Podcasts

Ditch the Rich

Any malefactors of great wealth who also happen to be devoted Remnant listeners may wish to avoid today’s episode. Jonah’s guest is Matt Lewis, a senior columnist at The Daily Beast, who’s on the program to discuss his new book, Filthy Rich Politicians: The Swamp Creatures, Latte Liberals, and Ruling-Class Elites Cashing in on America. Together, they explore “how the rich get elected and the elected get rich,” and what that means for American politics. Some grouchy musings on the future of the GOP are also mixed in, as well as a few more wholesome reflections on Matt’s life in West Virginia.

This episode is sponsored by our friends at FIRE. FIRE’s mission is to safeguard and uphold the right of all Americans to freedom of speech. Be a part of the front line of a growing movement by joining the FIRE Update.

Show Notes:

Matt’s new book, Filthy Rich Politicians

Matt’s page at The Daily Beast

Mike Murphy on why Trump won’t win the primary

Justice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue

Amanda Tyler, the Shannon C. Turner Professor of Law at Berkeley, joins Sarah and David for post-SCOTUS term talk. They finally give Mallory v. Norfolk Southern Railway Co. some love, and also:

-General jurisdiction and interstate commerce

-Graphics in opinions

-Habeas Corpus: Is Lincoln the good guy or the bad guy?

-Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg

-Advisory Opinions spinoff?

Amanda Tyler’s profile at Berkeley

This episode is sponsored by FIRE. FIRE’s mission is to safeguard and uphold the right of all Americans to freedom of speech. Be a part of the front line of a growing movement by joining the FIRE Update.

Conservatives Abroad

Robert Tyler, senior policy advisory for New Direction, joins Dispatch executive editor Adam O’Neal to sample the different flavors of the European right.

-America the good, America the bad
-Is Italy’s Meloni fascist?
-Fusionism and the Czech Republic
-Brexit and deregulation

Show Notes:

-Robert Tyler for The Dispatch

About New Direction

They Saved Jonah’s Brain

If you thought the Ruminant was incoherent at the best of times, you may be completely unprepared for today’s unpredictable onslaught of twists and turns. Grappling with a serious hangover, Jonah begins with a reflection on the war in Ukraine and somehow ends by discussing his newfound love for The Bear, all the while emitting a distracting array of grunts and groans. Along the way, he also finds time for a few more substantial and vituperative rants, which primarily concern his disdain for Adam McKay and what we get wrong about college admissions.

This episode is sponsored by our friends at FIRE. FIRE’s mission is to safeguard and uphold the right of all Americans to freedom of speech. Be a part of the front line of a growing movement by joining the FIRE Update.

Show Notes:

The M*A*S*H Up GLoP

Scott Lincicome: “‘The Bear’ Is a Tribute to Dynamism—and What Blocks It”

Jonah on friends on the life and legacy of Paul Cantor (skip to 2:55:35 to hear Jonah’s most despised question)

Brown’s social contagion?

Donors and Grifters

Sorry, Steve Hayes. Sarah, Jonah, and Mike start with Ukraine’s request for cluster munitions and the state of NATO. Jonah cynically uses Steve’s absence to flex his juvenile humor chops. Spanish wine is wildly overrated. Then:

Pence campaign prognosis

-A scavenger hunt to get on the debate stage

Ramaswamy’s Mary Kay pyramid scheme

-Sarah on Sesame Street

War of words and farting at RFK Jr. press dinner

GOP leads in midterm turnout

56% of voters think Biden took bribes

-Not worth your time (?): Zuck vs. Musk cage match 

The Great Couch Detectives

If you’re obsessed with pop culture but can’t stand Rob Long and John Podhoretz, today’s Remnant may be the weird, wonderful, and interruption-free GLoP alternative you’ve been waiting for. Jonah’s joined for the first time by Christopher Scalia, former academic suit turned scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Their paths recently crossed during an AEI panel on the legacy of cultural critic Paul Cantor, where they offered some exceptionally square-eyed geekery on TV shows both obvious and obscure. Jonah felt the event raised a number of urgent questions, so today, they provide answers: What happened to P.I. shows? Does The Godfather glamorize the mafia? How is wokeness influencing television? And is Chris really related to a famous justice? (Spoiler alert: Yes.)

This episode is sponsored by our friends at FIRE. FIRE’s mission is to safeguard and uphold the right of all Americans to freedom of speech. Be a part of the front line of a growing movement by joining the FIRE Update.

Show Notes:

Chris’ page at AEI

Jonah and Chris discuss the life and legacy of Paul Cantor

Joan Biskupic’s American Original: The Life and Constitution of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia

Chris: “‘Tom Jones’ Is No Masterpiece”

The Remnant with Bret Devereaux

Paul Cantor’s Gilligan Unbound

Paul Cantor’s The Invisible Hand in Popular Culture

AO on K Street

Kannon Shanmugam rejoins Sarah and David for another SCOTUS opinion wrap-up and barbecue showdown for this live taping in front of a lucky audience of summer associates. The trio discuss the implications of SCOTUS cases versus the notoriety of them and:

-Sarah and David’s SCOTUS beefs

-Sarah’s impasse for longer arguments and more cases

-Attire for oral arguments (don’t forget the lucky suspenders)

-A review of Judge Jackson’s first term

-Barbecue and burger debates

-Summer Associate questions

Show Notes:

-Matt Levine for Bloomberg Opinion on Twitter/Musk saga

As Crime Goes By

There’s been quite the media furore about rising crime rates in recent years. But now that COVID is behind us and cities are alive again, are the numbers on crime moving in a more positive direction? RAND Corporation criminologist Shawn Bushway is back on the Remnant today to answer this question, and to address a few other points of concern and uncertainty surrounding policing and criminal justice in modern America. What determines rates of recidivism? Are certain crimes becoming more common than in the past? Is there merit to broken windows theory? And have we finally got beyond defunding the police?

Show Notes:

Dr. Bushway’s webpage

Dr. Bushway’s previous Remnant appearance

Dr. Bushway’s research on hiring people with criminal histories

“Ex-Prisoners Face Headwinds as Job Seekers, Even as Openings Abound”

Billable Hours by the Millions

Will Taiwan Fight?

Bonnie Glaser, managing director of the Indo-Pacific Program at the German Marshall Fund, joins Executive Editor Adam O’Neal to discuss how the U.S. and China manage their differences over Taiwan. Also:

-Taiwan’s relationship with Trump and Biden
-China’s military transformation
-The significance of 2049

Show Notes:

Bonnie Glaser’s profile for the German Marshall Fund

-U.S.-Taiwan Relations: Will China’s Challenge Lead to a Crisis

High Times

Today’s Ruminant finds Jonah on an uncharacteristic high, and no, his good mood can’t be attributed to a certain substance that was recently discovered in the White House. He’s actually in elevated spirits because a recent AEI event prompted him to rediscover the work of Paul Cantor, a late scholar at the University of Virginia who analyzed pop culture through a conservative lens. He begins today’s program with a thorough exploration of Cantor’s work, before delivering similarly overlong rants on the American Founding and the purpose of the Supreme Court. Sometimes, the Remnant can feel like a wonderful drug.

Show Notes:

Jonah and friends discuss Paul Cantor

“The Macbeth of Meth”

Vanity Fair: “America Has a Supreme Court Problem”

The Remnant celebrates the Fourth of July

Legal Eagles Travel Log: A Gettysburg Anniversary Special

In this special episode of Advisory Opinions, Sarah follows Judge Alan Norris, a Sixth Circuit judge, on a trip to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The Legal Eagles, a group of Judge Norris’ colleagues and law clerks, accompany him on an annual trip to relive the bloodiest battle of the Civil War.

A.G. Sulzberger on NYT, Objectivity, and Media Bias

The New York Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger  joins Steve Hayes and Sarah Isgur in a special interview recorded from The Times’ building in New York. They discuss Sulzberger’s recent CJR piece on objectivity in journalism (and its discontents), digging into the historically hostile relationship between right wing media and The Times, the challenges of fighting “bias” in news, and the possible paths to rebuilding public trust in institutional journalism.

Show Notes:

-A.G Sulzberger’s article for the Colombia Journalism Review

-Transcript available here

Happy Birthday, America

Trapped on the island of Nantucket, a guestless Jonah uses today’s Remnant to provide an impromptu meditation on the Fourth of July. His musings explore the meaning of the Declaration of Independence, whether America is a nation or an idea, and why it’s vital to teach American history. Listen with a hot dog in one hand and a miniature flag in the other to feel like a true patriot.

Show Notes:

Henry Fairlie: “The Shot Heard Round the World”

The Gettysburg Address and the meaning of the 4th

Irving Kristol: “The American Revolution as a Successful Revolution”

Calvin Coolidge on the Declaration of Independence

SCOTUS on Student Loan Forgiveness: Nope

For Advisory Opinions’ purposes, the Supreme Court term is over. Sarah and David return to share their end-of-term thoughts and feelings, David’s crankiness about the student loan forgiveness commentary, look to the next term and:
Student loan forgiveness is dead
D.O.E. v. Brown
Compelled speech in Colorado
NYT: I Teach at an Elite College. Here’s a Look Inside the Racial Gaming of Admissions

France Riots, Explained

A deadly police shooting in Paris last week sparked days of riots across the country. Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry, a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, joins Dispatch Executive Editor Adam O’Neal to explain what led to the violence and where France will go from here.

Show Notes:
Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry’s profile at The Ethics and Public Policy Center

Reuters: France riots: Shot teenager’s grandmother says violence must stop