A Life Worth Working – Finding Purpose & Overcoming Setbacks
What happens when the institutions you trusted turn out to be the problem? Matt Stoller spent his twenties credentialing himself — Harvard, Congressional staffing, policy circles — and trusting that the credentialed people knew what they were doing. The Iraq War changed that. The 2008 financial crisis finished it. “I had validated myself based on all of the credentials I had accrued. But those credentials were given to me by people like that. So I was torn between this notion of — are you going to try to curry favor with people who are powerful, which is really how you get ahead as a kid? Or are you going to adhere to a sort of moral code?” What emerged from that reckoning was a decade-long dive into the anti-monopoly tradition buried in American law — and Goliath, his seminal book about how concentrated corporate power quietly reshaped democracy without most of us noticing. Today he runs BIG [https://www.thebignewsletter.com/], a newsletter with 150,000 readers, and directs research at the American Economic Liberties Project — translating antitrust law into stories about fire trucks, water coolers, vet bills, and all the other places where private equity roll-ups are making daily life more expensive and more fragile. Stoller’s career arc — from credentialed true believer to moral crisis to deep historical reckoning — is also a story about what it costs to trust institutions uncritically, and what it means to rebuild your compass from the ground up. In a moment when trust in institutions is collapsing and expertise is being weaponized on all sides, his argument for epistemic humility — grounded not in cynicism but in a genuine conviction that every person carries a touch of the divine — is its own kind of radical act. In this conversation, Matt talks with Dr. Michelle Weise and Rev. Dana Allen Walsh about: * What monopoly power actually looks like — in fire trucks, spring water, veterinary practices, and electric bills * Why curiosity is the foundation of democratic life — and why intellectual humility can be depressing * His unexpected take on the Federal Reserve as religious institution * What daily Talmud study has to do with a sense of calling Read Matt’s newsletter BIG: bignewsletter.com Listen to Organized Money: organizedmoney.fm About Matt Stoller Matt Stoller is the Director of Research at the American Economic Liberties Project and the author of Goliath: The Hundred Year War Between Monopoly Power and Democracy — called “one of the year’s best books on how to rethink capitalism and improve the economy” by Business Insider. A former policy advisor to the Senate Budget Committee and staffer on the Financial Services Committee during the 2008 financial crisis, Matt now runs the newsletter BIG and co-hosts the podcast Organized Money with David Dayen. His work translates the arcane machinery of monopoly power and antitrust law into stories that explain why everyday life feels increasingly expensive, fragile, and unfair. About the Podcast: A Life Worth Working A Life Worth Working is hosted by Michelle Weise [https://michelleweise.substack.com/], a writer on the future of learning and work, and Dana Allen Walsh [https://artofflourishing.substack.com/], an executive coach and pastor. Each week, they talk with guests who open up about the messiness, transformation, and wonder of their work lives — what they call the soul of work. 🔔 Subscribe so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Leave a review — it helps more people find the show. 📩 Email us: alifeworthworking@gmail.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit michelleweise.substack.com [https://michelleweise.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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