Podcasts

Shiny Happy Pundits

Tired, disorganized, and intent on burdening listeners with his personal problems, Jonah nonetheless approaches today’s eclectic Ruminant with aplomb. Granted, it helps that the details of the most pressing item on the docket—namely, the indictment of one Donald J. Trump—aren’t particularly clear yet, which allows Jonah to rant without sliding into too deep of a depression. Afterward, he touches on Chris Licht’s departure from CNN, why misuse of the term “isolationism” is so rampant, and what it takes to build a fulfilling life. 

Show Notes:

-Watch: Jonah Goldberg Solo on The Dispatch Channel YouTube

The Morning Dispatch breaks down Trump’s indictment

Tim Alberta: “Inside the Meltdown at CNN”

A special live Remnant on Jonah, Chris, and Steve’s departure from Fox

Jonah: “Your Life Portfolio—and Ours”

Jonah embraces Oakeshott

Robert Kagan’s The Ghost at the Feast

Indictment Watch: Trump Charged in Classified Docs Probe

In an emergency pod, Sarah Isgur and David French review the 7-count indictment against Donald Trump which was unsealed on Friday: what is (and isn’t) in the indictment, and how does this case compare with those of Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden.

Show Notes:

-Trump Classified Docs Indictment, Annotated

Pence-ian Posture

Jonah Goldberg invites Chris Stirewalt and Michael Warren to talk GOP primary contenders as Mike Pence and Chris Christie join the race. Stay for the jocularity and:

-Watch: Jonah, Chris, and Mike on The Dispatch Podcasts YouTube Channel

RNC nominee “pledge”

Tim Scott vs. The View

-House speakership fight

-Stirewalt’s Shrimp Cocktail Crawl 

-Who destroyed the Kherson dam?

Tucker Carlson’s anti-semitic Twitter show

God, Guns, and Trump

After a brief trademark SCOTUS update, Guest Host David French and Perennial Guest David Lat break down the trickiness of vouchers for religious charter schools. Plus:

-Text history and tradition versus strict scrutiny in 2nd Amendment cases

-Top profits for law firm partners

Show Notes:

-Watch: David et David on YouTube

“Trump too small”

Religious Charters in Oklahoma

Some felons can possess firearms

David Lat’s Substack

Part Klon, Part Machine

Klon Kitchen—former Dispatch national security extraordinaire turned private sector sellout—is back on the Remnant to take a deep dive into the exciting (read: terrifying) realm of artificial intelligence. With ChatGPT becoming ubiquitous, debate is raging over whether advancements in AI will bring forth an apocalyptic future or a brave new world. Klon’s prediction is that we’ll end up somewhere in the middle, and he has answers to all of the most intriguing questions of the moment: How exactly does AI work? Should we worry about machines replacing human workers? And will Jonah ever forgive David French for his treachery? 

Show Notes:

-Watch: Jonah Goldberg interviews Klon Kitchen

Klon’s page at AEI

Advisory Opinions on an infelicitous use of ChatGPT

Marc Andreessen: “Why AI Will Save the World”

Nearly a third of adults under 30 support surveillance in their homes

The House Is Where the Hatred Is

Armed with a provocative assortment of inappropriate puns, Jonah invites AEI Senior Fellow Philip Wallach onto the Remnant for the first time to discuss the importance of Congress and what we can do to fix the legislative branch. As holders of the Remnant bingo card are well aware, reforming Congress by expanding its size and discouraging performative behavior within its ranks has been one of Jonah’s primary obsessions since the launch of this program. Today, he’s sure to indulge in as many nerdish lines of inquiry on the subject as possible, waxing Yuvalian from start to finish. What core functions is Congress failing to perform? When did the institution begin to decline? And are its deficiencies fueling broader cultural partisanship?

Show Notes:

Phil’s page at AEI

Phil’s new book, Why Congress

Phil: “Time for Congress to Choose Deliberation Over Dysfunction”

Phil: “If We Give Up on Congress, What Will We Lose?”

Ben Sasse’s Kavanaugh hearing speech

Lyman Stone on expanding Congress

Explainer: Turkey Today

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan recently secured another election victory, leaving many in the West to question the country’s diplomatic future. Dispatch Reporter Charlotte Lawson speaks with Eric Edelman, former U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Finland, and under secretary of defense for policy, to explain what’s happening under the country’s longest serving leader.

Show Notes:

-Watch: Charlotte Lawson interviews Eric Edelman

-Eric Edelman for The Dispatch, “Erdoğan’s Impending Victory and Turkey’s Future Course”

-Charlotte Lawson’s piece for The Dispatch, “Recep Tayipp Erdoğan Notches Another Victory”

Lower Your Expectations

SCOTUS refuses to serve up the good stuff with the latest round of opinions released. Sarah and David discuss the chipping away of labor rights and subjective beliefs over violating the False Claims Act. Also on the docket:

-Aliens upon us?
-Whistleblowers in Sarah’s DMs
-Are Diversity Statements illegal?
-Angry cheerleader’s legacy
-Hunter Biden’s messy 2nd amendment issue
-Joe’s Hail Mary campaign throw, according to The Messenger

Show Notes:

-Virginia Tech speech police questioned by skeptical Fourth Circuit

-Angry Cheerleader case

-Advisory Opinions, Angry Cheerleader Gets A Supreme Court Win

Explainer: Do Other Candidates Have A Chance?

It’s not over for those not named Trump or DeSantis, says GOP operative Mike Murphy. Join The Dispatch’s Mike Warren as speaks with Murphy about the candidates chances of rising in the polls and what they’re doing to fight in the 2024 election.

Show Notes:

-WATCH: Do Other Candidates Have A Chance on YouTube

-Mike Murphy’s article for The Bulwark

-Mike Warren’s article for The Dispatch

All the Old Dudes

Today’s predictably overlong Ruminant finds Jonah haunted by foreign language commercials, which seem to be infiltrating all of his favorite podcasts and TV shows. Fortunately, his terror provides a useful launching pad for a rant on the nature of language and its role in shaping (or, in most cases, degrading) public thought on nuanced political issues. Tune in also for some obscenely rank punditry on Donald Trump’s dishonesty, Ron DeSantis’ presidential bid, and monetary policy, a subject that Jonah can’t help but have thoughts on despite professing to know nothing about it.

Show Notes:

The Remnant with Hal Brands

The Remnant with David Bahnsen

The Trump document saga continues

The Remnant with Matt Continetti

Rich Lowry: “How We Help People Like Megan Fox”

The Economist: “What America has got wrong about gender medicine”

The Wednesday G-File

Debt Deal Denouement

Sarah, Steve, and Jonah wonder if the Biden-McCarthy deal marks a return to politics as normal, whether Tim Scott’s bachelorhood will play into the election, and more:

Nick Catoggio on DeSantis

Brian Riedl’s debt-limit deal breakdown

-Mike Pence in Iowa

-Dresscode redux

Voters aren’t happy with Biden… but they’ll take him over Trump

-God’s chicken goes DEI

Maximum Security

After a spate of episodes crammed with mercilessly rank punditry and self-indulgent eggheadery, it’s time for the Remnant to get wonky once again. Jonah’s guest today is AEI’s Hal Brands, who’s back to discuss all things foreign policy. With the Ukraine conflict raging, tensions continuing to mount between the U.S. and China, and debates about America’s role in the world consuming the right, there’s no shortage of topics up for grabs. Does the United States actually have a strategic vision anymore? What’s the relationship between history and public policy? And will Chinese or American robots overthrow mankind first?

Show Notes:

Hal’s page at AEI

Hal’s new book, The New Makers of Modern Strategy

Hal: “Biden Will Find That Breaking Up With China Is Hard to Do”

Hal: “How the American War Machine Ran Out of Gas”

Rank punditry and notes from Ukraine on Dispatch Live

Kevin Williamson: “The Burial of the Dead”

Orlando Figes’ The Story of Russia

Jonathan Kirshner’s An Unwritten Future

The Bahnsen Conspiracy

David Bahnsen, Jonah’s trusted economics guru, is back on the Remnant to provide some raw, unfiltered wonkery on the latest in financial disasters. From the debt ceiling deal to the persistence of inflation, no policy matter, however terrifying, can escape his wonky gaze. Tune in also for a few musings on the Japanification of America, the appeal of conspiracy theories, and the nuttiness of the new right (yes, again).

Show Notes:

-Watch: Jonah Goldberg and David Bahnsen on The Dispatch Podcasts YouTube

David’s webpage

David’s Capital Record podcast

The Morning Dispatch breaks down the end of the debt limit saga

Kevin Williamson: “The Burial of the Dead”

David: “How to Fight the Politicization of Business”

Excessive Fines and Strange Bedfellows

With a 9-0 frown, the Supreme Court rejects the EPA’s expansive definition of “wetlands.” David and Sarah also discuss the growing Jackson-Gorsuch alliance, Ken Paxton’s impeachment, and the art of due diligence via ChatGPT.

Show notes-

Tyler v. Hennepen County

Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency

Eleventh Circuit Prison Case

David Last Newsletter Original Jurisdiction

Raffi Melkonian Twitter

The Appellate Wanderer

Fifth Circuit First Amendment Case

Ken Paxton Articles of Impeachment

ChatGPT Case Filing

When No One Cares

On the verge of a full recovery from his schnozzle surgery (more ominously referred to as “the operation”), Jonah’s prepared to indulge in another needlessly long Ruminant that blends a generous helping of conservative dorkery with a smidgen of rank punditry. He gets things started with a few thoughts on Ron DeSantis’ glitch-ridden campaign announcement, but afterward, it’s time for a highfalutin geekout as he examines the failure of the new right to appeal to people who aren’t chronically online. Stick around until the end for a defense of a recent G-File.

Show Notes:

The Morning Dispatch on DeSantis’ campaign launch

Answering listener questions with Guy on the Remnant

The Dispatch Podcast dispenses rank punditry

Wednesday’s G-File

Antonio Gramsci

Vanity Fair: “The American Conservative May Be on Its Last Legs”

Charlie Cooke: “Why Can’t Progressive Writers Defend the Law”

Debt Ceiling Countdown: An Explainer

Price St. Clair walks us through the ongoing debt ceiling fight in an interview with Ben Ritz, Director of the Center for Funding America’s Future at the Progressive Policy Institute. The two discuss the nuances of the issue, including:

-Throwbacks to 2011

-Trump’s lack of “caps”

-Likely (and worst case) scenarios

-Republicans pulling levers to get wins?

Show Notes

-Watch: Price St. Clair interviews Ben Ritz on The Dispatch Podcasts YouTube channel

-Ben Ritz profile at Progressive Policy Institute

-Price St. Clair’s Explainer for The Dispatch