential works are Race Matters (1994), Democracy Matters (2004), and his memoir Brother West: Living and Loving Out Loud (2010). West has a passion to communicate to a vast variety of publics in order to keep alive the legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. - “a legacy of telling the truth and bearing witness to love and justice”.
Glenn Greenwald
Glenn Greenwald is an American investigative journalist and author. A former constitutional lawyer, he founded and wrote for the online global media outlet The Intercept with Laura Poitras and Jeremy Scahill in 2014 until his departure in 2020, when he moved his writing to the online platform Substack. He is the author of several best sellers, among them, How Would a Patriot Act? (2006); With Liberty and Justice for Some: How the Law is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful (2011) and No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the US Surveillance State (2014). Living and reporting in Brazil, he was central to investigations that ultimately helped free Luis da Silva from prison after a parliamentary coup against the former President. Greenwald has received numerous awards for his investigative journalism. In 2009 he was awarded the Izzy Award by the Park Center for Independent Media for his “path breaking journalistic courage and persistence in confronting conventional wisdom, official deception, and controversial issues.” In 2010 he received an Online Journalism Award for his investigative work on the arrest and detention of Chelsea Manning. In 2013 he led The Guardian’s reporting team that covered Edward Snowden and the NSA, which earned the newspaper the 2014 Pulitzer Prize in Public Service. Foreign Policy magazine named him one of the top 100 Global Thinkers for 2013.
Moderator: Simon Critchley
Simon Critchley is a British philosopher and the Hans Jonas Professor at the New School for Social Research. His books include Very Little…Almost Nothing (1997), Infinitely Demanding (2007), The Book of Dead Philosophers (2009) and The Faith of the Faithless (2012). Recent works include a novella, Memory Theatre, a book-length essay, Notes on Suicide and studies of David Bowie and Football and Apply-Degger (Onassis, 2020). His most recent books are Tragedy, The Greeks and Us (Pantheon, 2019) and Bald (Yale, 2021). He was series moderator of ‘The Stone’, a philosophy column in The New York Times and co-editor of The Stone Reader (2016). He is also 50% of an obscure musical combo called Critchley & Simmons.
For more information: See the Holberg Prize website, holbergprize.org/en/2021-holb...

Пікірлер: 1 800

  • @HolbergPrize
    @HolbergPrize7 ай бұрын

    Don't miss the 2023 Holberg Debate on December 2. Anil Seth, Tanya Luhrmann and Rupert Sheldrake will debate the question: "Does Consciousness Extend Beyod Brains?" kzread.info/dash/bejne/oZqHt8OTf7qfmJs.html Feel free to follow the event page on Facebook: facebook.com/events/315569814476878 More information on the Holberg Prize webpage: holbergprize.org/en/2023-holberg-debate-does-consciousness-extend-beyond-brains

  • @d-mac734

    @d-mac734

    6 ай бұрын

    I dont even have to watch the rest of this to already know Glen is gonna tear yall a new ass hole at the end. Anti-white has been integrated into our culture and has been for decades now. This woman is living in the 1960s still and its PISSING ME OFF.

  • @user-cd2ut4fx1m

    @user-cd2ut4fx1m

    5 ай бұрын

    Hi Holberg, please sort this out, it’s unbearable + unwatchable - SIMON. STOP STOP THAT “UM HM” “UM HM”, it’s absolutely rude + irritating!!!

  • @skinnie2838

    @skinnie2838

    4 ай бұрын

    lol @ this leftist propaganda. Take your "white supremacy" garbage somewhere else. We see your lies.

  • @skinnie2838

    @skinnie2838

    4 ай бұрын

    These are the people who got rich off of selling fear based on race, gender, and sexual orientation. The spooky part is... look how many people in this comment section who fell for it. They have no discernment as to the propaganda being thrown at them..

  • @user-ek3jy2lb3r

    @user-ek3jy2lb3r

    2 ай бұрын

    😊p😊vvp😊copp

  • @PsychologyCheckup
    @PsychologyCheckup2 жыл бұрын

    Cornell West: "if you stay woke for too long you're going to develop insomnia"

  • @Bisquick

    @Bisquick

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ha, that's pretty good. To pointlessly expand on this while watching this if anyone gives a shit lol (idk whatever I'm bored or something), the whole "woke" thing obviously isn't "bad" or really even disagreeable to most I would think in its core basic message removed from its dishonest framing, _but_ it is precisely because of how over time its message has deteriorated into a visceral inauthenticity having been contained in such consistent dishonesty and betrayal, ie it's transparent self-serving performance has exposed itself, and essentially hollowed out that core basic message for individual profit as merely a fake performance of individual piety and a projected implicit _superiority_ or moral character over the "unwashed masses" intrinsically lacking such "virtue" or whatever, that people find it so repellant. Like the optimates of the late Roman empire, crushing the populares movement by the Gracchi bros and later Caesar by famously of course straight up murdering them in the senate, even after Caesar fucking owned Pompey in the language of violence these absolute demons _actually_ practice behind their facades of manners/niceties, but then post-hoc justifying such an obvious vulgar display of power through rhetorical notions of "goodness" and "virtue", as Cicero would claim, Caesar and the populares posed an "authoritarian" threat (against their oligarchical domination is of course the unsaid part). Obviously there's like...too many parallels to our contemporary historical moment with that, but I think that's why it's revealing, especially as the -counterrevolutionaries- "founders" of the US admired such a dominion explicitly, hell the senate is based precisely on that senate (in the constitution, entirely democratically unaccountable and nominated purely by state legislatures). The constitution itself merely a brokerage between Hamiltonian eastern banker finance capital federalists and Jeffersonian land-owning slave-holding yeoman farmer antifederalists with an explicit intent to stave off what both bourgeoise "factions" agreed was an _actual_ threat: democracy (see Federalist Papers, Federalist 10 by Madison gets at this pretty explicitly). I mean my god these people wrote this stuff so far up their own asses they knew at some level that these 'factions' would be a problem (like, no shit right? lol...) but assumed their personal "virtue", self-evident by their property ownership and dominion over black, poor, and indigenous people, would transcend it. Turns out that isn't a thing. Oops. This load-bearing two-party bourgeois dictatorship is, shocker, precisely a result from that lack of implementing a structural proportional/parliamentary system into the constitution..."oops"...or more cynically, likely giving two big thumbs up in hell, which at this point is probably hard to distinguish from the world they helped create for us... Considering my own "ressentiment" fueled last statement there reminds me of Nietzsche of course, who I think describes this extremely well from an interesting dimension with his conception of "slave morality" and its connection to shaping our ontological perception and "habitus" through a linguistic distortion over time (originating from a context that is no longer applicable but nonetheless still insisted on to form a simulacra of its more communal/spiritual meaning; in the Genealogy of Morals if my paraphrasing is bad here), especially in relation to the ensorcelling technology that maintains this through a spectacle of permanent reaction from within the digital panopticon that is the internet, might be a relevant way of thinking about our paralysis of action as well, especially noting the neoliberal paradigm's de facto emphasis on normative individualizing to abstract away from any analysis of systemically generated causes and how, as mentioned by everyone in this video, we get this sort of consumer ontology where we can choose our truth based on subjective preference (if that made any sense lol), most importantly for Nietzsche is that this "ressentiment" though creative is fundamentally _dishonest_ and thus we get the charade of bullshit we perpetually live within, that everyone _knows_ is fake but yet we can't escape/transcend as its scale and tidal social inertia subsumes individual dissent/transgression, or something: _"The slave revolt in morality begins when 'ressentiment' itself becomes creative and gives birth to values: the ressentiment of natures that are denied the true reaction, that of deeds, and compensate themselves with an imaginary revenge."_ As discussed, our passive spectator technologically mediated 'bread and circus' perception of "politics" seems in form entirely poisoned by that "ressentiment" emergent from entirely individual/self-absorbed media filters cemented in our culture coupled with an accurate intuition of the zero-sum competition driven structure that further cultivate this habitus of risk-averse narcissism so that "politics" becomes perceived more of an aesthetic consumer brand choice between two competing bourgeois tribes (no surprise I guess, basically describing the essential tenants of neoliberalism). Tribes that seem to essentially have their defining roots in emerging from that federalist/antifederalist split mentioned earlier; in marxist terms you can note this cultural distinction aesthetically arising from their distance to capitalism and exploitation, ie a base (antifederalists, contemporary Republicans)/superstructure (federalists, contemporary Democrats) distinction maybe put more simply (or maybe internationalist/nationalist; transnational finance/corporate capital v. national extractive/land capital; trying to describe the same basic bourgeois factional split with all of these, hopefully makes sense, eh no one's going to read this long ass bs anyway lol...). In a more general notion toward that inauthenticity (in like the marxist notion of a "character mask", especially as it pertains to this bread and circus cultural medium with all its implicit material filters and performative nonsense), I'll cut my screed off here by noting the lyrics from the song Tonguesplitter by one of my fav bands Protest the Hero, which is essentially a different way to phrase the West quote in a way (aw shit, full circle, eternal return baby) in how it transforms ourselves into an inauthentic shell that's not really living but rather killing time. _It's the mask that quite often starts to eat into your face._ _So wear it lightly like a cap, that can quickly be replaced._ aaaaaaaaand video done, huzzah. Good stuff, good quote, and GOOD DAY! sorry for wall of text, socialism or [continued] barbarism.

  • @lancegrandis6230

    @lancegrandis6230

    2 жыл бұрын

    It was refreshing to agree with Dr. West for once.

  • @ridicule1313

    @ridicule1313

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Bisquick I didn’t get through all of that, but I want to let you know that the message you were sending was received by me, at least in part. When wisdom spreads too fast, it’s meaning gets lost in the crowd through simple and natural misunderstandings. Few may get the message at first, but eventually it dies and new wisdom must be born.

  • @ridicule1313

    @ridicule1313

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lancegrandis6230 none of us have a monopoly on truth, there’s disagreement and agreement to be found with everyone, just more or less for each individual you encounter. :D

  • @MichaelRobertHart

    @MichaelRobertHart

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ridicule1313 felt the same way. It was a lot to take in, and given it came from KZread comment I wasn’t prepared to engage with the depth, haha.

  • @ceelar
    @ceelar2 жыл бұрын

    After Butler says a black woman should be in the debate (later clarified that she was talking about a black academic woman*), Greenwald says they should have a working-class person as well. You can hear the other debaters groan, because either they see themselves as working class, or as people who understand what it is like to be working class. Greenwald then goes on to call them out, and himself, as people who moved away from working class lives, and are now working in elite environments. Debaters change the subject... ...and this moment perfectly characterizes the entire debate. *who she agrees with

  • @joeberg3317

    @joeberg3317

    2 жыл бұрын

    Someone should clip this. I agree, telling moment.

  • @billsimms2511

    @billsimms2511

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very very telling moment indeed

  • @JB-lovin

    @JB-lovin

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes. I saw that. Well called out.

  • @mrage22r

    @mrage22r

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah this is basically it - and Dr. West scoffing at the idea of the ‘conservative’ women of color (even though tulsi gabbard is a dem) shows that Glennwald is right in his assessment of using racial identity in a superficial way. He showed that they actually do care more about the ideas first and race/gender second. I guess it’s hard to admit it because it is now considered a “right-wing” talking point.

  • @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    2 жыл бұрын

    Butler and West are divorced from American reality and married to Academic reality

  • @chrisyoung2179
    @chrisyoung21792 жыл бұрын

    I still feel like they tip-toed around Greenwald’s critiques and attempts to dive deeper into the complexities and contradictions.

  • @stella3265

    @stella3265

    2 жыл бұрын

    Chris, how so?

  • @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    2 жыл бұрын

    They are multi millionaires circling the drain

  • @billy-joe4398

    @billy-joe4398

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594 Amen

  • @twatts1523
    @twatts15232 жыл бұрын

    Cornell is so lovely and inspirational. He and Glenn make a perfect duo. Glenn gives a concise, literal narrative which is rational and organized, slamming each point down with precision. Then Cornell takes it over and interprets it for us in artistic form. What a special treat!

  • @angelg8445

    @angelg8445

    2 жыл бұрын

    These two are not the same. Cornel isn’t a fascist apologist for one.

  • @stkate1093

    @stkate1093

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@angelg8445 he’s less honest is all.

  • @ross4

    @ross4

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed, the dynamic between those two was great. I think they agreed on most points, yet have such different ways of expressing themselves.

  • @europa_bambaataa

    @europa_bambaataa

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@angelg8445 were you able to watch a decent portion of this conversation? Cuz that's what it's all about, especially if you disagree with one or more of the participants. seeing them interface in a way that's more than cordial, but caring- that's the goal. (And still honest & forceful when needed.)

  • @RV56

    @RV56

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@angelg8445 oh please stop that divisive sectarian shit! Glenn is a decent man on the libertarian left with a lot of integrity and courage. He has done more to challenge fascism and the power elites than you ever will and you know it. Judith Butler and Cornel West obviously doesn't regard him as a fascist apologist, because they have brains.

  • @Jeff-wj4wy
    @Jeff-wj4wy2 жыл бұрын

    Glenn G nailing it w his intro

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agree!Cornel is brilliant as allways, but can't stand Judith Butler.There should've been woman of color,instead of her.Boring af,always has a need for deconstruction😴

  • @taf4939

    @taf4939

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@josiplilic3384 what’s wrong with deconstruction?

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@taf4939 nothing,but I prefer dialectics & much deconstruction bores me to death🤕

  • @adrijan6510

    @adrijan6510

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who? The guy that think Tucker Carlson is a socialist? That guy? Cant stand Butler. Cornel is great. But Glenn, Tulsi, Jimmy are going towards the right. As I said Glenn Called Tucker a socialist. Jimmy doesn't even create videos taking on republicans. Tulsi is talking Mitch McConnell points on Sean Hannity. This are not on the left anymore

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adrijan6510 It was f##in joke!I agree that Dore is cilckbaiting to much,to the right wing,but his critique of dnc,is clearly left one.Don't wanna comment on Tulsi Bush,but I'm gonna defend Glen.He did too much of good & assholes trash him left & right,so you need to do better than one(suspicious)quote!

  • @michaelthornton5360
    @michaelthornton53602 жыл бұрын

    The Identity/Perspective that is ALWAYS excluded from these types of discussions is that of the “Non College Educated” Working Class person!

  • @tomasandrew9354

    @tomasandrew9354

    2 жыл бұрын

    💯

  • @joanofarc33

    @joanofarc33

    2 жыл бұрын

    Because the Left looks on certain demographics like pets they have to care for and govern. And yes I actually do believe that.

  • @heatherdean101

    @heatherdean101

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@joanofarc33 bingo! I've been saying this for years. I always go back to Malcolm X's interviews about the "white liberal". So relevant these days. They govern and apostolatize people like pets. It's actually so condescending.

  • @ChollieD

    @ChollieD

    2 жыл бұрын

    The other perspective that is always excluded is the Native when the "native" is white, as in France. Judith was really down on the idea that French Natives have the right to question when their elites have a highly pro-immigration policy. Does she perhaps think that "French Natives" don't exist? Or does she imagine that everyone to whom the phrase occurs is a National Socialist?

  • @muslimmetalman

    @muslimmetalman

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ChollieD its the latter

  • @ks-lf6of
    @ks-lf6of2 жыл бұрын

    I have a v hard time summarizing Butler’s meandering and quibbling statements

  • @ks-lf6of

    @ks-lf6of

    2 жыл бұрын

    I shd say it is difficult to parse any meaning from them - she seems so in love w words as to dilute their meaning

  • @davidsaintjohn4248

    @davidsaintjohn4248

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ks-lf6of agreed. She spends a long time going on about the fact that there isn't a black woman in this 4 person discussion. You can say that, and say that perspective is missing but it's kind of a perfect example of the navel gazing nature of most of academia these days. She was upset that the others used tribalism and then went on to act like it was a slur. Dumb.

  • @davidsaintjohn4248

    @davidsaintjohn4248

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ks-lf6of looking into her work, she's directly responsible for a lot of the bad ideas that the woke love. Makes sense, just remember that and you'll get more from her 'input'

  • @sharifsalem

    @sharifsalem

    2 жыл бұрын

    Because it’s Jungian bullshit like JPeterson. Intentionally verbose and convoluted so as to obscure its lack of substance.

  • @merfymac

    @merfymac

    2 жыл бұрын

    Butler is part of the problem. She's playing out the debate as if it's a virtual game, a high-minded dinner table discourse that's comfortably removed from the real lived experience of billions of humans trapped between the Neoliberal Scylla and Identarian Charybdis. Inclusion is very easy to call for when it's an abstraction that doesn't include anything substantial and there's no personal consequences for failure.

  • @justinadams5446
    @justinadams54462 жыл бұрын

    Thank God Glenn was there. I love Cornell West despite anything I might disagree with him on, if for no other reason than his involvement in the Matrix. His high praise of Judith Butler, having never heard of her myself, is enough for me to respect her and give her more of a chance than I would otherwise. But still, I can't help but feel Glenn is the only one in the room that can actually extract himself from the identitarian worldview and really stand outside it. The other two seem to have their own identities bound up in discussing identitarianism. Also they're obviously professional, ivory-tower chin waggers, lol. Glenn is an in-the-trenches journalistic powerhouse. It's just inevitable he'd have a better grasp on what's really going on.

  • @Tom-rt6df

    @Tom-rt6df

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm sorry but what in the actual substance of what West or Butler actually discussed was from "the identitarian worldview"? I mean, West literally said he wants everyone included in the conversation about humanity that can add quality to that conversation, and explicitly said that you can speak to the problems humanity faces regardless of your race, class, or gender. So he was quite explicitly NOT coming from an "identitarian worldview". And, really, neither was Butler. Also, in terms of being " ivory-tower chin waggers" - Cornell West has consistently been at odds with the University administration in favor of his activism (see what recently happened to him at Harvard that prompted him to leave). He is a man of the people in the true sense of the term - has been arrested with them in protest for human rights. And, I'm sorry, but Butler is in the 1% of philosophers alive today. Her place in the university is solidified by her philosophical output. Greenwald is not in their league. That facts to not bear out that this is about elitism.

  • @lancewalker2595

    @lancewalker2595

    2 жыл бұрын

    Judith Butler is most famous for mainstreaming the notion that gender is a "social construct" and therefore socially pliable... essentially she is the architect of the contemporary gender ideology.

  • @lancewalker2595

    @lancewalker2595

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Tom-rt6df Butler did nothing of value which was not already put forward by Simone de Beauvoir in The Second Sex; her only unique contribution to philosophy has been to redefine existing ideas under newly invented and utterly convoluted jargon language... hang on, not even that is original, the Greek sophists were partial to her kind of intellectual banditry.

  • @Tom-rt6df

    @Tom-rt6df

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lancewalker2595 Do you have anything beyond your opinion to demonstrate this? Because otherwise, the value of your response is lacking in substance. Simone de Beauvoir, for example, did not inquire into the philosophy of embodiment in any way nearing the rigor of Bulter. And as far as redefining "existing ideas under newly invented and utterly convoluted jargon language" - the phenomenological and dialectical philosophy she had engaged in, especially in her earlier writing on "performative acts", for example, is quite clear. She is opening of the space to think of gender as a social phenomenon based on the repetition of acts. If there is any value to the critique you pose, it's not that she is working over "the Greek sophists", but rather some of the writings from sociology (like that of Erving Goffman") and anthropology (like that of Esther Newton), but she's updated their work to included both the historical currents within feminist politics, as well as putting them in dialog with Freud, Lacan, and psychoanalysis. And as far as her inventing new language, you should re-read your Aristotle - especially "the poetics" - as that is how thinking works in the first place.

  • @Tom-rt6df

    @Tom-rt6df

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@lancewalker2595 Except her notion of gender performativity is far more nuance than social constructionism (e.g. Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann), since she engages directly with the phenomenology of embodiment (e.g. Maurice Merleau-Ponty). You seem caught in a logical contradiction by claiming that, on the one had, she is too invested in unintelligible specialized jargon, and on the other, that she is too mainstream. You'd do better to forego the straw-man characterizations of her and instead critique her actual arguments.

  • @schticknic
    @schticknic2 жыл бұрын

    Would have loved to see Adolph Reed on this panel.

  • @BradfordHills

    @BradfordHills

    2 жыл бұрын

    Or Toure Reed.

  • @publicserviceco

    @publicserviceco

    2 жыл бұрын

    Or that other Adolph...

  • @trevorsmith8950

    @trevorsmith8950

    2 жыл бұрын

    Kick the fascist sympathizer Greenwald off and bring on Reed!

  • @jackdolphy8965

    @jackdolphy8965

    2 жыл бұрын

    Adolph Reed the class reductionist who doesn’t acknowledge a racist foundation to our systems. I don’t miss him one bit.

  • @DunkmeisterFresh

    @DunkmeisterFresh

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed, Reed kills it. I'll just throw Noam Chomsky in there too because why not.

  • @rubentala4762
    @rubentala47622 жыл бұрын

    Butler may be more deep and West more poetic, but Greenwald is a lot more politically concrete. Butler is always looking outside of universals and always confirms the postmodern Left politics of groups' resistance instead of a radical revolution. The right identity politics is the one made by the ones suffering multiple oppression. The identity politics made by other people IN THE NAME of those groups is the problem. Greenwald is absolutely right in saying that sometimes what appears to be race is really class. The neoliberals say support to Trump is about white racism and never speak about working class support. If Sanders would have been the Democrat candidate, Trump would never have been president. Wallstreet Democrats love political correctness because it denies and distracts from class warfare.

  • @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. When I wrote my first book: Towards a Critical Multicultural literacy, 1995 or so, multiculturalism was the fascists favorite target. The fascists are now opposing Critical Race theory. This is keeping with their attacks on bilingual education and true multiculturalism. When will people learn?

  • @SaintKimbo

    @SaintKimbo

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594 People HAVE learned. They have learned that the real 'Fascists' are people like YOU.

  • @DinoRamzi

    @DinoRamzi

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594 Liberals oppose critical therapy because it is a simplistic Neo-Marxist pile of hot 💩 that intends to subvert, undermine and provoke bloody revolution.

  • @Bisquick

    @Bisquick

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SaintKimbo Ok so like, read the original comment, then read the reply you made there. I point this out only to highlight the original comment's point, as it demonstrates a pretty perfect example of precisely the ideological confusion and reflexive reactionary consciousness cultivated by corporate media outlets and exactly why neoliberalism (complete global freedom for capital, boundaries and restrictions for labor) was rallied around by capital in the 70s (particularly revealing, see: Powell memo by supreme court justice Lewis Powell, reaction to the 60s counter-culture/civil rights movement, cementing tons of long-term investments into cultural institutions and "think-tanks" that prop up specifically - and you can read this in it, extremely densely laid out - a trust/acceptance of corporate power and the opposite towards the state, despite the fact that the state works at the behest of exactly that corporate power - "cui bono?" being the only question of politics, Reagan/Thatcher being neoliberalism's apotheosis). In other words, the capitalist class and its vectors of material (and consequently ideological) influence corporate media focuses on anything and everything _but_ class, and if such media is consumed consistently enough and its spread of information ubiquitous enough, over time it shapes how people perceive the world aka their "ontology". As some guy put it, _“The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas, i.e. the class which is the ruling material force of society, is at the same time its ruling intellectual force. The class which has the means of material production at its disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it. The ruling ideas are nothing more than the ideal expression of the dominant material relationships, the dominant material relationships grasped as ideas.”_ _"The bourgeoisie has torn away from the family relationship its sentimental veil and has reduced it to a mere money relationship."_ - Engels, grounding the grain of truth conservatives intuit - and more cynical operators appropriate for their own personal gain - but seem to merely react to, and why I'm mentioning this at all, to a material cause generated by the sort of "business ontology" cultivated from the way we organize _material_ reality ie the mode of production of capitalism. If that makes sense. _"The ultimate hidden truth of the world is that it is something we make and could just as easily make differently."_ - the late great David Graeber

  • @hgservices5572

    @hgservices5572

    Жыл бұрын

    Bro, if Bernie would have been the candidate , Trump would have won in Ana even bigger landslide. The party knew that, that is one of the reasons they undermined his campaign . Bernie was fine enough with it then, and evidently appears still fine enough with it now

  • @richardburt9812
    @richardburt98122 жыл бұрын

    Butler donated to Kamala Harris in 2020 the maximum amount of money one is allowed to donate. Terry Castle donated thousands to Hillary Clinton in 2020. Angela Davis endorsed Biden. Shocking and disappointing.

  • @daysjours

    @daysjours

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ugh. You told me all I need to know.

  • @ebflegg

    @ebflegg

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wow. What a condemnation of her politics!! She should be challenged on that. Shows the contrast between bullshit you talk and what you actually do. ‘Embodied sociality’ = support for the corrupt neo-liberal Harris who prosecuted a criminal justice system that incarcerated so many of the black poor. Just wow

  • @ainnochaim9450

    @ainnochaim9450

    2 жыл бұрын

    Shocking?

  • @emileconstance5851

    @emileconstance5851

    2 жыл бұрын

    And Cornell West, rather than giving money to a neoliberal candidate, actually participated in Sanders' campaign at a high level. Their actions say more than their words.

  • @ebflegg

    @ebflegg

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@emileconstance5851 Pity about his sycophantic adulation of Butler at the outset of the show

  • @thepeak78
    @thepeak782 жыл бұрын

    I'll just say one thing about this ... I'm glad Glenn was there.

  • @Natallou55

    @Natallou55

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed when he talks it's like being able to breathe again

  • @thepeak78

    @thepeak78

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Natallou55 haha! So true 👍🏻

  • @nightoftheworld

    @nightoftheworld

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. Judith was obnoxiously smitten with Cornell.. “Mmmm” after every other word, geez

  • @bryanmurray2723

    @bryanmurray2723

    2 жыл бұрын

    Haha...true but the others had their momments even if fleeting

  • @bn2870

    @bn2870

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nightoftheworld it sounded very unnatural. Best way to describe it from my perspective is that it was painfully dorky.

  • @CajunMomma
    @CajunMomma2 жыл бұрын

    This is how it’s done ! As a viewer the goal is not to agree with any or all of their ideas but to expose yourself to others’ ideas with the goal of broadening understanding, empathy and love for each other. Without this much needed discourse we are doomed as a civilization. Truly grateful to all participants

  • @sollux13

    @sollux13

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's just a really tall order for Judith Butler lol

  • @ivandafoe5451

    @ivandafoe5451

    2 жыл бұрын

    @fenry hord You've got it totally ass-backwards...how apt your username is.

  • @ivandafoe5451

    @ivandafoe5451

    2 жыл бұрын

    Both of your commenters here completely missed the point of Butler's position...that everyone should have "agency in society" and that no person is exempt from the influence of their own identity in shaping their politics.

  • @oraz.

    @oraz.

    2 жыл бұрын

    Feminists like Judith Butler have performative empathy, not real empathy. It's not possible since her ideology is based on speaking for the opposite sex and asserting they have everything better while claiming to be benevolent.

  • @drdisillusion8037

    @drdisillusion8037

    2 жыл бұрын

    @fenry hord it is not agency but dominance that Butler is looking to removing. Merit is an excuse to ignor out of balance power structures.

  • @sunrae3971
    @sunrae39712 жыл бұрын

    1:10:50 "if you stay woke forever you´re going to suffer from insomnia". C. West

  • @HaKohen
    @HaKohen2 жыл бұрын

    We are truly blessed to live in the same timeline as Prof. West. Truly a lovley person with so much energy and love.

  • @chuckecheese5251

    @chuckecheese5251

    2 жыл бұрын

    Freedom and fascism west stands for a wide range of principles

  • @bigdap100

    @bigdap100

    2 жыл бұрын

    he stands for trans also, that may very well kill his legacy.

  • @tanyalake9152

    @tanyalake9152

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bigdap100 - He does not actually stand for transgender people, and neither do any of you brainwashed "adults". But, some (if not most) are still quick to go to *sex sites* to watch transgender people. trans people (of color) have existed before pale-skinned Europeans invaded *Africa* and other *indigenous lands/people of color* around the world. Cornel West never mentioned/mentions that fact, regardless of where he speaks. He still "thinks" trans women are not women who can't be straight/heterosexual. Get the heck out of here.

  • @bigdap100

    @bigdap100

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tanyalake9152 that lifestyle is being taught to children, that’s wrong.

  • @tanyalake9152

    @tanyalake9152

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bigdap100 - Hey, NUMBSKULL. *Africa* is the *motherland* and *African* (trans) people have *ALREADY EXISTED CENTURIES AGO,* and were *HIGHLY REGARDED* as *THEIR TRUE GENDER* in *SOME AFRICAN TRIBES.* What the heck do you not comprehend?!!!!

  • @emileconstance5851
    @emileconstance58512 жыл бұрын

    The irony that when I saw an announcement for this debate posted on FB, the majority of the comments were asking, "Why is Greenwald being included?" Greenwald's comments were consistently the most relevant and lucid. I have respect for West and Butler, but they're very much saying the same things they were saying 30 years ago, w/ very little to say about our present moment (w/ very few exceptions). One of the pitfalls some academics fall into, is finding their "lane" and never really venturing beyond it--I will give West credit for also being an activist, and so at least putting his ideas/politics into practice.

  • @milhouse9003

    @milhouse9003

    2 жыл бұрын

    I also like what Butler was saying about the social interconnectivity between people & going beyond self-centered individualism.

  • @emileconstance5851

    @emileconstance5851

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@milhouse9003 Yes, I think those were her most compelling comments. I wish she had gone a bit further and pointed to the fact that ID politics often undermines solidarity/interconnectivity when there is an excessive emphasis on individual identities.

  • @thedelta72

    @thedelta72

    2 жыл бұрын

    Greenwald is a journalist which demands a different timeline doesn't it? I similarly have respect for Butler and Cornell, but the latter's platitudes wash out into basic humanism (which is delivered eloquently, peppered with bons mots, but doesn't seem up to the demands of the current moment) and Butler is basically delivering on her research profile, which was hugely influential, but is also part of the machinery of (cynical) cover that Greenwald is exposing. If you listen to most liberals today (and I consider myself one, though I hardly recognize it anymore) they think Greenwald is a fascist, which is hilarious, but also shows a huge disconnect even between, lets say, the 'fans' of Butler and Cornell, and the actual objects of their fandom. Butler and Cornell seem totally happy to break bread with Greenwald, not because they're holding their noses I suspect, but because they recognize him as sharing basic foundational views with them.

  • @bernie4268

    @bernie4268

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought Greenwald was terrific. I learnt a lot from what he said. And he called out Obama as a fake and failure too.

  • @ennotianen1191
    @ennotianen11912 жыл бұрын

    It seems that Cornel, Judith and Glenn all agree to varying degrees that these bigger philosophical questions such as justice and equality are universal and not particular. The big problem with identity politics, is that politicians and political systems hijack and weaponize meaningful struggles, and co--opt them cynically. Glenn is a journalist and he points out how these tactics are used to atomize solidarity by breaking up people into identity and interest groups making it harder for solidarity. He also is repeating much of what we hear in the "alternative" media discourse, where he is one of the most relevant voices. Cornell and Judith are philosophers who are asking the broader and deeper questions of what it means to have justice in a society, which is uphill from the base and ugly political systems Glenn is rightfully challenging. There isn't anything Glenn is saying that I don't think Cornell is and has been aware of for ages. Judith's mutliculturalism has a good moral framework but as she points out we are living in an anti-intellectual age, so when her ideas get filtered down to the political realm, they get condensed to political buzzwords and slogans which are used to emotionally manipulate people into voting in a direction or even supporting participating corporations. I think that the political issues we are facing are more immediate and Glenn does great work on this front, Cornell plays an important role in politics as well. I think that Judith is right that we need to broaden what justice and equality mean in our society and that we need to challenge the hierarchical nature, but as Cornell always points out, identity politics (as deployed by the Democratic Party for instance)doesn't seek to structurally change and dismantle the current neoliberal order, but makes room to absorb chosen people from given identity groups to signify "hey we're cool , we get the struggle, we're with you, now shut up and get back to work."

  • @rubentala4762

    @rubentala4762

    2 жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. I think Butler is arguing against some white cis-het male Marxist-Leninist Left that is not even relevant anymore. She doesn't realize how her defense of identity group resistance is hijacked by the neoliberal elites from above and mediocre middle class liberals from below. Greenwald is a lot more politically concrete and I think that saved this conversation. Even if West is deeper than Greenwald, I think his personal vibe of being kind to everybody took him (as many times before) to under-challenge Butler's views. Sometimes you can't reconcile oil and water. One you must let go. I think Butler's views have to go, no matter their well-intended origins. Her kind of deconstruction work had to be done in the past when we still had to dismantle the Old Left myths and upgrade feminism, but now that the elites have hijacked identity politics, that kind of discourse is only good for fueling tribalism. Oh and her politically correct objection of the word "tribalism" was disgusting.

  • @deebop3539

    @deebop3539

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m gay. Watch this again and see how Mr. West displaces blame.

  • @kevinjohnson9533

    @kevinjohnson9533

    2 жыл бұрын

    Butler and West are major intellectuals and scholars , Greenwald isn't. Butler and West are both authentically broadly Left, humanist and radical democratic with true commitments to overcoming oppression and domination. Greenwald is NOW on the Right. He is a frequent guest on Fox News and has defended Tucker Carlson whom he called a " socialist", white replacement and recently Rittenhouse. He has launched furious attacks on AOC and the Democratic Party. Greenwald is not Left Libertarian or Libertarian Socialist but a right wing defender of civil liberties . Unlike West and Butler he has no real interest in the triumph of the minority groups who make up the subjects of identity politics indeed these days he is most comfortably in the company of the radical right .

  • @keyboarddancers7751

    @keyboarddancers7751

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kevinjohnson9533 He's the "wrong sort" of gay person.

  • @fredericklehoux7160

    @fredericklehoux7160

    2 жыл бұрын

    You say we live in an anti-intellectual age when if we look closely at facts, intellectuals are never really popular outside of intellectual circles. A lot of what they're saying feel good and true, but imo there's always a good amount of echo chambers in those discussions. What educated and well read intellectuals think and talk between themselves is often disconnected from the actual reality at hand of the average person. You say "we need to broaden what justice and equality mean in our society and that we need to challenge the hierarchical nature" In what way do we do this realistically? Because it's not happening we see the opposite happening, more authoritarianism from both sides, more division on bullshit that doesn't really matter and not a lot of cooperation in subject that do matter. It feel to me that people like this panel and yourself think we can live outside of a hierarchy, when everything point toward to opposite. Electric cars were overdue and it took someone like Elon Musk to really make it happen fast pace and if he wasn't born, this company wouldn't have emerged out of a community of people, like almost everything in life. To this i can only repeat my argument, people like you and this panel project their own intellectualism on the average person thinking everyone as the ability to think on these levels but i'm afraid to say it's not true. Give 15 years to social media, platform that basically give public and widespread voice to anyone. You see the resurgence of disease because of anti-vaxxer hotspots, flat-earthers, crazy and obviously untrue conspiracy, social division on race and culture worst then when there were way more reason to be angry at racism then today. People who spread fake news and misinformation are banned from these platform angering people saying it's free speech and yeah we are losing right and freedom, because the average person is not that smart and willing to control their ego and impulses. You might try to refute this saying "oh but that's only because of powerful entity seeding distrust and division to make a profit and stay in power" true.. but it's also true that it would have no power if it didn't sell and people were not falling for it, it's still a question of hierarchy, people in power need to play fair and be honest because they'll find someone to sell their manipulative bullshit anyway. We need hierarchy, it's the only game in town, we just need the right one

  • @guybaehr8124
    @guybaehr81242 жыл бұрын

    I learned something from every one of the speakers and also disagreed on something from each. A good, stimulating conversation among four very smart people. Glad I could watch it.

  • @-Gorbi-

    @-Gorbi-

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well said. West is such a wonderful speaker and spirit but I sometimes don’t agree with his take. But this was such a solid interchange

  • @resolutionarybeing1885

    @resolutionarybeing1885

    2 ай бұрын

    ME TOO!!

  • @huburgalula4031
    @huburgalula40312 жыл бұрын

    Critchley: We need to go back to longer forms of discussion. Take your time to think and discuss. Me: *reads the comment section* yup.

  • @davecaraballo
    @davecaraballo2 жыл бұрын

    Glenn keeps it current and real. Straight forward common sense.

  • @adrijan6510

    @adrijan6510

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who? The guy that think Tucker Carlson is a socialist? That guy? Cant stand Butler. Cornel is great. But Glenn, Tulsi, Jimmy are going towards the right. As I said Glenn Called Tucker a socialist. Jimmy doesn't even create videos taking on republicans. Tulsi is talking Mitch McConnell points on Sean Hannity. This are not on the left anymore

  • @jessicasawyer8506
    @jessicasawyer85062 жыл бұрын

    Judith’s thoughts on mandates are atrocious

  • @sloburnjo
    @sloburnjo2 жыл бұрын

    The breadth of Dr. West's literary historical memory is phenomenal !

  • @superfuntimehappy

    @superfuntimehappy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. Toward the beginning however he declared Adorno's splinter reference to be a reparaphrasing of Matthew 10. It's Matthew 7:3, if memory serves.

  • @FJB_TheBigGuy

    @FJB_TheBigGuy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah his recollection is beyond 10 minutes which is much more than the average American...

  • @JeffPhilosopher

    @JeffPhilosopher

    7 ай бұрын

    Yet, to me, while he is knowledgeable and has a great vocabulary, he always seems so dramatically self-absorbed. Am I simply envious of his verbal gifts, or is his motive for communicating that he wants others to see him as a smart person?

  • @populisttrope9385
    @populisttrope93852 жыл бұрын

    I'm not read enough to follow everything that Professor West is talking about but I could listen to him all night.

  • @knsummers

    @knsummers

    2 жыл бұрын

    He's not really saying anything. He's just mesmerizing you with language.

  • @populisttrope9385

    @populisttrope9385

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@knsummers it's a shame you see it that way.

  • @sethparker3122

    @sethparker3122

    2 жыл бұрын

    Gotta agree with @knsummers here. West seems like a nice guy (at least as long as you agree with him) and is definitely well-read (at least in far left critical activist-researcher works). However, everything he says are aurally pleasing strings of positively-connoted words delivered with a cadence and tone that imply profundity so that a listener ends up feeling like one just heard something brilliant and deeply insightful when, at the bottom of it all, the actual raw value of everything said is meaningless feel-good platitudes. To be charitable, I think the stuff he says does actually have value at an individual level. All the "love thy neighbor" memes are actually good individual social prescriptions. The problem is this was a "politics" debate (literally in the name), so the actual question has to do with behaviors at the polity level. Memes are not useful here; we need the hard truths and realistic trade-offs discussion, not utopian bloviation. He has a few moments, like when he's taking about education, when he really breaks out into some meaningful good points, but a whole lot of what he says didn't seem to really as much actual meaningful content.

  • @chogokin666

    @chogokin666

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@populisttrope9385 it's a shame you're so credulous.

  • @emmettwalz

    @emmettwalz

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@chogokin666 also knsummers and Seth Parker...It may serve each of you to read some of the comments below of the many who were so deeply impressed, and moved by Dr. West's brilliant contribution to the discourse, and then, to ask yourself what they all could possibly have gleaned from Dr. West, as well as from Glenn Greenwald, such that they wrote such glowing "reviews" of their spoken words. That you could not understand Dr West's contribution should not be alarming, given the depth of his education, and the consequent depth of his understanding of our historical, and societal degenerate state. I believe it might serve you well to listen again, and see what understanding you might derive from his critique, especially if you go to a library and read some of the classic works to which he made repeated reference. His brilliance can not be grasped from the "heights" of a very limited literary, and philosophical background.

  • @hungrydave1977
    @hungrydave19772 жыл бұрын

    I like Cornel, he's a truly nice guy. But its Greenwald bringing the interesting points here.

  • @knsummers

    @knsummers

    2 жыл бұрын

    He's making the other two address reality.

  • @greenguerrilla

    @greenguerrilla

    2 жыл бұрын

    Was going to write the same comment. Cornel is inspirational and doesn't just sit in the ivory tower but is a real activist, so love him, but trust Glenn to bring the cold hard facts and good arguments.

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    Cornel held back,thanks to host & Judith,who I find boring,uninspiring,allways needs to deconstruct things😴

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    And she stole "death drive" term from Zizek via Lacan via Freud☝

  • @kipwonder2233

    @kipwonder2233

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not sure that's true. Judith Butler alluded to an oft overlooked truism. European Americans are exclusively responsible for the existence of identity politics in America. A current, but well worn, tactic is to engage in a vulnerability fantasy in which EuroAmericans, who constitute 70% of the U.S. population, are in danger...and need to be protected. Which is, in fact, identity politics.

  • @artymowski
    @artymowski2 жыл бұрын

    Cornel throws up alot of spaghetti, not much in essence

  • @stephenblobaum5506
    @stephenblobaum55062 жыл бұрын

    Don’t let the people who created the problem be in charge of the solution.

  • @nomadproductions2812
    @nomadproductions28122 жыл бұрын

    butler is really good at saying a bunch of buzzwords without actually saying anything of substance

  • @l.w.paradis2108

    @l.w.paradis2108

    2 жыл бұрын

    Money. Money flows to you when you get good at it.

  • @Verity_Truth666

    @Verity_Truth666

    2 жыл бұрын

    She's built her entire career on that.

  • @populisttrope9385
    @populisttrope93852 жыл бұрын

    Butlers rejection of personal liberty is stunning considering her life's long work for personal sexual/gender liberty.

  • @lsobrien

    @lsobrien

    2 жыл бұрын

    That is indeed a populist trope.

  • @Halman2112

    @Halman2112

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s exactly what I thought too with her extreme views gender identity.

  • @g7042

    @g7042

    2 жыл бұрын

    Especially since, in practice, everything about gender identity and queer theory that she wrote is exactly about that. Its like her theory is having the opposite reaction that she writes about LOL

  • @evanblackie7510

    @evanblackie7510

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@g7042 I'm new to Butler so may be off the mark but in my brief take there does seem a weird internal conflict of Butler essentialising identity in the way she talks about it here at the same time as breaking fundamental categories wide open in her work, such as in her view of the body and biological sex as socially constructed. So perhaps this is resolved in the personal, but then with the intersection of multiple categories we all occupy, where is the perspectival privilege in say, being LGBTQ I+ or black, that allows for collective correction of the institution. What does solidarity across a pluralistic, intersectional world look like and how would you prevent the reification of new and potentially arbitrary power structures?

  • @toobnoobify

    @toobnoobify

    2 жыл бұрын

    Surprised to hear someone say this. I only know Butler by name, but I've never encountered a gender activist who expressed anything but open disdain for individual liberty.

  • @VernonNickersonSCHOOLCOACH
    @VernonNickersonSCHOOLCOACH2 жыл бұрын

    Glenn Greenwald's closing is priceless. He is challenging and hopeful at the same time!👍🖖🤟💯🌈

  • @jasminecorreia1175

    @jasminecorreia1175

    2 жыл бұрын

    What do you have to say now in 21 century: it’s theater as an art of the show or performance possible? 😕

  • @bobwobbabble5151
    @bobwobbabble51512 жыл бұрын

    I love Dr. West and Glenn Greenwald for their courage to call out neoliberal identity politics. Judith adds nothing.

  • @agaperion
    @agaperion2 жыл бұрын

    Since everybody seems to want to redefine all our terms, I propose redefining "anti-intellectual" - i.e. As distinct from "anti-intellect". Because, IMO, it's not intellect that most people have a problem with but rather intellectuals who, it seems, believe they can not only tell others how they should live their lives and what they should think but indeed tell them what they do in fact think. Evidently, the concept of "projection" somehow became integrated into popular consciousness while flying right over the heads of society's ostensibly most intelligent people. Maybe if they occasionally looked up from their navels they'd notice that their absurd pontifications seldomly reflect the reality of the average person's _lived experience._

  • @fredwelf8650

    @fredwelf8650

    2 жыл бұрын

    Examples always help any argument; it occurred to me that it was the anti-intellectuals who tend to tell people what to think. At least you can argue with intellectuals and discuss evidence-based claims. The problem with any individual is whether they are basing their beliefs and assertions on their convictions or on evidence.

  • @publicserviceco

    @publicserviceco

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fredwelf8650 if evidence has convinced you, are your pursuant convictions then different from the evidence?

  • @fredwelf8650

    @fredwelf8650

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@publicserviceco The key distinction is between conviction or judgment and evidence-based decisions. The persons who make decisions based on evidence, that is, statistics, are distinct from those who hold convictions. Of course, at issue is the validity of the evidence, which includes the statistical analysis.

  • @SaintKimbo

    @SaintKimbo

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well said, Judith Butler are you listening?

  • @resolutionarybeing1885

    @resolutionarybeing1885

    2 ай бұрын

    Very glad you stated the last about "validity of the evidence", @@fredwelf8650

  • @Hist_da_Musica
    @Hist_da_Musica2 жыл бұрын

    Butler thinks "women of color" are a concept, not individuals. Glenn pointed this out very well, he wasn't confrontational but he was quite clear.

  • @jfahmy1

    @jfahmy1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes his push back on that was brilliant! And to Judith Butler no less.

  • @Quest4Truth247

    @Quest4Truth247

    2 жыл бұрын

    She doubles down and insists that only voices who have published or have thought about it are needed, but truth does not require credentials, only to be true. Discrediting opposition as clinging to power ignores the argument for the sake of the vessel.

  • @emileconstance5851
    @emileconstance58512 жыл бұрын

    I think one of the reasons Butler comes across as somewhat out of touch in this discussion, is that she's used to speaking w/ people who largely agree w/ her--i.e., people in gender studies classes in particular, and the humanities more generally (I know, because I've spent a lot of time in this world--it's where I first read Butler and West). Butler's ideas are generally affirmed in these circles, but aren't as persuasive, intuitive, or well-received outside of the fairly cloistered world of the humanities, where Butler is something of an academic celebrity. I love the humanities, and have found real meaning studying the humanities, but admittedly its insularity can be a real problem; and despite the emphasis on "diversity," there is too often a lack of diversity of ideas, and a noticeable dearth of original thought. Edit: I would be remiss if I didn't point out that there is great value in studying the humanities, esp. the opportunity to immerse oneself in a topic--be it the French Revolution or Song Dynasty painting, etc.--as opposed to the generally more cursory knowledge one typically acquires via digital/online learning. I think it's important to point this out given the pervasiveness of anti-academic sentiments, which I wasn't intending to add to by pointing out some of the shortcomings of academia or the humanities in the 21st century.

  • @610vegas

    @610vegas

    2 жыл бұрын

    I concur.

  • @emileconstance5851

    @emileconstance5851

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Historylover Yes, I agree. Butler was writing her most influential books--"Gender Trouble" and "Bodies That Matter," at a time when there was a great deal of emphasis on language and the linguistic/social construction of reality, at least in philosophy and the humanities. This emphasis was taken to an extreme, such that the material world became something of an afterthought. I think gender studies would do well to look more at science, and in particular biology/genetics, but it seems that hasn't happened because there's very little interaction between the humanities and the sciences, regrettably. Hard to see how one can write about gender/sex authoritatively w/out some reference to science/biology.

  • @g7042

    @g7042

    2 жыл бұрын

    As someone in a social science major, this is true. She is hevealy influence in the thmes of gender and sexuality, to the point that even if someone disagrees with the theory or view it differently, it can look bad. I read gender troubles and bodies that matter, and its so clear that she comes from a philosophical backgrounds, her things is "the world of ideias" "what should be" and "what can be" and rarely "what it is", the social reality is very lacking I would say. That why for me her theory does not come easy, its really hard talking about sexuality and gender without a material reality analysis, in my opinion.

  • @fredwelf8650

    @fredwelf8650

    2 жыл бұрын

    Butler holds the position that gender is performative, that is, it is not what you supposedly are as a set of chromosomes or a particular observable genital, but what you do, what actions you take, particularly with regard to speech. This is an important view to understand in order to avoid discriminating against others on the basis of their inscribed identity in contrast to their agency.

  • @emileconstance5851

    @emileconstance5851

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Historylover Yes, I agree that gender is to a large extent socially constructed, but to what extent is open to debate--is it %100 socially constructed or is biology also determinative to a degree, and if so, to what degree? I'm not sure, myself. Where I have more of a disagreement w/ Butler, is over her contention that not merely gender, but also sex is socially constructed, a view she elaborates in "Bodies That Matter." Admittedly, it's been a while since I've read this book, and Butler's prose isn't known for its clarity, but that seemed to be one of the key arguments she was making.

  • @laurasalo6160
    @laurasalo61602 жыл бұрын

    @~2:10:00 Yes, exactly!! Thank you Glenn.

  • @fresciacarrasco2669
    @fresciacarrasco26692 жыл бұрын

    Thank you all for this open conversation yes more connectedness courage hope and laugther

  • @sollux13
    @sollux132 жыл бұрын

    Judith listing political ideology based on the axis of identity and then asking if it's identity politics should be a ringtone. It's this lack of self awareness that alienates the academic elite

  • @janosmarothy5409

    @janosmarothy5409

    2 жыл бұрын

    Did you actually listen though? Are wheelchair ramps identity politics, yes or no?

  • @FinneySP

    @FinneySP

    2 жыл бұрын

    Being in that setting myself you can’t underestimate the career climbing herd mentality that happens. I really think the internet and social media naturally promoting the most controversial and salacious is the crux of what moved people like her so high up.

  • @FinneySP

    @FinneySP

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@janosmarothy5409 look at your reflex with how you respond. Immediate dishonest strawmanning. That doesn’t tell you enough about how you we’re educated?

  • @janosmarothy5409

    @janosmarothy5409

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@FinneySP ironically, it says more about your own reactive approach, along with a lack of basic reading/listening comprehension as I was literally repeating a remark she made in the video

  • @FinneySP

    @FinneySP

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@janosmarothy5409 it’s insane how unaware you are. You went disrespectful immediately and can’t even see it. Again that doesn’t give you a hint?

  • @europa_bambaataa
    @europa_bambaataa2 жыл бұрын

    surprised one major division in society they didn't touch on was the age/ generation disparities within the political landscape.

  • @TCt83067695

    @TCt83067695

    2 жыл бұрын

    Meh young people don't vote so their concerns can be dismissed. And this is typical of all generations actually, before I start my zoomers and millenials bashing 😂

  • @wcstrawberryfields8011

    @wcstrawberryfields8011

    2 жыл бұрын

    The "Octogenocracy" is SACRED. Fakk Boomerz everywhere.

  • @AntonDoesMusic
    @AntonDoesMusic2 жыл бұрын

    I really tried to give Judith Butler a fair shot, but it seems like over and over it takes her 10 minutes and 10,000 words to say, "We should talk more about stuff that we're not usually talking about." and she never really actually talks about anything.

  • @lindaVanVranken

    @lindaVanVranken

    2 ай бұрын

    This is VP Harris' s mentor

  • @themilitantvegan2515
    @themilitantvegan25152 жыл бұрын

    Glenn always on point

  • @davidsaintjohn4248

    @davidsaintjohn4248

    2 жыл бұрын

    Someone needs to timestamp all of GG, JB is a lot to Wade through

  • @Winston-1984

    @Winston-1984

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@davidsaintjohn4248 She talks a lot but doesn't say very much.

  • @l.w.paradis2108

    @l.w.paradis2108

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@davidsaintjohn4248 36:25 1:03:37 1:22:33 1:33:50 1:55:03 2:17:58 2:23:38

  • @adrijan6510

    @adrijan6510

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who? The guy that think Tucker Carlson is a socialist? That guy? Cant stand Butler. Cornel is great. But Glenn, Tulsi, Jimmy are going towards the right. As I said Glenn Called Tucker a socialist. Jimmy doesn't even create videos taking on republicans. Tulsi is talking Mitch McConnell points on Sean Hannity. This are not on the left anymore

  • @l.w.paradis2108

    @l.w.paradis2108

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adrijan6510 Glenn just addressed those very criticisms, in a video on his own platform. Feel free to disbelieve him, of course. Your mistrust may be well founded. But you don't get to claim that he didn't. Use slogans at your own peril: no one is required to give credence to you, either.

  • @vchavez75
    @vchavez752 жыл бұрын

    Glenn Greenwald keeps it clear and real...

  • @kayleavanvliet5292
    @kayleavanvliet52922 жыл бұрын

    I say this as someone who has always viewed Judith Butler’s work on language as profound and seminal in terms of how it is used and how it can be interpreted - listening to her during this whole thing was downright painful. She is so stuck in her ideology and her arrogant insistence that her worldview is the right one and that anyone who doesn’t agree is evil that she is incapable of perceiving how she herself is an agent of the very evil that she claims to be against. Then she also all but admits that “diversity” is only important if the “diverse” people parrot exactly what she believes. Cornel West and Glen Greenwald were way more intellectually honest.

  • @bobgolden939

    @bobgolden939

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agree totally, except that Cornell did not make a single point worth remembering. He is literally insane, as lost in his circus car of conflicting ideas as Joe Biden himself. I have no idea what cornel means,ever, no matter how many times I rewind. He is always one sentence fragment and misplaced quote away from unwinding whatever semi thought he just blurted out.

  • @CharlieRabbit87

    @CharlieRabbit87

    2 жыл бұрын

    She’s a riddler. She spins you around until you don’t know which way is up. Her writing is very difficult to comprehend, & that’s intentional. I don’t want to entirely put her down… I expect people are able to make their own novel, perhaps fruitful, connections reading her, & I expect that’s rewarding for young, intelligent people. But don’t be fooled - there’s nothing there.

  • @CharlieRabbit87

    @CharlieRabbit87

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@malortfink Tbf she dismantles everything to the extent that it can be profound for the individual, on a personal level - the connections you decide to see. I dislike her, personally.

  • @Paskanjauhaja1

    @Paskanjauhaja1

    4 ай бұрын

    I agree. I've really tried to understand Butler's thinking and I appreciate her a lot, but this was at times almost painful to watch.

  • @fsmilejerairlellwoll3173
    @fsmilejerairlellwoll31732 жыл бұрын

    Most of this debate is two people on the same side talking to each other and agreeing with each other lol.

  • @chrisi8914

    @chrisi8914

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol, I was thinking the same thing. Far from profound.

  • @EclecticSceptic
    @EclecticSceptic2 жыл бұрын

    I'm an hour in, just want to say thanks for the upload. Brilliant discussion, sorely needed.

  • @TH-nx9vf
    @TH-nx9vf2 жыл бұрын

    Disappointing but not surprising to see a debate by philosophers about identity that doesn't interrogate the notion of identity itself. The most ancient philosophies of Greece and India held identity to be an illusion, with the task before the aspirant to truth being to overcome the primary illusions of self and world. Modern philosophy is haunted by the fact that it can't ultimately establish anything, so it gives up being deep in exchange for being the cleverest fool in the room. Ancient systems of enquiry took this non-establishment as their basis, it was a strength rather than a weakness, and from them we get the rich spiritual traditions of India and China and the mystery schools of the near East which, during their decline, produced the great monotheistic religions in which the primordial non-established base was deified. The problems under discussion in this debate can't be resolved without a deeply personal and thoroughgoing enquiry into the attachments which consitute the bundle of identities which we insist define us - and that enquiry ultimately leads to the dissolution of all notions of identity except the primordial identity of all apparent phenomena with each other.

  • @theduce3506

    @theduce3506

    2 жыл бұрын

    " Ancient systems of enquiry took this non-establishment as their basis, it was a strength rather than a weakness, and from them we get the rich spiritual traditions of India and China and the mystery schools of the near East which, during their decline, produced the great monotheistic religions in which the primordial non-established base was deified". That's the catch right, the greatest catch of all, catch 22. Both are self evident in the societies in which they arose as to the failure in any meaningful way to addressee the "Moral imperative" of each and in fact have been used to crush said imperative. West comes closest as does Hedges in there messaging of getting closer to the truth in today's world of a path forward. Grennwald is one of the best at explaining that world. I'm not familiar enough at all to speak to Butler but she certainly brought something to the table, I'm just not sure if it was palatable.

  • @LindaPurl1
    @LindaPurl12 жыл бұрын

    A chewy, inspirational conversation. Bravo!

  • @HolbergPrize
    @HolbergPrize2 жыл бұрын

    If you enjoyed this, check out our previous Holberg Debates too: holbergprisen.no/en/en/holberg-prize/holberg-debate

  • @faramarzkashigari8350

    @faramarzkashigari8350

    2 жыл бұрын

    7⑦⑦

  • @funsun9115

    @funsun9115

    2 жыл бұрын

    it took about 15 minutes before you got the talk underway. speed it up for crying out loud. wouldn't you rather have had 15 minutes more of discussion?

  • @FJB_TheBigGuy

    @FJB_TheBigGuy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Doesn't a debate normally require equal amounts of individuals with opposing viewpoints...😐😏

  • @MrShbbz

    @MrShbbz

    2 жыл бұрын

    I cannot but notice how selfcentered these people are, how deeply unintelectual their attitude is, the whole world is suffering, incredibly, and all these people come up with is "the importance of the marginal" ... all these people do its deepen the divisions, and make the matter even worse, on all accounts. These people are the true apologets of the current craz capitalism.

  • @joshknightfall
    @joshknightfall2 жыл бұрын

    I love Cornell. He calls everyone "brother" and "sister" and just by doing so, I feel he's my brother.

  • @kpmurphy2738
    @kpmurphy27382 жыл бұрын

    At the 1:25:20 mark, Greenwald says it all. The media defines diversity and you do not fit in that definition, then too bad for you.

  • @churchofthesacreddrift3663
    @churchofthesacreddrift36632 жыл бұрын

    I hope that Judith Butler learned something from her former student. Glenn brought it.

  • @Mustafa-bd3db
    @Mustafa-bd3db2 жыл бұрын

    I want to see more debates like this one!

  • @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    2 жыл бұрын

    This was not a debate it was a learning conversation

  • @BensXpresso
    @BensXpresso2 жыл бұрын

    Enjoyed watching this debate 🙌🏽.

  • @randnotizbleistift7985
    @randnotizbleistift79852 жыл бұрын

    Wow, how relieving it is to listen to this conversation. Rare enough these days to find people listening to each other while also sharing ideas about sensitive topics. Bliss!

  • @skinnie2838

    @skinnie2838

    4 ай бұрын

    These people are race grifters. They make money selling fear off skin color and sexuality to low iq individuals and you fall for it every time.

  • @resolutionarybeing1885

    @resolutionarybeing1885

    2 ай бұрын

    MMMMMMMMMmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm! YES!

  • @dfwherbie8814
    @dfwherbie88142 жыл бұрын

    It’s interesting watching Cornel West and Judith Butler go back and forth.

  • @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    2 жыл бұрын

    Like watching paint dry, or ping pong

  • @sekimichy
    @sekimichy Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for so deeply thoughtful conversation about the crucial issues in our global society now!

  • @ChollieD
    @ChollieD2 жыл бұрын

    What a great event! Tusen takk til Holbergutvalget for å sette sammen dette. (A thousand thanks to the Holberg Prize Board for putting this together.)

  • @jonjonson4269
    @jonjonson42692 жыл бұрын

    I consider mr Greenwald one the most courageous and truthful journalist in the world he has more balls than all thelegacy media combined I hope to meet you sometime. You are one of my heroes you have taught me so much Thank for believing in individual rights.May God bless and keep in the palms of hands.

  • @condelcos5734

    @condelcos5734

    8 ай бұрын

    the most couragous so nice yet no one fools, Cornel must be the most pleasant academic since Fredrick Douglas

  • @rickp354
    @rickp3542 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like Judith can't grasp why countries have borders 🙄

  • @rodrigotoscano7533
    @rodrigotoscano75332 жыл бұрын

    Inspiring conversation. Thank you so much.

  • @zachowen728
    @zachowen7282 жыл бұрын

    Cornel thank you 4 being one of the few public intellectuals that I can learn something everytime I hear speak, draw inspiration from everything I hear speak. Your more than true to tradition. You teach it and are a signpost to other contemporary and historical figures

  • @jkscout

    @jkscout

    2 жыл бұрын

    What did you learn?

  • @jasonhowell6382

    @jasonhowell6382

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who are the others?

  • @joanofarc33
    @joanofarc332 жыл бұрын

    When she says that when we call something ‘identity politics’ its a label to dismiss so we don’t have to talk about it anymore. Well that is exactly how she uses ‘whiteness’, ‘white supremacy’ and ‘racist.’ Its a term to dismiss and malign without the slightest discussion of what we are talking about.

  • @love_4_life865

    @love_4_life865

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bingo! I cannot stomach the amount of narcissism that is entrenched amongst some of these public figures. They preach against the very behaviors they practice and it’s mind blowing how it goes over people’s heads?!

  • @TCt83067695

    @TCt83067695

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't recall her using the word racist and I think she was very clear about her definition of white supremacy, giving examples like the French politician. She also seemed to agree with Glenn's point about the neoliberal policies that give rise to such demagogues and allow the masses to be fooled by thinking if you get hijabi ladies or black men off the streets of Paris then all the economic strife will dissapate. Surely I hope we're all in agreement that demagogues should be dismissed as unserious ppl.

  • @tonyplow9882
    @tonyplow98822 жыл бұрын

    Glenn is such an important voice… the fact that some people hate him for occasionally appearing on tucker Carlson is just insane to me.

  • @andjanice71

    @andjanice71

    2 жыл бұрын

    They don't actually hate him for going on tucker Carlson. They hate him for speaking truth. They just use tucker Carlson as an excuse because they can't face reality, and want to keep their illusions.

  • @milhouse9003

    @milhouse9003

    2 жыл бұрын

    I like him better on jimmy dore

  • @emileconstance5851

    @emileconstance5851

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@andjanice71 Agreed, I think a lot of people turned on Greenwald when he began debunking the Trump-Russia conspiracy--they wanted to cling to this narrative, so they went after Greenwald when he pointed out, repeatedly, that this narrative was unsupported by evidence. So yes, it's not about going on Tucker Carlson.

  • @cmo5150

    @cmo5150

    2 жыл бұрын

    y'all sound like cultists. Glenn has become a grifting reactionary, feeding off the income and attention he receives from the very impressionable proto-facist contingency in the West. Prove me wrong

  • @tonyplow9882

    @tonyplow9882

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cmo5150 maybe prove yourself right first? 🤷‍♂️

  • @chrisi8914
    @chrisi89142 жыл бұрын

    Glenn Greenwald is the best on the panel because he says the most with the least words.

  • @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    @dannyweilthereisnorussiaga6594

    2 жыл бұрын

    He is not an academic.

  • @aqueen3122
    @aqueen31222 жыл бұрын

    West looks about as relaxed in demeanour as Butler appears anxious.

  • @fredantonovich5420

    @fredantonovich5420

    2 жыл бұрын

    West is always just vibin’

  • @buddinganarchist
    @buddinganarchist2 жыл бұрын

    Wish Glenn would talk like this more often.

  • @MrKietzkidz
    @MrKietzkidz2 жыл бұрын

    An exclusive privileged group of people talking about inclusivity. A "person of working classedness" might have added a perspective about Identity Politics: how in the hands of capitalists it becomes a tool of disciplining the workforce. Learn how to use a complex language code that is constantly being updated - or you're out! Identity politics thus becomes a tool of oppression and is experienced as such. That's why you see the working class turning against the political left.

  • @brunosm.l2267

    @brunosm.l2267

    2 жыл бұрын

    @James Williams hate people looking at all through the privilege lens. Underminds what the problem of privilege is all about.

  • @brunosm.l2267

    @brunosm.l2267

    2 жыл бұрын

    made the previous comment just having read the starting of your comment. Still mantain what I said, but obviously agree that privileged people imposing his view in unpriviliged ones is something despicable.

  • @guwopman3503

    @guwopman3503

    Ай бұрын

    Your view of the working class is flawed, which in turn makes your argument flawed. The working class includes people who support or are the reasons for “complex language code that is constantly being updated.” Plenty of the working class engage in identity and, in turn, identity politics. To say identity politics as a blanket statement IS a tool of capitalist oppression as opposed to identity politics as a blanket statement CAN become a tool of capitalist oppression is dishonest. Anything and everything can be used as a tool of capitalist oppression. That itself does not mean anything and everything inherently IS a tool. Also, plenty of people in the working class are turning TOWARDS the political left.

  • @ajj1204
    @ajj12042 жыл бұрын

    Great Thinkers and excellent conversation. Thanks

  • @samcopeland3155
    @samcopeland31552 жыл бұрын

    The Roast of Judith Butler

  • @condelcos5734

    @condelcos5734

    8 ай бұрын

    like amy from democracy now - "I can't read that, trump can screw he he wants if he pays" we are not a morality panel. He shamed Milana but he sure played them, Cohen was the star wiitness and fogot Trump used his own funds (and never signed anything) what did Cohen get for that criminal fact? Trump knew the score before the DOJ whom cut cohen a deal. I dont believe stormy death threat story. She got her pay day why come back to be used as fodder, sex aint an impeachablee crime. It was just dumb and he wwas busted to his family but he paid out of his own funds and new all along. Great DOJ - Mr avenatti was a nice fellow - ripping off a parapalygic/stormy/nike......and he claims he was set up by Trump. Good set up!

  • @mclarenf2165
    @mclarenf21652 жыл бұрын

    Intellectual snobbery on display from the 2 philosophers. Dismissal on who speaks for what group of people without even the tiniest of acknowledgement they, themselves represent a fringe position. Glenn the only one dealing with the reality of the moment we're all living through.

  • @johngalt3434
    @johngalt34342 жыл бұрын

    Notice how Butler and West never really get to specifics. They never name specific policies or programs they would like to see created in their ideal world. Gee I wonder why.

  • @Halman2112

    @Halman2112

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also neither (with the exception of the KKK) talk about which groups cause marginalization. They just lazily dismiss everything as white supremacy.

  • @johngalt3434

    @johngalt3434

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Halman2112 Exactly. They know what they're doing. It's sophistry and manipulation by using emotional language like that.

  • @GamingBlake2002

    @GamingBlake2002

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm glad I'm not the only one noticing that. West seems to reference the past a lot more than he references the present, and when he does talk about the present he almost never says anything specific. We apparently operate under white supremacy and patriarchy despite the fact that male suicides and drug abuse are significantly more common and not at all dealt with, females have overtaken men in higher education by a considerable margin, feminist thought is largely the status quo, we have affirmative action programs out the ass, almost every corporation is instituting diversity boards, so on and so forth. He seems strangely disconnected from the real world for someone who appears so worldly.

  • @johngalt3434

    @johngalt3434

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@GamingBlake2002 Couldn't agree more.

  • @stevenp9209

    @stevenp9209

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@GamingBlake2002 The days of Hitchens are long over, he would probably be center these days. Modern Leftists fail to fulfill the onus of proving their theories about what's best for progress are going to work, it's based in sophistry and other fallacious thought, This is why you see so many getting slaughtered in debates more than ever. They are trying to argue for the ideal, utopian, unproven. And of course demonizing the past, which can't defend itself rather than point out tangible dysfunctions in the present, that are consistently and empirically true.

  • @ohjein
    @ohjein2 жыл бұрын

    I'm 50/50 on Butler. She makes good points (eg. tribal vs zivilized), but also has a tendency to avoid arguments (vs Greenwald on Covid or on diversity) and makes herself comfortable in abstractions.

  • @zacboyles1396

    @zacboyles1396

    2 жыл бұрын

    She sounds so incredibly out of touch. The best thing about her is she seemed willing to honestly listen. It just makes me wonder what she has been doing for information lately, she sounds like someone listening intently to Cuomo, oblivious to everything going on around her. If she’d listened to even one interview of the fda advisory board members, or really any other scientific bureaucrat actually voting to approve aspects of these policies she would know that none of them approve of masks and are deeply concerned with how policies in general are being rolled out. She seems very secure in that neoliberal protective bubble.

  • @CorazonDeCristoCano

    @CorazonDeCristoCano

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good point. Butler's abstract collectivist/anti-individualist frame crumbled in this exchange when it ran up against Greenwald's concrete, real-world, grounded frame. There's a meta-drama that played out in this conversation that Greenwald pointed out within the discussion: the disjuncture between those in academia and those in the real world which manifests most grotesquely when those in academia remain untouched while those in the working class have to suffer the economic consequences of implementing their ideas. In short, Butler is so divorced from reality that I don't think she has ever been held accountable to prove that her theoretical framework (much less her policy prescription) works. Being an engineer, myself, my theories about how to proceed with solving a problem are constantly running up against this little thing called reality. If my theory is true, it's born out in the fact that my solution works as intended. If my theory is false, then whatever I'm designing will fail, sometimes catastrophically. No matter how artfully articulate you are, you can't word salad your way through a failed design like so many academics can with a failed theory. If my designs fail often enough, then I'm out of a job, so I'm forced to have my ideas conform to reality. With there being an abstract notion and a concrete notion of integrity, my work has to have integrity and soundness in both senses of the word. Academics never have to contend with reality in that way.

  • @defenderofwisdom

    @defenderofwisdom

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like a philosopher.

  • @DEMcouver

    @DEMcouver

    2 жыл бұрын

    She needs longer trousers, though.

  • @madeofsalt4891

    @madeofsalt4891

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Andreth Who and why are they trying to cancel Butler? :(

  • @zekeybeats2927
    @zekeybeats29272 жыл бұрын

    It is an honour to hear you speak brother west. I especially respect the discourse between prof butler and dr west. He truly is a man of such great spirit, I do not think there is someone of opposing political views that speaks with him that doesn’t feel absolute surrender in the face of enlightenment, because he always seems to embody the same. He is such a refreshing presence in a world full of broken people, but specifically to hear these words made with such emotion, such hope and such clarity in the black community, he is certainly an inspiration and an honour to all of the ancestors that came before him. A member of my family was a part of the political party under Jamaican independence, where he has factually stated in another talk about the niggerization of black people in America was much worse in Jamaica. In Jamaica rebellion was always alive in political discourse. The drivers towards a society without segregation had been seeded since our people were brought there, and many ancestors of slavery(my great great grandparents I would have to assume were a part of this system, although in what capacity I don’t know yet) like my grandmother had the opportunity to integrate into the labour force. A large portion of my family from Jamaica were teachers, professors, and politicians that made direct change to the education system reforms Jamaica experienced early in its independence. Only through realizing the impact both my grandfather and great uncle had for the potential outcomes for marginalized people as a whole both in the Carribean and Canada where we migrated gives me so much pride for my history, and I am so proud to see men like cornel that embody the spirit and very essence my grandfather did. I guess, what I am trying to get at, is that both as black people and systemically oppreSsed humans as a whole, America’s black population desperately need the same flame of spirit and indomitable spirit of rebellion as opposed to the slow Acceptance of the circumstances that allow our potential to be raped from us. And as a whole, globally humans need to unite and begin to “look up”. Capitalism will oppress everything in its way that does not drive the clown car. It’s ridiculous how powerless we’ve been made to feel, when we have so many examples of success in revolution. Humans used to inherently fight for better, to destroy systems that were unjust and stand for the other regardless of their identity. Indoctrination under capitalism has been horrible to us all. Personally, the truth in the words dr west speaks about the niggerization of American blacks in context of my ancestors country, where certainly issues existed of racism, I can’t help but feel the overwhelming, tragic truth in those words when I compare even the early Canadian experience to the United States. Thank you for your time all speakers, and thank you dearly mr west for your dedication to exemplifying the soul of blacks lost and attempting to uncover it in us.

  • @saramarie_creates6046
    @saramarie_creates60462 жыл бұрын

    This was so wonderful! There were so many open questions. Cornell West forever has my heart.

  • @Milanvaneijk

    @Milanvaneijk

    2 жыл бұрын

    I know right. It is amazing to me there are still some that dislike Brother West. That seems impossible to me. The man is such a beautiful human being. How anyone can dislike him is beyond me.

  • @Milanvaneijk

    @Milanvaneijk

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Mia Cerro do tell? :)

  • @AndrewHorezga

    @AndrewHorezga

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Milanvaneijk he is proffering failed ideas...shame could be so much more.

  • @Milanvaneijk

    @Milanvaneijk

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@AndrewHorezga that is way too vague

  • @AndrewHorezga

    @AndrewHorezga

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Milanvaneijk .. Just like West....muh honesty, muh integrity, muh babbling on and on and never contributing anything new of value. You can pay enough $ to get a PhD in any topic....that's how it works ....but all these folks are low level midwits with nothing to do but fill time.

  • @daveBit15
    @daveBit152 жыл бұрын

    "There are some ideas so absurd that only an intellectual could believe them." -George Orwell

  • @Dominicanbulk

    @Dominicanbulk

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its so intellectual that its destructive to society.

  • @TheSupahJaws

    @TheSupahJaws

    2 жыл бұрын

    In your opinion, what are some of these ideas?

  • @zacharypayne4080

    @zacharypayne4080

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ty

  • @daveBit15

    @daveBit15

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TheSupahJaws The whole gender debate is a good example. The specific target of Orwell's quote was the nationalist totalitarian state, widely defended by intellectuals in England, and all around the world.

  • @goodpollutionofficial

    @goodpollutionofficial

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its sad and hilarious that so many reactionary ppl say they hate the "woke" or "identity politics" when 99% of the time it just means they hate trans people. Usually because they have a completely misinformed idea of what trans people are like in real life and let their "independent critical thinking skills" get mislead by the ongoing narrative that all trans ppl are elite academic pro cancel culture "evil" twitter people.

  • @robayohannes5331
    @robayohannes53312 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this. I'm not sure how much of it I grasped. I'm sure I'll listen to it again. It was interesting enough that I didn't realize I've spent 2.5 hrs listening to your conversations. It sounded to me more like a conversation than a debate. I think that is a good thing.

  • @MichaelWilson-ee8zx
    @MichaelWilson-ee8zx2 жыл бұрын

    As a white man living in SE Asia, I would like to suggest to Judith Butler and all her ilk that ignoring the realities- political, economic and social- of the 75% of humanity that lives outside what she and all 'identity politics' vendors consider the world is a pretty potent expression of white supremacy in itself. Almost 6 billion living, breathing humans are neither white nor live in nations dominated by white cultures. To practitioners of the parochial identity politics that Butler makes a living promoting, those 6 billion people simply don't exist until they show up as migrants or refugees in her white world, where Butler and her ilk magically turn these representatives of the majority of humanity into "racialized minorities" that they can point to when they apply for grants and publish their books and articles calling for 'justice'.

  • @jkscout

    @jkscout

    2 жыл бұрын

    Amen.

  • @TheWhitehiker

    @TheWhitehiker

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jkscout Forgive her, she's arrogant, imitative, and overrated.

  • @davuaable

    @davuaable

    2 жыл бұрын

    No mate. Her reference to Gilroy and Hall is precisely about how capitalism is not only a relation between those who own the means of production and those who don't but between groups of people. In this relation, one of hierarchy, the global south that you are defending here is stratified at the bottom. That is the 'identity politics' she has often talked about, against white supremacy. White supremacy is not merely a local issue but a global one.

  • @TheWhitehiker

    @TheWhitehiker

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@davuaable you're out of date with your 'white supremacy' world.

  • @MichaelWilson-ee8zx

    @MichaelWilson-ee8zx

    2 жыл бұрын

    The jejune notion that capitalism is just an aspect-emanation-expression of "white supremacy" would be hilarious if it weren't such a damagingly obtuse bit of racist, dare I say "white supremacist", nonsense. The global south has its middle classes and, shockingly to so many white people of David's apparent persuasion, its capitalists too. Yes, capitalism first emerged in the lands of the white folk, and yes it spread its tentacles across the globe when it reached what Lenin mistakenly assumed was its "highest stage". But origin stories are not analyses, and anyone who still tries to hold "whiteness" responsible for the depredations of capitalism needs to wake up as opposed to get woke.

  • @karinak09
    @karinak092 жыл бұрын

    West and Butler seem incapable of directly responding to Greenwald’s points. I like West though. He makes good points. Butler is simply the queen of obfuscation

  • @alextinsley9117
    @alextinsley91172 жыл бұрын

    Justice means equality, not equity.

  • @guwopman3503

    @guwopman3503

    Ай бұрын

    Equity is a necessary step to achieve equality. So, if justice means equality, justice depends on equity on the pathway to itself.

  • @alextinsley9117

    @alextinsley9117

    Ай бұрын

    @@guwopman3503 Sorry, but that is categorically untrue, by definition. It's also a childish and naive perception of reality, one that's going to keep you shaking your fist and whining your life away vs. living it.

  • @guwopman3503

    @guwopman3503

    Ай бұрын

    @@alextinsley9117 ramps in public spaces are useless if we choose to allow everyone to have equal access to stairs, right? Someone with a minor headache should take precedence in the ER over someone with a gunshot wound because they arrived after the headache patient, right? You are projecting so much. You’re assuming I’m “shaking my fist” as opposed to living my life because I believe equity is necessary to achieve equality, really? You have to imagine that I am not living my life happily so you can feel assured that the person with differing views from yours is in a worse position than you based on their differing views. That’s what I would call “childish.” Take my first example of universal access to stairs. For people who cannot use stairs does that equal access mean anything at all when it is actively hindering them from entering or maneuvering the same spaces as people who can use stairs? Someone who can’t use stairs would need a different solution that allows them to enjoy the same maneuverability as any other person who does not have their specific limitations. That’s called equity and it allows equal access to (in this example) maneuverability. Who would have thought?

  • @Angel-kw4yl
    @Angel-kw4yl2 жыл бұрын

    What a succinct and graceful debate. Bravo, so crystal clear.

  • @oldmoviemusic
    @oldmoviemusic2 жыл бұрын

    3/4 through, and my impression is that West and Greenwald are taking into account the needs of given identity groups in their critique of the current mode du jour of using identity as the driving descriptor of such needs, whereas Butler is entrenched in those definitions without addressing their cores (she seems to never address any common humanity in her obsession with the labels applied to members of it).

  • @matthewasher9819

    @matthewasher9819

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/f5xtq5dvepbMZLQ.html Howdy?

  • @condelcos5734

    @condelcos5734

    8 ай бұрын

    still pleasant to a fault, but more willing to call out the shills

  • @johnnywatkins
    @johnnywatkins2 жыл бұрын

    I haven’t even heard it yet and I’m liking it because these people agreed to talk

  • @dingusfartacus9624
    @dingusfartacus96242 жыл бұрын

    didn't even start watching, but I know how this is gonna go. Thank you Glenn.

  • @sophieoshaughnessy9469

    @sophieoshaughnessy9469

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oh honey badger, when will you care?

  • @Cyberphunkisms
    @Cyberphunkisms2 жыл бұрын

    1:59:00 did agamben write this question ? : P

  • @kakistocracyusa
    @kakistocracyusa2 жыл бұрын

    Greenwald is brilliantly on point, as usual. In contrast, J. Butler appears to have made a career out of stringing buzzwords together.

  • @yallgonemadd3786

    @yallgonemadd3786

    Жыл бұрын

    glen g can do whatever he wants...he says the injustice of that !! well WE DONT CHANGE LAWS FOR THE PURPOSE OF IMMORALITY !! GOD SAYS HOMOSEXUALITY IS AN ABOMINATION.... STOP CHANGING OUR LAWS TO FILL THE WHIMS OF SINNERS...NO WONDER OUR COUNTRY IS FUKED

  • @LizaFan

    @LizaFan

    Жыл бұрын

    Greenwald is so out of his league.

  • @kakistocracyusa

    @kakistocracyusa

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LizaFan smells like empty bot chatter around here.

  • @LizaFan

    @LizaFan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kakistocracyusa Do you always accuse random people of being bots?

  • @kakistocracyusa

    @kakistocracyusa

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LizaFan So you are asking me if I am a raving lunatic?

  • @EricaEteson
    @EricaEteson2 жыл бұрын

    I love the idea of soulcraft-- cultivating an "ethos of care." I think it must be cultivated, not imposed. When it's imposed involuntarily, people get defensivel, scared, suspicious and they rebel.

  • @FinneySP
    @FinneySP2 жыл бұрын

    Been waiting twelve years for someone to call butler out on her bs

  • @thedualtransition6070
    @thedualtransition60702 жыл бұрын

    In this debate, Butler embodies "Educated But Ignorant", ignorant of the real world whilst lost in her own cleverness. Cornell is Cornell: wonderful. Greenwald is "Educated But Aware". So many of our "intellectuals" are EBI rather than EBA. The usual "white supremacy" bugbear from Butler, rather than a nuanced intersectional understanding that properly integrates the importance of political economy - i.e. class, wealth and power.

  • @deathbysloth
    @deathbysloth2 жыл бұрын

    Judith Butler: "I worry sometimes when I hear criticism of 'Identity Politics' because it's not always clear what is meant by 'Identity Politics.'" Also Judith Butler: fails to be clear on what "racial justice," "white supremacy," "whiteness," "neofascist," and "racist" mean in her opening remarks.

  • @markduncan1149

    @markduncan1149

    2 жыл бұрын

    also Judith, "labeling something identity politics is a way to gove something a label and not listen to anything after." then also Judith, " White Supremacy is identity politics "

  • @stephenleyden9559

    @stephenleyden9559

    2 жыл бұрын

    Your comprehension is zero

  • @luvbeans405

    @luvbeans405

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes totally agree. She’s living life with the splinter in her eye as a magnifying glass as West put it. She is a a total fraud and a pseudo-intellectual grifter.

  • @luvbeans405

    @luvbeans405

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@stephenleyden9559 your comprehension is -1

  • @J0W1
    @J0W12 жыл бұрын

    Starts at 7:07

  • @summersanchez8212
    @summersanchez82122 жыл бұрын

    As always, Glenn speaks the truth!!!

  • @WWROABM
    @WWROABM2 жыл бұрын

    Glen hit it. This conversation is happening in the Ivory Tower. If this was among the grassroots, the conversation would be very different. A police officer, a factory worker, a farmer, a restaurant/cafe worker, and a nurse. What does this conversation mean to them?

  • @emileconstance5851

    @emileconstance5851

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good point!

  • @VangelisFilms

    @VangelisFilms

    2 жыл бұрын

    The meaning for them depends whether they get their news from CNN/MSNBC or not…

  • @globalistswampdweller5893

    @globalistswampdweller5893

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol. Glenn's job is to discourage leftists from voting for Democrats in order to help the GOP, obviously.

  • @stnbch3025

    @stnbch3025

    2 жыл бұрын

    You haven't listened well enough. The point they make is that inclusion itself isn't holy nor the most functional goal because of the amount of diverse perspectives that exist but that you need to think critically, listen carefully and morally reflect about the voices you include and justify.

  • @VangelisFilms

    @VangelisFilms

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@stnbch3025 Yes but what are all the diverse voices saying? That should be a bit relevant as to who we listen to, should it not?

  • @dealmaven123
    @dealmaven1232 жыл бұрын

    Glenn Greenwald won that debate hands down, Butler was surprisingly bad, West is always a joy regardless.

  • @barbarajohnson1442

    @barbarajohnson1442

    2 жыл бұрын

    No need for competition. Glenn brought great insights, agreed. But I do appreciate them all. Much needed discussion!

  • @Persephales

    @Persephales

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@barbarajohnson1442 agreed I didn’t see it as a “Debate” I think they all had there contributions to make

  • @ruimarquespinto7242

    @ruimarquespinto7242

    2 жыл бұрын

    West Always magnificent. He won the discussion.

  • @cherryzietz8626
    @cherryzietz86262 жыл бұрын

    It’s impossible not to love Cornel West. I mean unless you an entire habadashery

  • @jkscout

    @jkscout

    2 жыл бұрын

    What's to love?

  • @ageofhorus
    @ageofhorus2 жыл бұрын

    It's really surprising to me that there is no criticism or even reflection on the social production of truth. Civic virtue is assumed to be a simple matter which corresponds to ones own conception of it. This is an extraordinary blindness. Most people are trying to do their best and no one has a monopoly on the truth. This is why personal agency and freedom are fundamental to any generous emergent social order. Prof. Butler disappointed me in the last part of the discussion.

  • @beebleknievel2603

    @beebleknievel2603

    2 жыл бұрын

    I heartily agree. I was quite surprised about the tone at the end, of everyone (to an extent). No one has a monopoly on truth, like you say

  • @ageofhorus

    @ageofhorus

    2 жыл бұрын

    Prof. Butler seemed to think that there is a conflict on the level of values and was happy to lazily endorse a caricature of those with an opposing view. The so-called progressive left has become addicted to state action as a sinecure for social problems and has failed to articulate a proper or adequate critique of state institutions. OK, we all know this story. But this has brought us to the absurd situation whereby the institutions they formerly relied on to deliver social justice - the courts notably - are the only line of defense left against totalising and capricious projects of social engineering. I don’t disagree meaningfully with Professor Butler on anything to do with values or ethics. I disagree with her on the facts, and by extension on the social production of truth. But it is not our disagreement on facts that matters either, it is her erasure of epistemological uncertainty and its consequences for social governance. It is her insistence on driving an ontological juggernaut through the fragile defenses of personal agency - let’s not even call it freedom - upon which the generosity of the emergent social order depends. I would ask how someone so devastatingly intelligent could become captive to such an obviously defective discourse. But then again, Heidegger stands as a salutary warning. I do think that it is tragic that so few people in the real world still take seriously her critique of socially constructed gender roles, and that in this way she is providing even fools with simple excuses to not admit her to the discussion. Because she very much needs to be a part of it. The entire edifice of Wokeness rests on the work of Judith Butler. It is a jingoistic perversion of it with no limiting principles that she would herself disavow I believe, and perhaps frequently has, I am not enough of a scholar; but I can’t help wondering if she is not complicit in the distortion and somewhat flattered by her role as a cultural icon. I still insist everyone should read Judith Butler. Including, if this is anything to go by, she herself. Personal agency is the only chink in the armor of social determinism. How many times has she said it?

  • @thedelta72

    @thedelta72

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ageofhorus great points. I’m really curious as to what Critchley was referring to, in reference to Butler’s writings and/or thoughts, on the issue of vaccine mandates as a form of bio-politics, which she, it seems to me, wanted no part in. It leads me to wonder as to whether she had in the recent past adopted a left-critique of the Covid crisis & vaccine mandates (akin to Agamben’s) and has since realized that such a position would have lead to her vilification by her “employers”. This sounds conspiratorial on my part, but... just b/c you’re paranoid, doesn’t mean they aren’t out to get you, as someone on the left once said.

  • @eliashe1797
    @eliashe17972 жыл бұрын

    Ironic Butler statement on defining identity politics: 'put it in that category, that way you don't have to think bout it.' Neatly sums up bout 3/4 the concerns regarding identity politics as a practice. How 'neatly' we place people in their little categories.

  • @worrellrobinson4332
    @worrellrobinson43322 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this communication Holberg debate with lots of food for thought!....

  • @bobwobbabble5151
    @bobwobbabble51512 жыл бұрын

    God bless Glenn

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    Glen & brother West! I've never liked Judith,the nerd,who always has a need for deconstruction,uninspiring & boring AF!

  • @l.w.paradis2108

    @l.w.paradis2108

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@josiplilic3384 A few of her books are inspired. I admit I was surprised. (The ones about peace and justice, not gender.)

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@l.w.paradis2108 could be,although I've never read her.I know about her,cause,Zizek often quotes her,in his book.As brother Cornel would've said;I'm wrestling with my male dominance😂

  • @l.w.paradis2108

    @l.w.paradis2108

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@josiplilic3384 I was surprised, I admit it.

  • @josiplilic3384

    @josiplilic3384

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@l.w.paradis2108 I might be ready to be surprised too!I'll never like her rhetoric qualities,but you right,written word has more into it.As a old school leftie,I'm not into gender theories,my position is libertarian here,but I could give a shot to peace & justice.Peace!

  • @zacboyles1396
    @zacboyles13962 жыл бұрын

    I want healthcare and Butler wants to argue how virtuous she is. She’s absorbed with claiming superiority over those she has convinced herself are the only opposition to her beliefs. When confronted with simple facts and concerns she reverts to reinforcing her virtue while attacking her imagined oppressors. Someone struggling for healthcare right now thinks she is absolutely detached from reality.

  • @Fee_V

    @Fee_V

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes. Very far removed from reality was exactly the impression I got from her.

  • @ebflegg

    @ebflegg

    10 ай бұрын

    Post-modernists don't believe in 'reality', which may have something to do with it

  • @djnkosi
    @djnkosi2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent dialogue. Thank you.

  • @ronpitcher138
    @ronpitcher1382 жыл бұрын

    What a fascinating conversation. I know it will probably never happen but I would love to see a Thomas Sowell & Judith Butler debate.

  • @ronpitcher138

    @ronpitcher138

    2 жыл бұрын

    @William Manning Hahaha kinda true. Sowell is done fighting the good fight. He put in the work and I think he deserves to chill. It's just sad to not see that great mind shared more in current day media.

  • @j.w.2391

    @j.w.2391

    5 ай бұрын

    Debating with a Black Conservative like Sowell would be a waste of time....there is nothing more paradoxical and contradictory in the Black community than a "Conservative" that basically denies his own Blackness and that Racism / White Hegemony persists.

  • @PatTheRipper-zb7oj

    @PatTheRipper-zb7oj

    4 ай бұрын

    Hell yeah Thomas Sowell is an American Masterpiece I’m pretty sure Judith’s face would melt off once she understood she isn’t and was never a victim but a product of her choices Unfortunately Higher Academia wants no part of Thomas