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Here, John and I begin with an assessment of a sharp, thoughtful Quillette piece by black intellectual Aaron Hanna which is critical of black conservatives. (Both John and I have written responses which Quillette will publish.) This lead us into philosophical terrain, where we engage questions about free will, ethnic/racial differences in culture and so on. We go on to discuss critically a recent New York Times piece by Jenée Desmond-Harris, “Which Black People Should You Listen To?” Her answer, which we dispute: not people like us! We critically assess Thomas Sowell's "black rednecks" argument, that black culture reflects the legacy of Scotch-Irish norms common to Southern/Appalachian enclaves. And we agree to disagree about the merits of Charles Murray's new book, Facing Reality, where I find more merit than does John.
As always, I’m curious to know what you think.
I originally posted this earlier this week for paying subscribers. I’m now releasing it for the general public. If you want to get the full episodes early, plus other exclusive content and benefits, please subscribe now. Let’s keep doing the work!
0:00 A peek inside Glenn’s writing process
3:31 Aaron Hana’s critique of Thomas Sowell and Shelby Steele
13:50 Extending the presumption of free will to black communities
19:31 Who gets to opine on race matters?
32:09 Black rednecks
44:31 Is the “acting white” phenomenon real?
53:58 A critique of Charles Murray’s new book …
1:12:12 … and a defense of same
If there's a short segment (under 2:20) from this episode that you thought was especially good, please share the timestamps in the comments—we’re looking to spread the word on Twitter.
By Glenn Loury4.8
22482,248 ratings
Here, John and I begin with an assessment of a sharp, thoughtful Quillette piece by black intellectual Aaron Hanna which is critical of black conservatives. (Both John and I have written responses which Quillette will publish.) This lead us into philosophical terrain, where we engage questions about free will, ethnic/racial differences in culture and so on. We go on to discuss critically a recent New York Times piece by Jenée Desmond-Harris, “Which Black People Should You Listen To?” Her answer, which we dispute: not people like us! We critically assess Thomas Sowell's "black rednecks" argument, that black culture reflects the legacy of Scotch-Irish norms common to Southern/Appalachian enclaves. And we agree to disagree about the merits of Charles Murray's new book, Facing Reality, where I find more merit than does John.
As always, I’m curious to know what you think.
I originally posted this earlier this week for paying subscribers. I’m now releasing it for the general public. If you want to get the full episodes early, plus other exclusive content and benefits, please subscribe now. Let’s keep doing the work!
0:00 A peek inside Glenn’s writing process
3:31 Aaron Hana’s critique of Thomas Sowell and Shelby Steele
13:50 Extending the presumption of free will to black communities
19:31 Who gets to opine on race matters?
32:09 Black rednecks
44:31 Is the “acting white” phenomenon real?
53:58 A critique of Charles Murray’s new book …
1:12:12 … and a defense of same
If there's a short segment (under 2:20) from this episode that you thought was especially good, please share the timestamps in the comments—we’re looking to spread the word on Twitter.

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