Podcasts

Immigration and the Problem at the Border

The Biden administration plans to end use of Title 42, the pandemic-era border policy, next month. The governor of Texas is busing migrants to the nation’s capital. Meanwhile, illegal border crossings are on the rise. Does anyone have a plan? Ali Noorani, president of National Immigration Forum and author of Crossing Borders, joins Sarah to discuss America’s immigration woes.

Show Notes:

“Crossing Borders: The Reconciliation of a Nation of Immigrants” by Ali Noorani

Room to Grow: Setting Immigration Levels in a Changing America

Texas Tribune: “San Antonio and other Texas cities confront the spillover from the border migration crisis”

The Right Side: Part 2

Jonah and Matt Continetti continue their tremendously nerdy adventure through the history of American conservatism today, taking us from the 1970s to the present. In a conversation tailor-made for holders of the Remnant bingo card, they discuss the Reagan Revolution, the Clinton years, the future of the conservative movement, and much more. Can the contemporary right hold off resurgent anti-Americanism? Could fascism happen here? And how many more times will Matt need to appear for Jonah to ask everything that’s on his mind?

Show Notes:

Matt’s page at AEI

The Right, available now

Part 1 of Jonah and Matt’s shameless nerdfest

Buckley’s The Unmaking of a Mayor

Barry Goldwater’s The Conscience of a Conservative

Milton and Rose Friedman’s Two Lucky People

Kevin Phillips’ The Emerging Republican Majority

John Patrick Diggins’ Ronald Reagan: Fate, Freedom, and the Making of History

Stephen F. Hayward’s The Age of Reagan

Jonah: “Appetite for Power”

How and Why We Change

In a glorious pod about which songs will be sung and tales will be told, Sarah and David talk about our puzzling and arbitrary death penalty, briefly discuss a pronoun case, and then talk about change. Why aren’t we the people we were 10 years ago? Finally, they ask and answer the question: Do we need more trial lawyers on the Supreme Court?

Show Notes:

Supreme Court order list

Love v. Texas

French Press: “American Racism: We’ve Got So Very Far to Go”

National Review: “How the Supreme Court Became the Province of Cloistered Elites”

Democracy is in Danger: Should Christians Care?

Liberal democracy is under military threat abroad, and intellectual threat in America. And many of these domestic attacks are coming from within Christianity. So should Christians care about defending democracy? What are the connections between our Christian faith and America’s form of self-government? This week David and Curtis dive headlong into this deep and fascinating issue, including some history, some theology, and some critical guidance for why we Christians must indeed care about the state of our democracy and its institutions.

Show Notes:

French Press: “A Christian Defense of American Classical Liberalism”

Sarah Repucci & Amy Slipowitz (Freedom House): “Democracy Under Siege”

From John Adams to Massachusetts Militia, 11 October 1798

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Mr. Popularity

After providing an update on his absence this week, Jonah begins today’s Ruminant on a note of uncertainty: He hasn’t decided whether an Elon Musk Twitter takeover is something we should welcome or fear. His mind is also occupied by the idea raised by Megan McArdle that Americans are increasingly “sidestepping institutions” in their daily lives, as well as Matt Continetti’s perspective on the term “right-winger.” Plus, tune in for a predictably nerdy disquisition on populism and why an old-fashioned liberal ethos is what separates conservatism from statism.  

Show Notes:

The Remnant with Megan McCardle

Martin Kramer’s The War on Error

The Remnant with Michael Brendan Dougherty

Part 1 of the Remnant’s Matt Continetti nerdapalooza

Father Coughlin: Man of the left

Louis Hartz’s The Liberal Tradition in America

Seymour Martin Lipsett’s American Exceptionalism

Political Implications of Inflation

The Bureau of Labor Statistics released its latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report this week, and our hosts are here to talk through it. What does this all mean for the upcoming midterms and 2024? They will discuss that too. Plus, Sweden and Finland are looking to join NATO. What does this mean for the Western alliance? What should we expect from Russia?

Show Notes:

TMD: “Light at the End of the Inflation Tunnel?”

The Sweep: “Tsunami or Ripple? What a Midterm Wave Might Look Like.”

The Sweep: “To Agenda or Not? That Is the Question for the GOP.”

TMD: “Finland and Sweden Weighing NATO Bids”

New York Times: “Military Memo Deepens Possible Interstellar Meteor Mystery”

WUSA: “Teens among seven people arrested after detectives find dog reportedly taken at gunpoint”

That Nationwide Injunctions Concurrence

David and Sarah start with a short talk about Elon Musk and his quest to buy Twitter, then talk about a fascinating 6th Circuit concurrence that’s the best two-page explainer of nationwide injunctions that’s available anywhere, and they wind up with an extended discussion of library book bans, and how to judge what’s best for kids.

Show Notes:

House passes bill to honor Sandra Day O’Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Arizona, et al. v. Biden, et al.

PEN America: “Banned in the USA: Rising School Book Bans Threaten Free Expression and Students’ First Amendment Rights”

The Right Side: Part 1

The Remnant ascends to a higher plane of nerdom today, as Matthew Continetti returns to discuss his new book, The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism. This episode presents the first half of a two-hour conversation between Jonah and Matt, which takes us on a freewheeling journey from the ‘20s to the ‘70s. They begin by exploring whether it’s possible to provide a simple definition of conservatism before digging deeply into the evolution of the movement. What did conservatism look like before the New Deal? How did William F. Buckley Jr. shape modern politics? Is fusionism still relevant? And how should we remember figures like Richard Nixon, Calvin Coolidge, and George Wallace? All of these questions and more are addressed within. But to learn about the Reagan era onward, and to hear some of Jonah’s quibbles with the book, you’ll have to tune in next week. 

Show Notes:

Matthew’s page at AEI

The Right, available now

George Nash’s The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America Since 1945

Richard Weaver’s Ideas Have Consequences

Russell Kirk’s The Conservative Mind

Matthew previews The Right in the Wall Street Journal

Frank Meyer’s reluctant and apologetic essay collection, What Is Conservatism?

Lionel Trilling’s The Liberal Imagination

The Remnant with Stephanie Slade

How William F. Buckley changed his mind on civil rights

Buckley’s The Unmaking of a Mayor

Barry Goldwater’s The Conscience of a Conservative

Let’s Talk About Sex

Sarah and her guest are here to talk about sex. Christine Emba, a columnist for the Washington Post and author of the new book Rethinking Sex, examines our current sexual mores and finds them wanting. What’s the cause of today’s sexual malaise? What does a new sexual ethic look like? Listen (but maybe not with your young children) for those answers and more.

Show Notes:

“Rethinking Sex” by Christine Emba

Christine in the Washington Post: “Consent is not enough. We need a new sexual ethic.”

David in The Atlantic: “Consent Was Never Enough”

“Get Me Kitchen!”

The Remnant gets wonky today as Klon Kitchen, AEI senior fellow and author of The Current newsletter for The Dispatch, returns to discuss Russia’s information war in Ukraine. With no end in sight for the conflict, Jonah and Klon explore what America’s intelligence support for Ukraine looks like and what other measures we could take to assist the country. They also touch on the veracity of Russia and China’s COVID statistics, what Putin’s war will mean for Taiwan, and how Klon would advise Joe Biden if he were summoned to the White House. Stick around until the end for obligatory dog discourse.

Show Notes:

Klon’s page at The Dispatch

Klon: “Why Russia’s Cyber Warriors Haven’t Crippled Ukraine”

Daniel Hannan: “Vladimir Putin’s kleptocracy will be his own undoing”

Mike Duncan on the Russian Revolution

The Remnant with Mike Duncan

Klon on semiconductors and the “splinternet”

The Remnant with Lyman Stone

Jonah: “Vladimir Putin, Brittle Oak”

The Remnant with Edward Carr

Klon: “School’s in Session”

The Argument for Originalism

Sarah and David address the very interesting announcement that Elon Musk won’t be joining Twitter’s board, including the clues about the reason that are not-so-hidden in Twitter’s announcement. They also discuss the acquittals in the alleged kidnapping plot of Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, and they talk to Catholic University law professor Joel Alicea about his new law review article, “The Moral Authority of Original Meaning.” Sarah ends the podcast with an interesting question.

Show Notes:

Joel Alicea: “The Moral Authority of Original Meaning”

“Why We Are Restless: On the Modern Quest for Contentment” by Benjamin Storey and Jenna Silber Storey

My Kind of Town

Jonah’s still in Chicago for today’s Ruminant, and he isn’t terribly comfortable with the pre-summer weather. Still, severe cold in spring is less frustrating than our political dysfunction, and Jonah has plenty to discuss on that front. After exploring the distinction between disinformation and misinformation and the state of American media bias, he turns to the Hunter Biden laptop scandal, Florida’s controversial education bill, and why misusing the term “groomer” is both immoral and tactically foolish for Republicans. Ready your bingo cards for a predictably freewheeling ride.

Show Notes:

The Remnant with Megan McCardle

Jonah on disinformation at the UChicago Institute of Politics

Soviet disinformation

The paradoxes of media bias

Jonah on the Kavanaugh allegations

Anne Applebaum’s UChicago panel

Anne Applebaum on Hunter Biden’s laptop

David French: “Against the ‘Groomer’ Smear”

The Remnant with Adam White

How Title IX became a political weapon

Fundamentalism Part Deux

This week David and Curtis offer a follow up discussion on fundamentalism, clarifying some key points from the previous episode and diving deeper into how we can become fundamentalists without even knowing it! Do our increasingly homogenous social groups perhaps push us toward fundamentalism and even radicalization? How might the presence of even a few diverse voices impact these groups? This then leads to a discussion about liberal democracy and how it is under assault, not just globally (as in Russia/Ukraine), but even here in the US. How should our Christian faith inform things like our system of government and our embrace (or rejection) of liberal democracy?

Show Notes:

Cass Sunstein – The Law of Group Polarization

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-Check out Curtis’ series Anxiety as Opportunity for Spiritual Growth, available at RedeemingBabel.org. 20% discount for Good Faith listeners, use code: GoodFaith20

Future of Supreme Court Fights

On Thursday, the Senate confirmed Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court. Our hosts are here to discuss what her confirmation foreshadows for future Supreme Court fights. Plus, the Biden administration announced plans to end use of Title 42, a pandemic-era border policy, next month. What does that mean? Sarah, Jonah, and David finish the show discussing the practicality of bringing charges of war crimes as we learn more about the atrocities committed by Russia in Ukraine.

Show Notes:

The Dispatch: “​​The Bucha Massacre and the Horrors to Come”

G-File: “Is It Okay to Use the ‘G-Word’?”

The Dispatch: “What are Secondary Sanctions?”

TMD: “How Will the U.S. Admit Ukraine’s Refugees?”

Uphill: “Congress Finally Meanders to a Russia Trade Bill”

Supreme Court Rules in Malicious Prosecution Case

David and Sarah talk about a fascinating Supreme Court case that no one is discussing, unleash again on Yale Law School, and then spend the last few minutes on Sarah’s game show idea—a revolutionary combination of social science and dating advice. Plus, book recommendations!

Show Notes:

Louisiana v. American Rivers

Thompson v. Clark

“Rethinking Sex: A Provocation” by Christine Emba

David in The Atlantic: “Consent Was Never Enough”

Christine Emba: “Consent is not enough. We need a new sexual ethic.”

“Powers and Thrones: A New History of the Middle Ages” by Dan Jones

Mitch Daniels for God-King

Live from the Windy City, Jonah returns to the Remnant driver’s seat. He’s joined by Washington Post columnist Megan McArdle, who has plenty of thoughts on America’s strange plague of mobocratic thinking and workplace safetyism. The pair also explore Jonah’s distaste for public sector unions, Megan’s opposition to student loan forgiveness, and the circumstances in which populism can be put to good use. Plus, for all you bingo cardholders, there’s plenty of dingo discussion and kvetching about primaries mixed in.

Show Notes:

Megan’s page at the Washington Post

Megan: “It’s time for major institutions to make their employees get off of Twitter”

Grace Metalious’ Peyton Place

Sleeping with the fishes

The New Yorker “flyover country” cover

Jonah and Elaine Kamarck talk primaries

Megan on student loans

The Remnant with David French and Jonathan Rauch