Podcasts

Drive-Time Ruminant 8: Worst Episode Ever

The Remnant returns to the drive-time format to end the week, and the results are predictably unusual. Feast your ears on the eighth installment of this curio, in which Guy discusses the end of America’s “Remain in England” policy, Jonah ponders the appeal of cow brains and potted meat, and Ryan recounts his time as a Celtic warrior in the Irish mountains. Plenty of serious punditry is also included on the state of the COVID-19 pandemic, the appeal of right-wing grifters, and the rise of victimhood culture on college campuses. Tune in for a celebration of the legendary Tom Wolfe, but stick around to learn about some of the most depressing movies ever made.

Show Notes:

George Costanza’s prison girlfriend

Apu Nahasapeemapetilon’s citizenship test

The Commentary podcast on COVID panic

Tom Wolfe’s “The Great Relearning”

Oakland reverses its plan to defund the police

Thursday’s shameful solo Remnant

Wednesday’s weird G-File of weirdness

Tom Wolfe’s brilliant Brown speech

Jonah’s first eggheady publication

Guy’s history of Uncommon Knowledge, featuring plenty of Wolfian goodness

The battle of Smith College

Alex Jones, ace reporter

Milo Minderbinder, statue salesman

Jonah and Steve on their departure from Fox

The New York Times report that broke the Fox story

Jonathan Karl on Trump’s Final Days

In his new book, Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show, Jonathan Karl, ABC News’ chief Washington correspondent, details what was really going on in the final months of the Trump administration, and in the aftermath of the 2020 election. What was happening behind-the-scenes as Trump left the White House? How should the press cover a potential 2024 campaign by the former president?

Show Notes:

Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show by Jonathan Karl

The End of Roe and Casey?

It’s an almost-all-Dobbs podcast, as David and Sarah discuss the oral argument that surprised the nation. Could Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey actually fall? David and Sarah talk about the court’s decision-making process from here and the history of judge-flipping post-argument, and they identify the key moments in yesterday’s argument. Also, they give their listeners a vital challenge–and if they can meet that challenge, then Advisory Opinions will be the indisputable flagship of the Dispatch podcast fleet. Listen to learn what the challenge is.

Show Notes:

Dobbs v. Jackson oral argument transcript

Ginsburg’s remarks on Roe

David in The Atlantic: “How Roe Undermined Itself”

Washington Post: “Justice Kennedy’s Flip”

Generation Turnip

Isolated and sleep-deprived in the wilds of the Pacific Northwest, Jonah once again attempts to fuse the classic Ruminant format with that of a supplemental episode. With the possibility that Supreme Court could overturn Roe v. Wade, a sea change could soon occur in American politics. Using an extract from The Tyranny of Clichés (still available wherever books are sold!), Jonah explores some of the most challenging questions surrounding the jurisprudence of abortion. When does life truly begin? Why are taboos so important? And are dogmas, religious and otherwise, fundamental to the health of a civilized society?

Show Notes:

The Morning Dispatch breaks down Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization

Jonah’s previous ruminations on abortion

The Remnant with Will Saletan

The (eternally underrated) Tyranny of Clichés

Barbara Boxer’s blunder

Supreme Court Hears Mississippi Abortion Case

With all eyes on the Supreme Court today, the gang starts with an explainer of what is happening in the oral arguments of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. What’s at stake? Is it as monumental as some are making it out to be? When might we know how the court rules? Plus, a new COVID variant emerges, Russia builds up its military presence near Ukraine, and blue states fail to live up to their own ideals.

Show Notes:

SCOTUSblog on Dobbs v. Jackson

TMD on Omicron

U.S., Allies Warn Russia Over Military Buildup Around Ukraine | WSJ

David Ignatius’ latest column on Ukraine

Blue States, You’re the Problem | NYT

Everyone’s Moving to Texas. Here’s Why. | NYT

Lives Well Wasted

After a Thanksgiving hiatus, Jonah is back and ready to break open the strategic rank punditry reserve. His guest today is Chris Stirewalt, who’s concerned with only the most important questions of the political moment: Why are Americans terrified of clowns? Is there a better parent than television? And was Pete Buttigieg raised in a refrigerator box? Serious discussion is also mixed in on what we can expect in 2024 and why Build Back Better is the “kitchen junk drawer” of policy proposals. Recent events surrounding a certain cable news network might even be mentioned.

Show Notes:

Profit, the most important show you’ve never seen

Build Back Better’s hypocritical tax cut

Malapropisms

Schoolhouse blues

Chris on subsidizing local news

Blind and toothless

Woke Racism, by John McWhorter

The Remnant with Josh Kraushaar

The most interesting man in politics

Why Jonah left Fox News

Chris on digital depredations

Prior Restraint and Project Veritas

On today’s podcast, David and Sarah open with the puzzling case of Project Veritas and James O’Keefe. Why is a New York appeals court appearing to let stand a prior restraint on the press? They then answer a fascinating reader mail question before wrapping up with an extended discussion of self-defense in the context of an incredibly troubling Texas shooting that was caught on tape.

Show Notes:

Near v. Minnesota

New York Times Co. v. United States

University of Richmond Law Review: “The Meaning of Life (or Limb)”

Reason: “Are People Allowed to Use Deadly Force to Defend Property?”

Lubbock Avalanche-Journal: “Widow releases video of Chad Read’s fatal shooting in South Lubbock”

Warning Graphic: Lubbock, Texas shooting video

What the Heck is an Evangelical?

David French and his theological wingman Curtis Chang dive into the term “evangelical”, defining it historically and discussing how it fits in the current American context. Is it really a set of religious beliefs, a set of cultural beliefs, or a set of political beliefs? How does evangelicalism compare with fundamentalism? Is evangelical a term worth salvaging for Christians, or has it become too closely tied to a political movement to retain any spiritual relevance?

Show Notes:

The French Press: “Did Donald Trump Make the Church Great Again?”

Pew Research Center: “More White Americans adopted than shed evangelical label during Trump presidency, especially his supporters”

National Association of Evangelicals: “What is an Evangelical?” (including the Bebbington Quadrilateral)

Barna: “Survey Explores Who Qualifies As an Evangelical” (including the 9-point Evangelical)

Ryan Burge: “For White Evangelical Republicans, Approval of Trump is About Immigration more than Abortion”

Ryan Burge: “Why ‘Evangelical’ is becoming another word for ‘Republican’”

The French Press: “The American Crisis of Selective Empathy”

Breaking Bread with Bahnsen

David Bahnsen, managing partner and chief investment officer at the Bahnsen Group, is back on The Remnant to explain why there really is no such thing as a free lunch, and to explore why some on the right now think we’d all be better off as serfs. With shameless book-plugging, David and Jonah also discuss the moral case for capitalism, the differences between cost-push and demand-pull inflation, and why the Japanification of the American economy won’t bode well for anyone. Zombie Reagan urges you to tune in!

Show Notes:

David’s new book, There’s No Free Lunch

David’s previous Remnant appearance

David: “Sound Economics Enables Human Flourishing”

The (still underrated) Tyranny of Clichés

Robert Nisbet’s Prejudices

Hayek’s “The Use of Knowledge in Society”

Yuval Levin’s case for capitalism

J.D. Vance’s serious nonsense

Tucker Carlson debates Ben Shapiro on free markets

The algebra of inflation

Understanding the Rittenhouse Verdict

On today’s episode, David and Sarah take a deep dive into the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict with Damon Preston, Kentucky’s Public Advocate and a criminal defense attorney with almost 30 years of experience. They discuss self defense law, the difference between the Rittenhouse trial and the trial of Ahmaud Arbery’s killer, and the ways in which the criminal justice system could be reasonably reformed. Also, David exults in Mississippi’s stinging defeat at the Supreme Court as the court turned back the Magnolia State’s greedy attempt to keep Tennessee from drinking water from its own wells.

Show Notes:

Mississippi v. Tennessee

French Press: “Kyle Rittenhouse, Open Carry, and the Breaking of Self-Defense Law”

David in The Atlantic: “Kyle Rittenhouse’s Acquittal Does Not Make Him a Hero”

Liberty University and the Reality of Institutional Sin

In the inaugural episode of the Good Faith Podcast, David French and his theological wingman Curtis Chang discuss some of the recent issues at Liberty University and how Christians should think about the concept of institutional sin. Curtis makes the theological case for how human institutions fit into the biblical narrative and that as such, they are both made in the image of God and also capable of sin and brokenness. They also discuss why it is important for Christians to place a high priority on being honest and open about institutional sin in our own ranks, amongst our own institutions.

Show Notes:

ProPublica, Hannah Dreyfus: “‘The Liberty Way’: How Liberty University Discourages and Dismisses Students’ Reports of Sexual Assaults

ProPublica, Hannah Dreyfus: “Senators Call for Federal Investigation Into Liberty University’s Handling of Sexual Assaults. School Promises Independent Probe”

Sarah Pulliam Bailey and Susan Svrluga: “Liberty University spokesman files lawsuit after his firing”

The Roys Report: “Liberty U Gives Large Gifts to Ministries of Powerful Trustees, Prompting Questions of Self-Dealing”

The Roys Report: “Former Liberty University Chairman Hints He Was Demoted For Speaking Out About Trump”

The Roys Report: “Fired Liberty U Spokesman Tells Inside Story Behind Lawsuit | The Roys Report”

Rachel Treisman: “Liberty University Sues Ex-President Jerry Falwell, Jr., Seeking Millions In Damages”

Karen Swallow Prior: “Truth, justice and the torturing of tolerance”

Colossians 1:15-16

Divine Intervention

Today’s Ruminant finds Jonah preparing for an epic journey to the Pacific Northwest, and he’d appreciate podcast recommendations for the long and lonely trip. With Thanksgiving approaching, he’s feeling grateful, but he’s also concerned about the conservative movement’s gradual shift away from the classical liberalism embedded in American culture. How do societies emerge? Will mankind ever learn not to immanentize the eschaton? And has American life officially become crazier than a late night Japanese game show? 

Show Notes:

Wednesday’s regrettable G-File, released to the masses

The Remnant with Will Saletan

Nockian nerdery

Nine Days and the making of an existential crisis

Fukuyama’s The Origins of Political Order

That time Bernie Sanders got kicked out of a commune

I, Pencil

The ultimate throwdown

Paul Gosar gets censured

The Insular Cases

On today’s show, David and Sarah bring Neil Weare, president and founder of Equally American, on the pod to teach us interesting things about the Constitution and history, with an emphasis on the unique history of American territories. And then Sarah and David dive into the controversies at Yale Law School and try to answer the question, “What the heck is going on?”

Show Notes:

French Press: “An Airing of Grievances Against Diversity Training”

Reuters: “Yale Law students ‘blackballed’ for refusing to lie about professor, lawsuit says”

Reason: “More Shenanigans at Yale Law School”

David Lat: “The Newest Insanity Out Of Yale Law School”

David Lat: “Yale Law School And the Federalist Society: Caught In A Bad Romance?”

David Lat: “Doe v. Gerken: A Lawsuit Against Yale Law”

Up From Nationalism

In preparation for Thanksgiving, Jonah invites the latest gold jacket-wearer Will Saletan back on The Remnant to consider what, if anything, is so uniquely great about America. Their conversation quickly develops into a discussion of nationalism, universal principles, and whether America is simply an idea, with a generous amount of rank punditry mixed in for good measure. Is the COVID-19 pandemic over? What does the Virginia result mean for both parties? And can Biden’s presidency recover after a disastrous few months?

Show Notes:

Will’s page at Slate

Will’s previous Remnant appearance

Paxlovid Americana

Will on critical race theory and the Virginia result

Jonah: “What Inflation and CRT Have in Common”

Rich Lowry: “Don’t Rewrite Mark Twain”

Paul Gosar gets censured

Jonah: “Mugged By Fallacy”

Seymour Martin Lipset on American exceptionalism

Jonah’s fondness for Thanksgiving

Curb Your Inflation

On today’s podcast, our hosts discuss how to solve a problem like inflation. Will Biden’s Build Back Better Act actually bring down prices? Plus, Sarah and the guys discuss pandemic fatigue driving voters to the GOP, what’s going on at the Naval Observatory, and what the Kyle Rittenhouse and Ahmaud Arbery trials tell us about ourselves as a nation.

Show Notes:

TMD: “Can the Build Back Better Act Curb Inflation?”

The Sweep: “Dems’ Permanent Pandemic Mindset Deepens Midterm Gap”

CNN: “Exasperation and dysfunction: Inside Kamala Harris’ frustrating start as vice president”

Harris has a Veep moment

David in The Atlantic: “Kyle Rittenhouse Is No Hero”

Purely By Coincidence

Remnant regular Matt Ridley is back to discuss the origins of COVID-19. Did the virus emerge from a lab? What would that mean for virological research? And how can we prepare ourselves for future pandemic? Broader scientific discussion is also mixed in on subjects ranging from climate change to mask-wearing. Lukewarm listeners are in for a treat.

Show Notes:

Matt’s previous Remnant appearance

Matt’s new book, Viral

Matt previews the book in the Wall Street Journal

Trapped in Disneyland

The lab leak and the Lancet

Gain of function research

Matt the lukewarmer

Jonah goes nuclear

Jonah on getting past the pandemic