Ezra Klein
π€ SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
How do you tolerate people who don't want to be tolerant?
How do you then not become intolerant?
Can you trace a bit of that tension?
What, in your view, is the first society or state in which something that we would now recognize as liberalism takes power?
When does it move from a theory outside power as a political philosophy, not as a virtue, into something that is being wielded by those with authority?
Let's stay on Marx for a minute.
What is his critique of liberalism?
In Marx's view.
Where does liberalism begin to become interested in or associated with?
the actual redistribution of resources in society from the rich to the poor?
Where does it become connected to social welfare states?
When you talk about FDR and that later liberalism, and a lot happens between what we've been discussing in there.
At some point, this moves away from just being a set of approaches to a marketplace of ideas or individual virtue, and it becomes connected to a view that power needs to be redistributed and
Money and security need to be redistributed.
When does that begin to happen?
There is an interesting dimension there that I think you hear less of today, which is a connection of a social welfare state, everything from education to health care and on and on, as being not just a matter of justice, maybe not even at all a matter of justice, but instead a matter of uplift.
You're trying to create the conditions for
a capable, educated, productive citizenry.
And something you see in a lot of the early arguments about it is that you see less of the argument, at least in my reading, that society is unfair.
That's more sort of how I would argue for a lot of these policies today, and more of the argument that