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Tag: Reason Interviews

  • Rep. Chip Roy on spending, immigration, and the American dream

    Rep. Chip Roy (R–Texas), who recently announced that he is running to replace Ken Paxton as Texas attorney general, has carved out a reputation as one of Washington’s most unflinching fiscal hawks. His political career began as an aide to then–Texas Attorney General John Cornyn on his Senate campaign; he subsequently served as chief of staff to Republican Sen. Ted Cruz. First elected to Congress in 2018, Roy distinguished himself as a lawmaker willing to buck party leadership, most notably by opposing spending bills favored by both Republicans and Democrats.

    Today, Roy is a critic of runaway federal spending and at times a thorn in the side of political leadership, which has led President Donald Trump to call for primary challenges against him. He has taken high-profile stands on the debt ceiling, entitlement reform, and what he calls the “tyranny” of a government that funds itself by mortgaging future generations.

    He also voted for the president’s budget-busting One Big Beautiful Bill Act, arguing that its reductions to Medicaid were better than nothing. In August, at a 90th birthday celebration for former Rep. Ron Paul (R–Texas), Roy sat down with Reason‘s Nick Gillespie to explain that vote, as well as to discuss Social Security, health care reform, immigration, whether his state’s controversial redistricting plan is legitimate, and why he believes Texas still embodies the American dream.

    Reason: You are a rare voice of fiscal shrinking in Washington, D.C. That has put you in the crosshairs with Donald Trump in particular. You don’t want to raise the debt ceiling unless there’s a reduction in spending. You pushed back against the Big Beautiful Bill, although you did cave and support it.

    Chip Roy: We’ll come back to the word cave, but OK.

    Well, you voted for it. Talk a little bit about your general philosophy. Why is it so important that government spending be either held constant or reduced?

    My view is that the power of the purse is the central power of Congress, and we’ve abdicated it for as long as I can remember. If you don’t constrain that power of the purse, then you’re funding the very bureaucracy that was predicted by the Founders—and has proven to be true—to be at odds with our liberty.

    To say Congress is asleep at the switch is an understatement. You came into office in 2019, but this has been going on for at least 20 years before. Why?

    My observation is that we’re actually at a moment where more members of Congress get it than I’ve ever seen in the past. That’s the good news. But the bad news is, it’s still a woefully inadequate group of people to change it.

    I think members of Congress believe that they get more popularity in votes by spending money. I actually disagree with that. I’m a cancer survivor. I have cancer groups who come in and ask me for money. I say, “God bless you. I know what you’re trying to do. Research is great. But do you have a pay-for [for] that?” No. Well, then I can’t support it. Farm Bureau comes in. I love the farmers. I want to protect small farmers against corporate [agriculture]. But they come in and they want their money on the farm bill. I’m like, “Well, are we fixing the food stamps?” No. Well, then I can’t support it. They get that.

    It’s important to not fund the tyranny that’s turned on us. I think more people are seeing that now in ways that they didn’t in the past.

    Going to the heart of the Big Beautiful Bill debate: We were told in January, “You’re not going to touch anything in Medicaid or any kind of health care.” Well, we got a trillion dollars of Medicaid. We were told we weren’t going to be able to do much on the Green New Scam subsidies. We were able to get 3, or 4, or $500 billion worth of cutbacks to those. Did we get everything we need? No.

    There’s no question that the Big Beautiful Bill is going to increase the debt, right? There’s no realistic scenario where it doesn’t.

    I think that is likely the case based on the following facts: Medicare was not touched. Social Security was not touched. Interest payments are going up.

    But understand that part of the agreement, and we got to deliver the agreement, was holding discretionary [spending] flat or lower. That was a part of the deal, which by the way, will pay dividends if we do it.

    That’s a part of the deal, which I’m going to fight for. And also, remember that tax cuts. I had libertarian friends who were like, “Hey, I love the no tax on tips.” Well, OK, but what about no tax on the guys in the back of the restaurant? We all want lower taxes. You, I, every person who wants a limited government.

    I want lower spending.

    But you want lower spending to go along with that. What I would argue is, we fought to get lower spending on things that people never thought we could get, Medicaid being huge among those. Is it enough? No. Is it likely going to create front-loaded deficits? Yes.

    You took a lot of heat from Trump on the debt ceiling bill. He was calling you out by name. And you also got leaned on in the Big Beautiful Bill debates. What is it like when Donald Trump, the president of the United States—a guy who, whatever else you can say about him, has the power to destroy the political careers of politicians who are very popular in their districts—says, “What the hell are you doing? You’d better get in line!”

    I view it slightly differently because I don’t worry about whether I’m in office or not. Come after me, it’s fine.

    What I do care about is what can we do in this window of time when we have some people in the administration willing—clunkily, not always what you and I and others who are fiscal stewards would do. What are you going to do when you’ve got that opportunity?

    Whatever he’s doing—scaling back some of the spending at the Pentagon, or getting the $9 billion of the rescissions package—there are things that are in process. Are they peanuts and crumbs? Kind of. But are they trending in the right direction? So far. Did we get material changes on spending? Yes.

    The political pressures don’t matter much to me. What matters to me is, how can you assemble people to build a coalition to deliver? I’m proud of what we delivered on Medicaid reforms. I’m proud of what we delivered on the subsidies, which are horrid.

    Medicare and Social Security are things that Trump has taken off the table for as long as he’s president. Interest on the debt, Medicare, and Social Security are the biggest chunks of the federal budget. How do you get to a smaller budget without addressing those?

    We’re legally prohibited from touching Social Security. You got to come up with some sort of bipartisan way to address Social Security, or you can’t really get to it.

    I fundamentally believe for Medicare and Medicaid, and frankly, [Veterans Health Administration], [Children’s Health Insurance Program], and these other health programs, you have to have fundamental health care reforms from top to bottom that starts with the individuals, doctors, and liberty. I’m not saying liberty because I’m talking to you; that’s what I mean.

    One of the first bills I introduced was the Healthcare Freedom Act, which would do that. By the way, we did force into the Big Beautiful Bill DPC—direct primary care—being able to be used within your health savings accounts.

    Look, fighting the health care swamp is brutal because the insurance companies, pharma, big hospitals, they’re all colluding to make it where you and I can’t go to the doctors of our choice.

    I’m a member of Congress and I’m on Obamacare. If my cancer comes back, which I had 13 years ago, I can’t go to MD Anderson [Cancer Center], which is an hour up the road right here in Texas, because Obamacare won’t let me go to MD Anderson. That’s asinine. And yet, millions of Americans are on that system. We’ve got to blow that up to get people control.

    Why didn’t the Republicans—and this is before your time in Congress, but when you were chief of staff for Sen. Ted Cruz—do any of this during the first Trump administration? We heard, “When we take over, we’re going to repeal and replace Obamacare.” Then they were like, “Yeah, we didn’t really mean that.”

    Republicans in Congress suck on this and are running afraid to touch and deal with health care. To the credit of the administration, we were told that we weren’t going to touch health care at all, and we did touch Medicaid in a very big way. I think that’s a baseline to now give us some offense.

    Is there anybody in Congress doing anything about Social Security? Or are they all just going to wait and then blow out the cap on earnings that are taxed to pay for Social Security?

    I think [Sen.] Rand [Paul (R–Ky.)] has been right for a long time: this penny plan, which now probably has to be the nickel plan for all I know. You have to have something where, across the board, you’re shrinking everything, and then force everybody to deliver.

    This is actually really important. For what everyone thinks about the Big Beautiful Bill, we broke the orthodoxy in Washington that we can just have all the tax cuts we want without spending restraint. We forced that in the budget committee. Myself, [Reps.] Ralph Norman [R–S.C.], Josh Brecheen [R–Okla.], Andrew Clyde [R–Ga.]. The four of us took down the bill in the Budget Committee; we killed it. That brought everybody back in. I can tell you, those were some intense meetings where we said, “We’re not doing this if we don’t get this level of spending restraint at least as a model to guide what we do on the floor.” That was before we sent it to the Senate.

    That’s actually a big shift. The fights we’ve had to have inside the Republican Party to say, “I know we’re products of the ’80s, and we believe in the Laffer Curve, and we believe in lower taxes, of course we do. I do. But you also have to do math. You can’t just keep cutting taxes and then not do the spending side, because the inflation/turning over of all our freedom to government is eating up any of the value you get.”

    How do you define the American dream?

    The ability to live free. The right to live your life, work, produce for your family, own a home, get a doctor. Right now, if I look at my staff in their 20s or 30s, can they buy a house? They don’t know. Can they go get a doctor and get health care? Increasingly limitedly. Can they buy a car? Can they send their kids to a school of their choice? Those things are at the center of existence.

    I think we’ve got to reclaim that ground. I think we’re too corporatist. Free trade, I believe in, but you’ve got to be smart about what we’re doing here in this country, in making sure that we’ve got workers here who have jobs in the United States. You don’t have corporatists that are buying up every farm in the state of Texas, and I’m unable to actually go have the small farm that my parents passed down to me.

    It gets complicated, but what’s wrong with corporate farms? Especially if they can run more acreage cheaply and produce more crops on it.

    I’m all for the freedom to move capital around and make it efficient. But there is still something about your home and your community. There is still something about being able to say, “I own this dirt, this farm. I’m building and growing for the people here.” The overcorporatization, frankly it’s not pure free enterprise. The federal government is subsidizing big ag at the expense of local farmers. The big government that’s subsidizing massive hospitals at the expense of local doctor-owned facilities. We put all these bans in place, and we funnel all this money, and now it’s no longer the balance of a market. I think that’s where we’ve gone awry.

    I’m not asking for restrictions. I’m just believing that community and the American dream are tied together. You want to be able to have an investment in your local area. And the free flow of capital is important. But you also have to have the non-government-interfered-with free flow of capital.

    Should those small farmers be able to hire who they want, or should they need to go through the federal government? What is your view about legal immigration and about letting people come here who want to and who can get jobs here?

    In a gathering of my libertarian friends, I’m a little more “protect our sovereignty as our country.” It’s important that we know who’s here and why they’re here. And making sure that Americans have jobs.

    In a perfect utopian libertarian world, where free flow of capital is unfettered by government regulation, government interference, or crony capital, then things would work out much better with respect to that flow. But you still have to have borders. You still have to know the bad guys are coming.

    Sure. Nobody’s questioning that.

    Well, some do. I’ve had some pretty good fiery responses from some of my Cato [Institute] brothers when they’ve been at hearings. It’s fine, and I get it. Should you be able to go get labor if you can’t get it? Sure. But there still has to be a component that is factoring in things like anchor babies and birthright citizenship. Again, erase all the public programs. I think it was Milton Friedman who said very famously in the ’70s, “I’m all for open borders if you get rid of the social welfare state.”

    Actually, he basically just said, “I’m all for open borders.” He said to build the wall around the welfare state, not around the United States.

    But the component being with a welfare state, which we massively have, which then completely alters the culture of our country. We in Texas are the ones that are sitting here with elementary schools where we have to do English as a second language, we have to do all of the things that cost with that, the hospitals, the health care locally. It’s a real issue.

    But at the end of the day, we have a problem right now where there are American workers who are not working because we’re subsidizing them not to work, while we’re then complaining about needing labor. We’ve turned it all upside down is my main point.

    Is there a libertarian flavor to the MAGA movement? With Ron Paul in 2008 and 2012, the rise of the Tea Party in 2010, which included Rand Paul, Thomas Massie, [former Rep.] Justin Amash [L–Mich.], it really seemed like a libertarian version of the Republican Party: anti-war, end the Fed, limit the government. Gears shifted heavily with the rise of Donald Trump and MAGA.

    Well, that’s an interesting question and I haven’t really thought about it. I’ll give you my gut response, and then I’ll think about it a little bit. I think where we are right now is in a blend of different factors. We’ve had this evolution from 2008 onward. Now we’re 17 years into the post–Tea Party, where all of those factors are a part of where we are. Obviously, the overriding dominant force is the president and MAGA, but all of that is a piece of the fabric.

    I do think the part about immigration right now is just recognizing we’re at a point right now where we have, depending on which reports you look at, 51.5 million people who were foreign-born. People will say, “Well, who cares? We often have that.” That’s the highest percentage as an overall population we’ve had in at least the modern era, if you go back to the early 20th century.

    When America became great, yeah.

    But we also had a culture at that time that was assimilating, and saying learn English, and join in the American dream. Now, we’ve had this counterculture saying, “No, you don’t have to do that.” How does that produce a unified nation with an overall environment for success?

    Is it immigrants’ fault that we don’t have a robust conception of what it means to be American? Because when I grew up, America was a nation of immigrants. That was our whole thing—that what is great about us is we can take people from shithole countries and turn them into great Americans.

    Trump got in trouble for saying that.

    Because he meant it, whereas I’m ironic about it.

    Of course, we’re a nation of immigrants historically speaking, but understand that we’re still a nation. And that has to matter. I actually don’t care where people are from. What I care about is whether they’re proudly putting the American flag up instead of another nation’s flag, whether they’re proudly joining in with our cause.

    But bringing this back to the point, there are a lot of hard-working American families that are hurting right now. They need to be able to have access to jobs. They need to be able to have access to their schools, and to their hospitals, and to their police.

    I’d love to have the free flow of trade, people moving about being able to work. But you’ve got to have barriers, in the sense of restrictions and processes that work. At the end of the day, what you really need to do is have a smaller federal government focused on its core responsibilities. Because if it was actually doing the basic job of defending the country and defending the borders, instead of meddling with all aspects of our lives, then I think they would do a better job of that.

    Let me ask you about foreign policy. At various points you have said that we should not be intervening, we shouldn’t be giving any countries a blank check. But you also say we should be supporting some countries. Can you explain your foreign policy? And do you think you’re reflecting a new Republican consensus that may not be a Ron Paul anti-interventionist but is certainly not a George Bush neoconservative?

    Funny you say it that way. When I was Sen. Cruz’s chief of staff, we talked about it in terms of a third way of thinking about foreign policy and national security.

    I grew up a child of the ’80s. I was a proud American. It was like, beat the commies, let’s tear down the wall, all that stuff. Then fast-forward, and you have these wars that are ongoing, and I’m studying the Middle East, and then 9/11. Then you’re backing the president. He’s standing on the rubble. You’re all there, patriotic, wanting to say, “Yeah. What the hell? Get the bad guys.” Then somewhere in that timeframe, I started to go, “What are we doing? We’re in endless conflict with no clear mission.” That reset my thinking.

    I took a rule-of-law trip to Baghdad in the middle of the war. I was getting a tour from a three-star general. He’s taking me up and showing me soccer fields they’re building. I’m going, “This is all well-intended, but what the hell are we doing?” It just became very clear to me that there was this whole industry built around this.

    Where I am today, I just generally believe we should be highly skeptical of—I’ll use “endless wars” as the moniker. Our driving policy should be, what do we need to do to defend our interests as a nation? If you’re going to intervene, what is the mission? When can it be done? Can it be done quickly with the least amount of cost, loss of life, etc.? Defend our position, and then get out. But we shouldn’t be out meddling in nation building.

    We can’t own every skirmish or conflict around the world. I think when we do, we sometimes make them worse: notoriously, Afghanistan, the Soviet Union.

    But that all being said, where I break from some of my libertarian brothers and sisters is, I do think there are things where we have very specific national security interests where we should be engaged. I think that they [pay] long-term benefits. I do think the work with Israel and Iron Dome is beneficial for us. But obviously, there’s some different tensions going on now after the October 7 issue. I hope that’ll get drawn down and get to peace, and that they can get busy rebuilding and dealing with what they’re going to do.

    By and large, the United States needs to focus on its own house. We have not done that. We’re $37 trillion in debt. We’ve spent, what, $10 trillion-plus, at least, on whatever we’ve done in the Middle East in all of our engagements over the last 20 years. That doesn’t even count the burn pits, by the way [the PACT Act, which pays for health claims related to personnel exposed to trash pits on military bases]. Which I didn’t vote for because it was a $600 [billion] or $700 billion entitlement. That’s what we do though. That’s a perfect example. Overextend, endless wars, our guys and gals get hurt, then we create a massive entitlement that we can’t afford. Then our kids and grandkids are paying high interest rates and inflation.

    Let’s talk about Texas. As we’re speaking in August, the Texas Legislature is doing a novel mid-decade redistricting. How do you feel about that? Is this legitimate, or is this the worst kind of politicking?

    Gerrymandering goes all the way back to the founding. Texas is not as gerrymandered as some of our blue states. I think representation matters to match the culture and the community that you represent. Those are my driving principles, but politics are part of it.

    Is it OK to redistrict anytime, rather than every decade, based on the Census?

    There’s nothing that says we can’t. It’s very clearly political. Not saying anything anybody doesn’t know. Gerrymandering is political. I think there are seats to be gained there. In full disclosure, we were probably a little soft in how far we could have gone in 2020. I say “we”; we have no vote in that in Congress. It’s the Legislature in Texas. They’re taking it up. I think in light of the very close divisions and wanting to make sure that they’ve got a majority in the House, and also in light of, without reopening the immigration debate, a Census issue about noncitizens represented…I think when we factor all that in, I do think that there’s room here for the Legislature to redistrict. My personal philosophical bent is cleaner lines, less gerrymandered districts. But you can’t unilaterally disarm, so I get the political desire of the Legislature to act. But I don’t get a say.

    Texas is becoming the destination. Florida can say whatever it wants, but Texas is going to become the most populous state in the country by 2050, if not before. It is also increasingly the cultural heart of America. It has an identity in a way that California and New York do. Why do you think people are coming to Texas? Is it the weather? Is it the fire ants? Is it the floods?

    You picked the three things not to come here.

    When my great-great-great-grandparents moved out to Dripping Springs, Texas, it was 1853-ish. They came from Georgia. Then my Roy side of the family came via Tennessee, Arkansas, in the 1870s. The reason I bring that historic perspective up is, it was tough living. You had to want it. It was tough, so you had tough people. I think that bred a culture that was mixed with a great historic culture that was the Tex-Mex mix. Then the Germanic mix that came in—somewhat illegally too at the time.

    Texas has been under six flags. Different countries. It’s one of the great mixing pits of America.

    I think all of that has combined to create a culture that people are proud of. They want to adopt that.

    Importantly, I worry about preserving that culture. That culture of independence, of personal responsibility, where government isn’t providing for you. I’m very worried. The Texas government is bigger than it should be. We spend more than we should. Texas isn’t as free as it should [be]. It is highly regulated. Cato has done some big studies on that.

    I don’t think we’re safe enough. I don’t think we’re free enough. There are things that we need to do to improve. But the reason people come to Texas is because of what it represents.

    I think we’re at a crossroads. I think in order to maintain that Texas spirit and that Texas culture, we’re going to have to double down on the things that made us great. That means, in my opinion, a hard move to freedom; a hard move to a truly limited government. You can’t go around saying that Texas is the best thing since sliced bread and the federal government’s the problem when our state government is bureaucratic. We’ve got work that we need to do there, but it’s a great state with a great mix of people, and people who respect what it means to work hard and to make their own lives.

    I think from a free enterprise standpoint, Texas is pretty free. I think from a regulatory, compliance standpoint, property taxes, there are things that we need to do to improve freedom in Texas and be the beacon of hope for the next century.

    This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.

    Nick Gillespie

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  • Susannah Cahalan on the psychedelic pioneer Rosemary Woodruff Leary

    Rosemary Woodruff Leary is remembered—if she’s remembered at all—as a muse, fugitive, and heavily indicted co-conspirator in Timothy Leary’s psychedelic revolution of the 1960s and ’70s. But her story is far more complex than that. A true believer in the mind-expanding potential of LSD, a master of the elusive art of “set and setting,” and a woman determined to live a remarkable life, Rosemary was a countercultural icon in her own right.

    Susannah Cahalan is the author, most recently, of The Acid Queen: The Psychedelic Life and Countercultural Rebellion of Rosemary Woodruff Leary. In June, Cahalan joined The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie to discuss Woodruff—what drove her to begin experimenting with psychedelics, what she saw in the tumult of postwar America, and why her legacy deserves more than a footnote in someone else’s story.

    Q: Who was Rosemary Woodruff Leary?

    A: As much as I hate to start with Timothy Leary, we are starting with him—she was [his] third or fourth wife, depending on who you ask. She was a seeker. She was a behind-the-scenes character who was propping up Leary, working with him on his speeches, sewing his clothing, helping him create an image.

    She was also very much a true believer in the role that psychedelics could play in not only expanding consciousness but actually making society better. She was called the Queen of Set and Setting—the mindset that you bring into a trip, and the environment. Rosemary was very good at making people feel grounded and supported.

    Q: What drove her to move to New York and start experimenting with drugs? What was she seeking that she wasn’t getting in her hometown of St. Louis?

    A: She had always talked about herself in these mythic terms. She saw herself as someone who was going to live a great life—with a capital G, Great. She wasn’t going to find that in St. Louis. She was attracted to “great men”—these genius archetypes. That’s what she found in New York. Through being in this scene, she was able to express some of those sides of herself.

    Q: What was going on in postwar America
where this type of thing was even taking place?

    A: I think there’s a lot of overlap with today. There was a sense of insecurity. Some people responded to that insecurity and fear by having a lot of children, being very family focused. And other people started questioning the nature of their reality and the role of society.

    They were still kind of caught up. Rosemary described how Timothy—despite all of his talk of revolution of the mind and [how he] was going to upend society—was the kind of man who put his hand out and expected to have a martini glass put in it.

    Q: And that was part of the function that she served, right? She kept the rooms clean, helped organize, fed people.

    A: It’s been an interesting thing, talking about Rosemary in today’s culture, where there seems to be this idea that either you have to be a tradwife or a girlboss. She wasn’t either of those. Yes, she was stuck with a position that oftentimes she resented. But she actually did really enjoy taking care of other people. She was genuinely really good at taking care of people and beautifying spaces, too.

    Q: What is the message that you might bring to a contemporary person reading this?

    A: The thing I hope people take away from it is that she was complicated. She doesn’t fit into these ideas of what a woman should be or how she should use her power. She was more like all of us, who are complicated. We sometimes pick people who aren’t great for us. Or we love people who are damaged and damaging. And that doesn’t make her any less worthy of a biography.

    This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.

    Nick Gillespie

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  • Richard Dawkins on new threats to science—from religion to relativism

    Few living thinkers have been as influential—or controversial—as Richard Dawkins. An evolutionary biologist by training, Dawkins rose to prominence with his 1976 book The Selfish Gene, which revolutionized the public understanding of evolution by shifting the focus from organisms to the genes that shape them (as well as surfacing the now-ubiquitous concept of the meme, which Dawkins defined as units of cultural transmission or imitation). In the decades since, he has become almost as well known for his critiques of religion as for his scientific work, with 2006’s The God Delusion establishing him as one of the world’s most outspoken atheists. Dawkins’ work shows why free inquiry and the scientific method are essential for human progress, especially when they are under threat from religious dogma or new forms of ideological orthodoxy.

    In this wide-ranging conversation with Reason‘s Nick Gillespie, recorded live in September 2024 in Milwaukee as part of Dawkins’ Final Bow tour, the two discuss the central metaphor of Dawkins’ latest book, The Genetic Book of the Dead, which presents every organism as a kind of living archive of evolutionary history. He explains how cooperation among genes—not just competition—drives natural selection. The two also explore the role of atheism in a changing moral landscape, whether science requires a specific cultural or political environment to thrive, and what humans might gravitate toward next as belief in traditional religion continues to decline.

    Reason: I first encountered your work as an undergrad. I was a double major in psychology and English. When reading your work, I couldn’t believe that I was reading science because I understood what you were saying. But in The Genetic Book of the Dead, you use a term—palimpsest—as a controlling metaphor. What is a palimpsest, and why is it so important to what you’re doing in this book?

    Dawkins: A palimpsest is a manuscript which is erased and then the parchment is used again. In the days when paper was not available, people wrote on parchment. It was quite scarce; they would reuse it. The point of it in the book is that every animal bears in itself—in its genes and in its body—a description of the worlds in which its ancestors survived. This, it seems to me, follows from natural selection. The animal has been put together by a whole lot of selection pressures over many millions of years.

    In the book, you talk about how that palimpsest is sometimes literally on the organism’s skin or shell. What’s a good example of that?

    Any camouflaged animal that sits on the background that it resembles. I use the example of a lizard in the Mojave Desert, which has, more or less, painted on its back a picture of desert. The whole of its back is a painting of the desert. Any camouflaged animal is an obvious example. My thesis is that that principle must apply to every cell, every biochemical process, every detail, every part of the animal.

    In The Selfish Gene, you debunked the idea that we’re in control as humans—you said we’re being used by genes. In this book, you’ve outdone yourself by saying that we are actually a cooperative of viruses. I guess my question is: What do you have against human beings?

    Well, The Selfish Gene had what you would call a sting in the tail—the last chapter switched to a different topic, which was memes. I thought this book should have a sting in the tail as well, and so this is this idea that we are a gigantic colony of cooperating viruses.

    One of my books is called The Extended Phenotype. This is the idea that the genes in an animal work to survive not just by influencing the body of the animal in which they sit—they reach outside the animal, and part of the so-called phenotype of the genes is outside the body. An obvious example is a bird’s nest or a bowerbird’s bower, which is not a part of the animal but which nevertheless is a Darwinian adaptation. It’s shaped by natural selection. And this must mean that there are genes for nest shape, genes for bower shape. This principle of the extended phenotype applies not just to inanimate objects like nests and bowers. It applies to other individuals. A parasite can influence the behavior of the host in which it sits in order to further its designs as a parasite. That means that the genes in the parasite are having phenotypic effects on the body and behavior of the host.

    Now, if you think about a parasite in an animal—like a worm or a virus or a bacterium—its task is to get into the next host. There are two ways in which it can do this.

    It can be expelled from the host in some way, like sneezed out or coughed out of the host, and then breathed in by the next host. When a parasite exits the body by some such route, it has no great interest in the survival of the host in which it sits. For all it cares, the host can die.

    But what about a parasite which passes to the next host via the gametes, via the eggs or sperms of the present host? Well, a parasite whose hope for the future is to go into the progeny, into the offspring of the present host, if you think about it, its extended phenotype, its aims, its desires, its hopes for the future will be identical to the genes of the host. It will want the host to be a successful survivor. It will want the host to be a successful reproducer. It will want the host to be sexually attractive, to be a good parent, because everything about what the host regards as success, namely having offspring, will be the same as what the parasite regards as a success, namely, the host having offspring.

    All our own genes: The only reason they cooperate in building us—in building the body, in building any animal—is that they all have the same interests at heart. They all get into the next generation via the gametes of the host. In other words, they have the same interest at heart in exactly the same way as a virus that gets passed on in the gametes, or a bacterium that gets passed on in gametes. So that’s why I say that all our own genes can be regarded as equivalent to a gigantic colony of cooperating viruses.

    Are you becoming a softy? When you published The Selfish Gene in 1976, evolution seemed to me more about competition and the survival of the fittest. Now you’re speaking more about cooperation. What moved you away from competition and toward cooperation?

    I think that’s a misunderstanding. I’m not becoming a softy, or rather, I always was a softy, because The Selfish Gene is not really about selfishness. It’s about selfishness at the level of the gene, but that translates out into altruism at the levels of the individual, or it can. And that’s largely what the book is about. Genes are selfish in the sense that they are striving to get into the next generation. That’s what they do. They are, in a sense, immortal. But they do it by cooperating. I’ve always said that.

    In The Selfish Gene, there’s a chapter in which I have the analogy of a rowing race where you have eight men sitting in a row in a boat, and they’re cooperating. That’s what the genes are doing. The genes are cooperating in building a body that will carry all of them to the next generation via reproduction. So they have to cooperate.

    We’re always looking for the gene that controls this or controls that. You say that’s a misnomer. Where does that misunderstanding come from?

    When you talk about a gene for anything, it’s tempting to think that there’s a gene for this bit and a gene for this bit. It’s not like that. Genes are more like the words of a recipe or a computer program, where they work together to produce a whole embryo, and then a whole body. Genes cooperate in the process of embryology.

    The reason why you can, to some extent, talk about a gene for that is that you focus on the differences between individuals. Gregor Mendel, for example, studied wrinkled peas and smooth peas. Well, what he’s really talking about there is individual differences. A genetic difference controls an individual difference. Say, the Habsburg chin—the hereditary malformation of the chin which affected the royal families of Europe. There are lots and lots of genes that enter into the making of a chin, but what this particular gene does is to make the difference between somebody who has the Habsburg chin and somebody who doesn’t. So “gene for X” always means “gene for the difference between somebody who has X and somebody who doesn’t have X.”

    You also talk about how a cultural change can have evolutionary consequences, such as the taming of fire and the shrinking of jaws and teeth.

    There’s a book by Richard Wrangham, who’s an anthropologist at Harvard, about the importance of cooking on human evolution. One of the things you see as you look at the human fossil record is that our jaws have shrunk. Our ancestors had much bigger, more powerful jaws than we have. Wrangham thinks that this is because of the discovery of fire, the invention of cooking, which enabled us to make food less tough. We didn’t need such powerful jaws. And so that’s an interaction between culture, namely the taming of fire and the development of cooking, and genetic evolution.

    Over what time period does that emerge?

    Well, it looks as though Homo erectus, which is our immediate ancestor species, which lived about a million years ago, had fire. It’s not absolutely definite, but there do appear to be archeological remains of hearths suggesting that they had fire, and they probably had cooking. At least Wrangham thinks so. So maybe a million years.

    Last year, you wrote an article in The Spectator called “Why I’m sticking up for science” about the adoption of certain Māori origin myths being presented as science in New Zealand schools. What was going on there?

    This is a very strange business. I arrived in New Zealand and was immediately aware that I was in the midst of a great controversy. The New Zealand government—which was then a socialist government; it’s changed now, but the present government is doing the same thing—is importing compulsorily into science classes in New Zealand schools, Māori myths. And they are being given equal status to what they call “Western science.” Which is just science. It’s not “Western”; it’s just science.

    So the children in New Zealand are, I would have thought, being bewildered by, on the one hand, learning about the big bang and the origin of life and DNA and things like that; on the other hand, they’re being told it’s all due to this sky father and the earth mother probably having it off together. It’s pandering to, I think, a kind of guilt that white New Zealanders feel toward the Māori indigenous population, and bending over backward to show respect to the indigenous population. And I think that’s fine—it would be great for New Zealand children to learn about Māori culture and myths in classes on anthropology and history. But to bring them into science classes—that’s just not science.

    I became involved because a number of distinguished scientists in New Zealand—fellows of the New Zealand Royal Society, which is the New Zealand equivalent of the National Academy of Sciences here—had written a letter protesting about this to a New Zealand journal called the Listener. As a consequence, they had their lectures canceled, they were threatened with expulsion, really quite unpleasant victimization of these distinguished scientists. And I had lunch with about half a dozen of them and heard all about it from them.

    Broadly speaking, how important is it that you were born at a time when you were able to take advantage of a liberal political era so that you could do a lot of the work that you did? If you had been born 200 years earlier or 20 years later, maybe not, right?

    Totally. Very, very important.

    What do you think accounts for that kind of social and moral progress that makes us more open as a society?

    I am fascinated by this. In one of my books, The God Delusion, I talk about the shifting moral zeitgeist. Something changes as the centuries go by. You’ve only got to go back to, say, the mid–19th century, where people like Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Henry Huxley—who were in the vanguard of enlightened liberal thought—by today’s standard were the most terrible racists. So the shifting moral zeitgeist is something that changes not just over the centuries but over decades.

    I am genuinely curious about what it is in the air that changes. It seems to me to be a bit like Moore’s law in computing, which is a definite mathematical straight line on a long scale in computer power. It’s not due to any one thing; it’s a composite of things that I think the shifting moral zeitgeist is the same, it is a composite of conversations at dinner parties, journalism, parliamentary/congress decisions, technological innovation, books. Everything moves on.

    What do you think the role of atheism—or a challenge to the supremacy of religion—has been, if not as a kind of scientific theory of order, then a social or cultural theory of order?

    Well, I think atheism is just sensible. If you look at polls in America and in Western Europe, the number of people who profess religion is steadily going down. There are more religious people in America than there are in the rest of Western Europe. But it is coming down. So that’s part of the shifting zeitgeist.

    Part of that has to do with books that you—or the colony of bacteria that are you—wrote. What do you see as the most convincing arguments that you advanced?

    If you want to believe something, you’ve got to have reason to do so. It’s rather better to say, “What are the most convincing arguments for theism?” And I’m not sure there are any. But, obviously, there are a lot that appear convincing to many people. The argument from design is probably the most powerful one.

    In a way, you kind of advance a godless design with evolution, don’t you? Everything is designed?

    Yes, yes. Absolutely. It’s an astonishingly powerful illusion of design. And it breaks down in certain places where there’s bad design, like the vertebrate retina being backward, that kind of thing. But one of the things that I try to do in most of my books, actually, is to show how beautifully perfect the animals are. They really, really do look designed. I think this is probably why it took so long for a [Charles] Darwin to come on the scene. People just couldn’t fathom the idea that it could come about through unconscious laws of physics.

    Do you feel good that atheism, or maybe a better term is godlessness, is ascendant?

    Yes, I do.

    Despite not believing in God, you have called yourself a cultural Christian for at least a decade. What do you mean by that?

    Nothing more than the fact that I was educated in Christian schools and a Christian society. It doesn’t mean I’m sympathetic toward it, doesn’t mean I believe it.

    You have said that if you had to live in a Christian country or an Islamic country, you would pick the Christian country every time.

    Yes, I would not wish to live in a country where the penalty for apostasy is death, and gay people are thrown off high buildings, and women are stoned to death for the crime of being raped.

    There is an argument that liberal political philosophy, which allows for limited government, free speech, and open inquiry, has its roots in Christianity and the English Civil War. Part of the argument there was that the king did not have dominion over other men because we are all equal in front of God. I read a critique of you saying that you have been in the tree of Christianity and you’ve been sawing the branch off your whole time, and now by calling yourself a cultural Christian, you’re in a way free riding on something. How do you respond?

    Well, I’m rather sorry I said that thing about being a cultural Christian, because people have taken it to mean I’m sort of sympathetic toward the belief.

    Now that thing about the society which lets science be free to do what it does being a Christian society, that’s a matter for historians. And they might be right. It is possible that Christendom was the right breeding ground for science to arise in the 17th, 18th, 19th centuries. And your point about the English Civil War could be valid as well.

    Research suggests, with obvious exceptions, that religiosity is declining. Religion has been a part of human history and civilization. Is there an issue that replaces it?

    G.K. Chesterton is possibly wrongly thought to have said, “When men stop believing in religion, they believe in anything.” It’s rather a pessimistic view. I would like to think you believe in evidence. And I think it’s rather demeaning to human nature to suggest that giving up one sort of nonsense, you’ve immediately got to go and seize on some other sort of nonsense.

    What do you hope you will be remembered for? You are a palimpsest—you are writing over the work of previous scientists and thinkers. What is the message that sticks around long enough to influence people after you?

    I suppose the message of The Selfish Gene: that natural selection chooses among immortal replicators, which happen to be genes on this planet. It will be the same principle, the Darwinian principle of the nonrandom survival of randomly varying, potentially immortal replicators.

    This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.

    Nick Gillespie

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  • Thomas Massie is railing against the ‘virtue signal vote’

    Thomas Massie is railing against the ‘virtue signal vote’

    “I have a history of being the only vote that was a ‘no,’” says Rep. Thomas Massie (R–Ky.). “I’ve developed some trust with my constituents on those lone votes.”

    In the second episode of Reason‘s new video podcast Just Asking Questions, Massie joined hosts Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe in mid-December to talk about his recent votes against aid to Ukraine and Israel and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Reform and Reauthorization Act, as well as his attempt to force an in-person congressional vote on a $2.2 trillion COVID-19 relief bill in March 2020, a move that prompted former President Donald Trump to label Massie “a third-rate grandstander.”

    Reason: In light of the vote on the FISA Reform and Reauthorization Act and the reauthorization of Section 702, which essentially allows the government to surveil communications between American citizens and foreign targets without a warrant, there is a push to attach it to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) with a temporary extension. What is at stake for Americans?

    Massie: We’re not trying to eliminate the FISA 702 program. It was established to allow our intelligence agencies to spy on foreigners without a warrant. In order to qualify to be spied on without a warrant, you have to be outside of the country and you have to be not an American citizen. If you’re inside the country or if you’re an American citizen outside of the country, you can’t be spied on by this program. Sounds great, right? But we’ve got 250,000 people on that list that we’re collecting information on.

    If you talk to a businessperson in France, for instance, your emails may get caught up in this data collection. What they’ve been doing is going into this giant ball of data and they put in your name and search it without a warrant, without reasonable suspicion or probable cause. They are using this not to investigate suspects, but to create suspects.

    Let’s say that you are at a protest and they develop some nexus. They say, “Well, we think these protesters were inspired by Russia. We’re just going to run all the protesters’ names through this database.” Now, even though the intel community doesn’t concede that they need a warrant for this, they’ve admitted that they violated their own protocols hundreds of thousands of times when they searched for U.S. persons’ data in this haystack. They say, “Well, it was created legally, so we don’t need a warrant to go search it.”

    There are two proposals to reauthorize this program. By the way, the only chance you ever get to reform these programs is when they expire. So it’s important that they do expire occasionally, and this one expires in January. In the Judiciary Committee, which [Rep.] Jim Jordan [R–Ohio] chairs, and on which I serve, we’ve marked up a bill that would require them to get a warrant. It would create criminal penalties for people in the executive branch who abuse the program. Because there’s never any culpability or blowback for anybody that’s abused this program.

    And then the Intel Committee has created a bill that is less than ideal. It doesn’t have a warrant requirement. It doesn’t have many of the reporting requirements back to Congress that the Judiciary bill has. In fact, it expands their ability to collect information. For instance, if you had free Wi-Fi at a café, that service provider would be treated like Google or Verizon now and they would have to create a direct pipeline to the intel agencies for any of the communications that go through that.

    So you’ve got two proposals out there, and we’re running out of time.

    In the wake of Edward Snowden’s revelations about inappropriate government surveillance a decade ago, there were some lonely dissenters, but most just rubber-stamped this stuff. Now, it seems there’s more resistance, possibly influenced by the way FISA was used against the Trump administration. Do you feel the political tides have shifted to the advantage of people who care about privacy?

    The tides haven’t just shifted; the stars have aligned. We’ve never had a chairman of either the Intel Committee or the Judiciary Committee who made reforming this program one of their priorities. So with Jim Jordan, we’re very lucky to have him as the chairman of this committee. One of his signature agendas is to get this reform because we have seen abuses that have been used against President Trump.

    A lot of conservatives have woken up to the fact that this program is being used against them. You have liberals who are upset about the program. Obviously, the FBI’s using this against Black Lives Matter as well.

    So you do have this coalition of the left and the right. It used to be a coalition of a dozen people. It was me and [former Rep.] Justin Amash [L–Mich.], [Rep.] Zoe Lofgren [D–Calif.], and [former Rep.] Tulsi Gabbard [D–Hawaii] who were concerned about this. We used to come together and we would offer amendments to try to fix this in the funding bills. We would try to defund some of this stuff, which is a really blunt instrument. It’s a lot easier to write legislation that affects the laws than it is to just defund something. And they would pat us on the head and say, “Well, you know, we appreciate the sentiment, but this isn’t the time or place to do what you’re doing. And you shouldn’t be mucking around with the funding.” But now is the time and place: The program is expiring. We’ve got a chairman who’s sympathetic to the cause. This reported out of the Judiciary Committee 35–2. There were only two dissenters.

    During his recent visit to Washington, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy sought more U.S. funding to support Ukraine’s war against Russia’s invasion. There’s also a complex foreign policy situation in the Middle East right now between Israel and Hamas. You have called funding Ukraine and Zelenskyy “economically illiterate and morally deficient.” Why oppose this form of funding?

    The economic illiteracy is in reference to a letter that the White House sent to the House of Representatives. In two or three of the paragraphs of the letter, they espouse the virtues of spending money with the military-industrial complex and sending that to Ukraine as a job creation program. That it would re​invigorate our military-industrial complex. You’ve got to believe in the broken window fallacy to think this will be an economic stimulus for the United States.

    Meanwhile, the moral deficiency comes from some of the senators who have said that this war is a great deal for America because all we have to do is supply the weapons and Ukraine supplies the soldiers, and we’re grinding down the Russian army. We’re degrading their capacity to do this elsewhere or to commit war against us. The problem with that is the number of people who are dying. Zelenskyy allegedly told the senators that he’s raising the draft age to 40 and admitted that they are running out of soldiers either through attrition on the battlefield or from people who’ve defected and left the country.

    You would think if this were a war about the existence of Ukraine and protecting a democracy and such a fine government that people would sign up, would volunteer to fight for their country. But the reality is that hundreds of thousands of them who had the means and the money got out of the country. Some are dying, trying to escape over mountains and through rivers to get out of the country. And far too many have died on the battlefield. We can keep supplying them with weapons. We can keep depleting our treasure. But they’re going to run out of fighting-age males pretty soon.

    Regarding individuals leaving Ukraine, do you take that as an indictment of Ukraine’s democratic system or a perception that the war is unwinnable?

    I think it’s both. They lived in a country where they know that bribery and corruption are part of the culture and the current government isn’t immune to that. If you’re fighting for your country, that’s one thing. But fighting for the government that’s in charge of your country is another thing. I believe that’s part of it. Obviously, self-preservation is going to be part of it as well.

    When it’s over, there’s going to have to be some negotiated peace settlement. Nobody, I think, believes Crimea is going to go back to Ukraine. So why spend all the lives when the lines are going to be where they were when it started? Realism is a third factor in that.

    You’ve been on the lonely end, certainly on the Republican side, of several votes pertaining to Israel, including House Resolution 771, which is entitled, “Standing with Israel as it defends itself against the barbaric war launched by Hamas and other terrorists.” Could you explain your stance on Israel, where you’re coming from, and what you think some of these critics might be missing about your position?

    Today, we’re going to take our 19th virtue signal vote here in Congress. I guess I got off on the wrong foot early and have been voting consistently ever since. The title of that bill is wonderful. I have no disagreement with the title of that bill, but there are four or five pages that go after that title.

    The first objection I had was that there is an open-ended pledge of military support for Israel. We never declare wars anymore. The administration just kind of goes and does it. And Congress keeps funding it, but they find the imprimatur for their activity right there in these resolutions. The open-ended guarantee of support for that war that’s contained in the text of that bill, but not the title, could have implied boots on the ground. And that may be the only vote we get to take in Congress on whether we’re going to do that or not. So, number one, I don’t support that notion.

    Number two, in that resolution they mentioned Iran. In the very first resolution, they’re already trying to expand the war and incorporate as much of the Middle East as they can. There’s some people that just can’t wait to attack Iran, and they want to use this as the nexus to get there. So that was in the resolution, a condemnation of Iran. I think we should be trying to constrain the conflict, not to expand it in the first resolution of support that we passed.

    Part of that resolution wanted stronger sanctions on Iran. I don’t support sanctions, never voted to sanction a sovereign country in the 11 years that I’ve been in Congress. I think it leads to war. Sanctions actually create crimes only for U.S. citizens, because we’re not going to put somebody in jail in another country who trades with Iran. What we’re proposing to do when we pass a sanction is to make a federal law that would result in the imprisonment of a U.S. citizen who trades with Iran. And it hurts the people who are in the country. I think it actually edges us closer to war instead of getting us out of war. Even though I support Israel and I condemned Hamas, I did that on my own. I put out a statement. I support Israel’s right to defend itself and I condemn these attacks. But that wasn’t enough.

    You’ve taken heat for what you would describe as a “virtue signal” bill that is essentially the House reaffirming the state of Israel’s right to exist and recognizing that denying Israel’s right to exist is a form of antisemitism. Where are you coming from on these sorts of bills that aren’t directly tied to any sort of military aid?

    I recognize Israel’s right to exist. I have to preface all of this stuff with that because people would imply from a vote that I don’t. But when they passed that, I said, “You’re basically saying that anti-Zionism is antisemitism.” And people argued with me about that.

    What’s interesting is the next week they passed almost the same resolution and they replaced Israel’s right to exist with Zionism. Maybe I’m just giving them clues for how to write their bills more directly because the next resolution said that anti-Zionism is antisemitism. There are hundreds of thousands of Jewish people who disagree with that statement. In fact, [Rep.] Jerrold Nadler [D–N.Y.], who’s the most senior member of Congress who’s Jewish, went to the floor and gave a five-minute speech, which is a long speech in the House of Representatives, on why that’s untrue to say that anti-Zionism is antisemitism.

    There are a lot of people who are antisemitic who are also against the state of Israel, but you can’t equate the two. I think these 19 votes, after today, are sort of part of the war effort for Israel to make it hard for anybody in the United States to criticize what they’re doing.

    Every two or three days here in Congress, we’re taking these votes. A lot of what’s in the resolution is just obvious and doesn’t need to be stated. It’s kind of like Black Lives Matter. You have to say “black lives matter.” They’re doing the equivalent with Israel. Now Israel matters. I agree that Israel matters, but we don’t have to take all these votes. And some of them are going into campuses and trying to limit free speech by withholding federal money if you allow things that are considered antisemitic.

    I’ve been called antisemitic for merely not supporting the money that goes to Israel. [The American Israel Public Affairs Committee] spent $90,000 in my district running ads implying that I was antisemitic, then in a tweet said that I was antisemitic for not voting for the $14.3 billion to go to Israel, even though I’ve not voted for foreign aid to go anywhere.

    You have a reputation as the guy who’s willing to take the unpopular vote. One of the prime examples of that is back during the depths of COVID-19, in March 2020, when everyone was pushing for a $2.2 trillion COVID relief bill, including the president. It was you who said, “If we’re going to have a $2 trillion vote here, let’s follow the Constitution and have everyone come back to D.C. and actually do it in person.”

    President Trump’s response to that was, “Looks like a third-rate grandstander named Rep. Thomas Massie, a congressman from, unfortunately, a truly great state, Kentucky, wants to vote against the new Save Our Workers bill in Congress. He just wants publicity. He can’t stop it.” He goes on to say that “the Republicans should win the House, but they should kick out Thomas Massie.” What was that like having the Eye of Sauron on you for insisting on an in-person vote in March 2020?

    I’ll have to write a book someday. Those tweets happened about 60 seconds after a phone call ended between me and President Trump, where he basically burned my ear off, screaming at me for probably three minutes and said he was coming at me, he was going to take me down. That’s a sobering proposition when you’ve got a primary election eight weeks away and you’ve been trying to keep the president out of your race. The person running against you says you don’t support the president enough. The president had a 95 percent approval rating among the primary voters who were going to vote in my election. But I just stood strong. I said, listen, if truckers and nurses and grocery store workers are showing up for work, then Congress should show up for work too. And that was, I think, an unassailable message. Ultimately, I was just trying to get people on record.

    The reason I was trying to get people on record is because I knew this was one of the worst votes in history and nobody was going to be accountable for it. Here we are three years later, and every bad thing that I said would happen as a result of doing that has happened. And even my colleagues here in Congress, a lot of them admit to me that they were wrong about that. They won’t say it too loudly lest anybody hear it.

    The reporters came up to me as I walked out of the chamber that day and said, “Your own president just called you a third-rate grandstander. What do you have to say?” And I said, “I was deeply insulted. I’m at least second-rate.”

    How much COVID policy remorse is there among your colleagues in Congress?

    Not enough. Not nearly enough. The policy isn’t just the spending, the vaccine mandates, the shutting down of our economy, the compulsory masking, the way people were treated like cattle. There should be far more remorse. But frankly, that’s a reflection of the voters as well. If you poll this, most people have moved on. Even a year ago, most people had moved on and it wasn’t in the top five issues that people care about in any congressional district.

    Look at [Florida Gov.] Ron DeSantis. That was part of his signature issue. He most famously opposed a lot of this COVID nonsense after it became obvious what we were dealing with. He rode that wave and he was polling better than Trump. But I think people have moved on and they’ve got other issues to think about now. So have my colleagues. I think it’s really unfortunate. I wished that I had been able to get that recorded vote that day. We’d have a lot more people who wouldn’t be back here in Congress perpetrating bad ideas like FISA.

    You were elected during the era of the Tea Party’s emphasis on reining in government spending: “We can’t have the money printer constantly printing forever. We have to be prudent because the bill always comes due.” Do you think that message has any hopes of having any sort of revival in the coming years, especially given the runaway inflation that we’ve seen? Is it a lost cause?

    Let me assign a 95 percent probability to that last proposition. I’m here with a 5 percent chance that we can save it. And in the 30 percent chance that if it all goes to hell in a handbasket, I can still be here and have some credibility to put it back together.

    I think what’s starting to curb the appetite for spending and bring some realism into the discussion is the only thing that was ever going to curb our appetite for spending, and that is our creditors are starting to balk. The rates at which the government can borrow money now aren’t what we want them to be. When we go out to do an auction or a sale for treasuries or bonds, what we’re finding is the appetite isn’t there, even at 4.5 percent. To get a guaranteed 4.5 percent return on your money from the government backed by the U.S. military? That’s not enough to loan that money to the government. They want 5 percent. The private sector and the other countries, the sovereign funds, usually have the appetite for our debt—when they’re losing their appetite, that’s a sign that things are going south.

    I wear this debt clock that I built in Congress to remind people of it. One side effect of me wearing this is that I’ve noticed the rate at which the debt is increasing is going up. For the math nerds, that’s the second derivative. Today, the debt per second is an average of $78,000. I don’t think people realize. It feels like we’re going over Niagara Falls right now. The rate of these bad things happening is increasing now.

    This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.

    This article originally appeared in print under the headline “Against The ‘Virtue Signal’ Vote”.

    Zach Weissmueller

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