Rob Montz

The musical influences of Coleman Hughes

6 min · 13. juni 2025
episode The musical influences of Coleman Hughes cover

Beskrivelse

As an unknown undergraduate philosophy major, Coleman Hughes penned a series of brilliant essays on race and crime, carefully dismantling what he called “the racism treadmill,” the stale, endlessly repeated narrative about institutional oppression in America. His fan base exploded and he’s now regularly called up to battle the high priests of right-think on race. We got together to talk personas, heroes and using rap to deal with the absurdity of death.

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Alle episoder

7 episoder

episode The Case Against School with Prof. Bryan Caplan cover

The Case Against School with Prof. Bryan Caplan

The politics of the pandemic have been defined by brutal tribal division, but there’s at least one point of consensus among the professional punditry: the COVID school closures were a catastrophe. The thinking goes: shutting down K-12 led to vast, unrecoverable learning losses, hobbling the next generation of workers, and we’ll be suffering the economic repercussions for decades to come. School does indeed serve valuable purposes, most importantly providing shelter and food for low-income kids. But education? We’re not so sure. That’s why we sat down with Professor Bryan Caplan, the George Mason economist and author of “The Case Against Education,” the book that convinced us school is largely a waste of time. What does he think about this consensus on the COVID school closures?

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episode Why Frederick Douglass Opposed Mass Immigration with NumbersUSA’s Roy Beck cover

Why Frederick Douglass Opposed Mass Immigration with NumbersUSA’s Roy Beck

We have unapologetic cringey Boomer love for the idea of America as a creed, not a clan; as a set of ideals and principles open to anyone. Immigrants have been an essential part of this country's cultural dynamism and economic dominance, and closing up our borders seems like it would compromise the magic of America. On the other hand, there's ample evidence that there are real costs of excessive immigration, and those costs are not evenly distributed. Fortune 500 titans get to load up on H-1B engineers and cheap entry-level laborers, while low-skilled American citizens suffer shrinking wages and fewer footholds into the labor market. We just talk about all this with Roy Beck, founder of NumbersUSA and one of the country’s leading advocates for tight immigration restrictions. He has an interesting new book documenting a forgotten fact about the immigration debate: many prominent civil rights leaders opposed immigration, specifically because they feared the flux of low-wage workers would rob black Americans of economic opportunity.

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