FAIR Perspectives

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Welcome to the FAIR Perspectives, the official podcast of the pro-human movement, brought to you by the Foundation Against Intolerance & Racism. Hosts Melissa Chen and Angel Eduardo hope to elevate a pro-human approach to our deadlocked discourse on a var

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    • Dec 20, 2022 LATEST EPISODE
    • every other week NEW EPISODES
    • 1h 13m AVG DURATION
    • 36 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from FAIR Perspectives

    On Being Triggered By Free Speech with Konstantin Kisin - Ep. 36

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2022 88:33


    Konstantin kisin is a Russian-British comedian, podcaster, writer and social commentator. He made international headlines in 2018 by refusing to sign a "University Behavioral Agreement" form, which banned jokes about religion and atheism, and insisted that all humor must be respectful and kind. He is also the creator and co-host of the Triggernometry YouTube show, where two comics interview economists, political experts, journalists and social commentators about interesting, controversial and challenging subjects. In this episode, we discuss Twitter under Elon Musk's leadership, why Sam Harris left that platform, why free speech absolutism is a trap, how the western culture war affects views on the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Russia's own internal politics, Konstantin's book 'An Immigrant's Love Letter to the West', redefining words for political purposes, wokeness and comedy, the debate surrounding gender ideology and trans issues, and why the UK seems better equipped to handle this than the United States.

    Jazz Vs. Racism with Greg Thomas - Ep. 35

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2022 73:07


    Our guest this week is Greg Thomas. Greg is a writer, teacher, entrepreneur, and CEO of the Jazz Leadership Project, which uses a creative methodology to frame leadership and team development through the lens of jazz. Greg has written about culture, race, and democratic life in publications ranging from the Village Voice, Integral Life, New Republic, Salon, UPTOWN, The Root, the Guardian Observer, and the New York Daily News—as jazz columnist. We discuss jazz and its ability to serve as a foundation for learning leadership and connection, the power and importance of art and storytelling in our culture, race and the idea of transcending race in our society and personal lives, Greg's use of the term “Black American” and the tensions of trying to adopt it without racialization, whether “American” is an ethnicity, how to disentangle culture and ethnicity from race, and more.

    How the Social Justice Movement Promotes Anti-Semitism with David Bernstein - Ep. 34

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2022 84:32


    Today we speak with David Bernstein. David is the founder of the Jewish Institute for Liberal Values, which supports viewpoint diversity, counters radical ideology in the Jewish community, and opposes novel forms of anti-Semitism. His recent book 'Woke Antisemitism: How a Progressive Ideology Harms Jews' is now available on Amazon. It's a first hand account from a longtime Jewish leader about how woke ideology shuts down discourse, corrupts Jewish values and sponsors a viral and new strain of anti-Semitism. In this episode, we discuss how woke anti-Semitism differs from other forms of anti-Semitism. Jews as an identity group, the difference between identity and identity politics, the role of Israeli geopolitics in anti-Semitism, the pros and cons of tribalism, the conflict between blacks and Jews, culture as a strategy for living in the world. And what the Jewish style of cancel culture is. This episode was recorded on October 11th 2022. We also discuss in this episode Kanye West's then recent tweet about going DEFCON 3 on Jewish people. Since then a lot has developed in the story of Ye's anti-Semitism, including multiple further tweets, podcast appearances and most recently his announcement of a 2024 presidential campaign with noted anti-Semite Nick Fuentes as a staff member. We hope to have David back on the show again soon to discuss the many updates of the story and the recent spread of this style of anti-Semitism.

    Fear, Transgenderism, and Psychology with Dr. Patrick Lockwood - Ep. 33

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 66:23


    Today we speak with Dr. Patrick Lockwood. Patrick is a practicing clinical psychologist and professor and the author of The Fear Problem: How Technology and Culture have Hijacked our Minds and Lives. Dr. Lockwood focuses on trauma and addiction treatment. He also has a podcast on YouTube about topics related to mental health, wellness, psychology, and neuroscience called The Psychology Checkup. And in this episode, we discuss his background as a psychologist, how he treats patients with unjustified fears. The pros and cons of social media, pineapple on pizza (spoiler alert: he's anti), the oversimplification on both sides of the trans debate, the sex-gender distinction, the over medication of children, and the tendency for psychology to over correct.

    Standing Up to Intolerance in the Arts with Rosie Kay - Ep. 32

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2022 61:15


    Today we speak with Rosie Kay. Rosie is a British choreographer, best known for her shows 5 Soldiers, MK Ultra, and choreographing the handover in the 2018 Commonwealth Games closing ceremony. In 2019 Rosie resigned from her dance company following an investigation after claims were made by her dancers regarding her views on gender and biological sex. In 2022 she launched the K2CO dance company, where company members are asked to sign a commitment to freedom of expression, the charter of creation, affirming that the workplace will be a safe space, where we will be free to express our thoughts and feelings without fear of being silenced, shut down, or canceled. In this episode, we discuss her background as a dancer and choreographer, the discourse around representation and marginalized groups in the arts, gender ideology and the importance of biological sex, the role of art in human connection, FAIR in the arts, and Rosie's plans for the future.

    How to End Racialization with Dr. Carlos Hoyt - Ep. 31

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 75:15


    Our guest this week is Dr. Carlos Hoyt. Carlos is a teacher, author, and facilitator providing guidance beyond the false and problematic habits of mind that result in social bias. He explores race, racial identity, and related issues as a scholar, teacher, psychotherapist, parent, and racialized member of our society. In his book, The Arc of a Bad Idea: Understanding and Transcending Race, as well as his workshops and lectures, Dr. Hoyt interrogates master narratives and the dominant discourse on race with the goal of illuminating and virtuously disrupting the racial worldview. We discuss his unique views on racial identity and how he developed them, how we should approach the reality of genetic differences between human groups without using race, his background and work as a DEI facilitator, affinity groups, and his change.org petition to amend the 2030 census to improve the collection of "race" data and whether it inadvertently reinforces racial categories or actually works to dismantle them.

    What is "Asian" Identity? with Ye Pogue and Daisy Wu - Ep. 30

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2022 49:40


    Today we have a special episode, FAIR is releasing a short film from filmmaker Daisy Wu, starring friend of FAIR Ye Pogue. Our conversation today is with Ye and Daisy but first, we are proud to present their film "The Chinese box" which touches on how the government reinforces racial categories, often against the will of people who feel flattened by those categories. Xiaowen “Daisy” Wu is currently an international student studying film and television production at the University of Southern California. She previously finished her undergrad degree at Boston University. Her work explores identity, feminism and social issues. Dr. Ye Zhang Pogue is a health policy researcher and behavioral scientist. She explores The concept of identity in American culture through writing. Because of her experience of living and coping with bipolar disorder and its stigma, she has developed a unique way of seeing the world through common humanity. She writes for Psychology Today's blog, the human identity, and her work has been published in Newsweek and on FAIR's substack. She is also the Vice President of the nonprofit organization, Asian Americans for equal rights. And now, I bring you The Chinese box.

    The Canceling of Jihad Rehab with Meg Smaker - Ep. 29

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2022 67:42


    In this episode, we speak with Meg Smaker. Meg is an award-winning American filmmaker and director of Boxeadora, which received critical acclaim as “one of the best boxing films of all time” by Paste Magazine, and most recently The Unredacted, formerly titled Jihad Rehab—her début feature length documentary, which premiered at this years Sundance to rave reviews before becoming the subject of a cancelation campaign from a small group of activists. We discuss her background as a firefighter, how the 9/11 attacks caused her to move to Yemen, learn Arabic, and study Islam, her documentary film and the various criticisms levied against it, the importance of compassion in art and in life, and how you can support Meg and her mission of making the film available so you can make up your own mind. To support Meg and keep updated on when you can see the film, visit jihadrehab.com.

    Anarchism, Feminism, and Open Borders with Bryan Caplan - Ep. 28

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 91:32


    Today, we speak with Bryan Caplan. Bryan is an American economist at George Mason University, and the New York Times best selling author of many books, including The Myth of The Rational Voter, Selfish Reasons To Have More Kids, The Case Against Education, Open Borders: The Science and Ethics of Immigration, and most recently, Don't Be A Feminist. He's also the editor in chief writer for the blog Bet On It and has published in the New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and many more publications. In this episode, we discuss anarcho capitalism, and how we will work in our society. Bryan's book, Don't Be A Feminist, the advantages and disadvantages of being a man versus being a woman, Bryan's argument for open borders, the burden of immigration on the welfare state, and much more. 

    Canceling the Culture War with Salomé Sibonex - Ep. 27

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 77:59


    In this episode, we speak with Salomé Sibonex. Salomé is a writer, visual artist, and social critic, as well as the host of the podcast Silver Eye Society and the writer of the Substack Spiritual Soap. Salomé's work spans the topics of identity—both her own & identity as it functions in society—psychology of the self, and socio-political subjects such as love, hate, the culture wars, and spiritualism and mythology as functions of human expression. We discuss Salomé's background as a woke communist, her work as a writer and cultural critic, why shame, guilt, and misanthropy seem to be so prevalent in our culture and discourse, how best to engage on social media, and why Alex Jones isn't the problem.

    Liberty, Individualism, and Identity with Nick Gillespie - Ep. 26

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2022 97:59


    Our guest this week is Nick Gillespie. Nick is an editor at large at Reason, the Libertarian magazine of free minds and free markets and host of The reason Interview with Nick Gillespie. He serves on the board for Ideas Beyond Borders, and is the co author with Matt Welch of 'The Declaration of Independents: How Libertarian Politics Can Fix What's Wrong with America' We discuss what Libertarianism is and is not, the relationship to anarchism, the role of the state in an ideal society, the lack of a unifying social or political narrative, libertarianism successes in the West, the rise of China's willpower, social media and the tensions between libertarian views on private companies versus free expression, Francis Fukuyama and our crisis of identity and more.  Nick emailed us shortly after the recording to make one correction: At one point Nick refers to there being currently 100,000 school districts in the United States, a reduction from previous numbers, but there are actually currently 13,500 school districts, also a reduction from previous numbers of 100,000 in 1940. Follow Nick GIllespie on: https://twitter.com/nickgillespie

    Why America is Uniquely Stupid with Jonathan Haidt - Ep. 25

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2022 63:42


    Our guest this week is Jonathan Haidt. Jonathan is a social psychologist, professor, and author whose research examines the intuitive foundations of morality, and how morality varies across cultures—including the cultures of progressive, conservatives, and libertarians. He is the author of The Happiness Hypothesis, and of The New York Times bestsellers The Righteous Mind, and The Coddling of the American Mind, which he co-authored with Greg Lukianoff. We chat with Jonathan about his recent Atlantic article “Why the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid,” social media and its effects on our discourse and culture, the need for a shared story, the importance of dissent, the distinctions between liberalism and conservatism, the global impact of America's descent into what he calls “structural stupidity,” and what measures we can take to improve it. Follow Jonathan Haidt on: https://jonathanhaidt.com/

    Is Conversation Impossible? with Peter Boghossian - Ep 24

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2022 74:55


    Today, we speak with Peter Boghossian. Peter is an American author and philosopher. He was an assistant professor of philosophy at Portland State University for 10 years, and his areas of academic interest include atheism, critical thinking, pedagogy, scientific skepticism, and the Socratic method. His main focus is bringing the tools of professional philosophers to people in a wide variety of contexts and teaching people how to think through what often seem to be intractable problems. In this episode, we discuss why Peter left PSU, the grievance studies hoax, the coming realignment in our culture war to rebuild our reform institutions, his work as a founding faculty member at the University of Austin, Street Epistemology, the problems at NPR, and how to have impossible conversations. Follow Peter : https://linktr.ee/peterboghossian

    Can Education Fix Society? with Will Reusch - Ep 23

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 62:55


    Today we're speaking with William Reusch. William is a Los Angeles-based high school teacher, social scientist, and host of the Cylinder Radio podcast, which focuses on deep explorations of controversial and contentious topics. Through his work, Will is working to change the standard school model from one that exchanges imagination for compliance, to one that uses imagination to innovate. We discuss his role as an educator in public and private schools, political differences amongst teachers, his run-ins with Nikole Hannah Jones, Marc Lamont Hill, and other proponents of CRT, tackling controversial topics in the classroom, CRT in K-12 education, the increasing distrust between parents and teachers, and his approach to constructive engagement on social media. Critical Race Theory in K-12 Education: An IG LIVE conversation Should CRT in the classroom!

    Sex, Gender, and Youth Transition with Dr. Erica Anderson - Ep 22

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 81:41


    In this episode, we speak with Dr. Erica Anderson. Erica is a clinical psychologist and transgender woman best known for her work on sexual and gender identity for teens. She has over 40 years of experience working at multiple healthcare facilities, and is now an advocate for safe and well-informed transitions of those experiencing gender dysphoria. We discuss her background as a clinician and a transgender woman, the definitions of “sex” and “gender,” and how they relate. The difficulty discussing the topics of gender, sex, and transgenderism in our discourse and social media, gender stereotypes and gender essentialism, the difficulties and challenges regarding gender affirming care, peer influence regarding transgender youth, and how concerned people on all sides of these issues can approach these conversations more productively.

    There's Hope for the West with Douglas Murray -Ep 21

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 65:15


    In this episode we speak with Douglas Murray. Douglas is a journalist and author of The Strange Death of Europe, The Madness of Crowds, and most recently The War on the West: How to Prevail in the Age of Unreason. Douglas is a columnist for The Spectator and has also written regularly for numerous other outlets including The Wall Street Journal, The Times, The Sunday Times, The Sun, The Evening Standard and The New Criterion. We discuss how Douglas labels himself, the utility of labels in general, the difference between the British and the American Right, his book The War on the West, how self-criticism in America has become self-loathing, dog whistles, noticing the good and the bad in all societies, whether there is hope for the future, and whether Douglas has any praise for the left.

    The Classics Belong to Everyone with Dr. Anika Prather - Ep 20

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 70:41


    Today, we speak with Dr. Anika Prather. Dr. Prather teaches in the Classics Department at Howard University, and is the founder of the Living Water School, a unique Christian School for independent learners based on the educational philosophies of classical education and the Sudbury model. Dr. Prather's research focuses on building literacy with African American students through engagement in the books of the canon. In this episode, we discuss Dr. Prather's background as a thinker and educator, the difference between the Western canon and the classics, how works of literature belong to everyone regardless of their ancestry or skin color, her alternative approach to decolonizing curricula, why students have trouble appreciating and engaging with the classics, W.E.B DuBois vs Booker T. Washington, and the importance of telling stories from a human perspective. We have moved to a new YouTube channel- https://bit.ly/3O9Bs4H

    There Are No Victims with Ian Rowe - Ep. 19

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 66:31


    In this episode we speak with Ian Rowe. We discuss his origin story, The Success Sequence, being racialized in America, the phenomenon of acting white, and the difference between equity and equal opportunity. We also learn about his new charter school network, discuss how to help disadvantaged kids, and touch on the relationship between meta narratives and individual agency. Ian is an author and educator, as well as co-founder and CEO of Vertex Partnership Academies, a new network of character-based International Baccalaureate high schools opening in the Bronx in August of 2022. Mr. Rowe is also a resident Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he focuses on education, upward mobility, family formation, and adoption. Mr. Rowe is a social entrepreneur with more than 30 years of experience founding and leading organizations in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors that empower young people to effect positive change in their own lives. He is also the author of the recent book Agency, which seeks to inspire young people to overcome the victimhood narrative and discover the pathway to power.

    We Should Be Rational Optimists with Steven Pinker - Ep 18

    Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 74:42


    Our guest this week is Steven Pinker. Steven is a cognitive psychologist, psycholinguist, popular science author, and public intellectual. He has won numerous prizes for his research, his teaching, and his books, including The Language Instinct, How the Mind Works, The Blank Slate, The Better Angels of Our Nature, The Sense of Style, Enlightenment Now, and most recently, Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters. In this episode we speak with Steven about his books, the public's responses to them, and whether those books have had a positive effect. We talk about the euphemism treadmill and whether we can ever escape it, the misunderstandings of terms like optimism and idealism, the tensions between human nature and the potential for progress, social media and the ways we can improve it, and how we can all be more rational. Announcement : We're excited to share that members of FAIR Community can now submit questions for upcoming Q&A episodes of FAIR Perspectives. To ask questions about FAIR, the pro-human movement, the podcast and more, sign up for FAIR Community at fairperspectives.org.  

    Free Speech is Weird w Greg Lukianoff - Ep 17

    Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 80:15


    In this episode with Greg Lukianoff., we discuss free speech as a principle, why the many arguments for censorship or restricting speech don't hold water. We also touch on cancel culture, disinformation, campus free speech codes, and the potential benefits of Elon Musk taking over Twitter. Greg is the President of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE). He is the author of several books, including The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure, which he co-wrote with Jonathan Haidt.

    Free Speech Victory at Emory Law School Ep 16

    Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 31:26


    This week on FAIR Perspectives, we feature a special episode about the Emory Law School Free Speech Forum (EFSF), and their victory in securing formal recognition as a student organization. Having witnessed intolerance at Emory and on other college campuses, the EFSF students sought to create a place for interested students to hear, consider, and debate diverse ideas. In October 2021, the group's application for formal recognition was denied twice, under the pretext that open inquiry is “harmful” and the EFSF “overlapped” with other organizations. FAIR sent a letter to advocating for the EFSF to the Emory SBA and administration on January 18, 2022, and the EFSF's charter was finally granted in April. Co-hosts Angel Eduardo and Melissa Chen spoke with the group's founders about their journey and their plans for the future of the EFSF.

    America Isn't Black & White with Thomas Chatterton Williams - Ep 15

    Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 72:50


    In this episode, we speak with Thomas Chatterton Williams about his opposition to identity categories, the ethnic and cultural valence of black identity, the cultural challenges of abandoning race and racialized language, Islamism in France, and the French approach to race policy. We also survey the current landscape of the backlash against Critical Race Theory, the effectiveness of anti-CRT bills sweeping the nation, and debate the relative merits and faults of the Christopher Rufo strategy. Thomas Chatterton Williams is the author of 'Losing My Cool' and 'Self-Portrait in Black and White'. He is a contributing writer at The New York Times Magazine, a Columnist at Harper's Magazine, and is a Hannah Arendt Center, and a Senior Fellow and Visiting Professor of Humanities at Bard College. His work has appeared in The New Yorker, the London Review of Books, and Le Monde, among other publications.

    Black Thought Should Be Free with Erec Smith -Ep 14

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 72:29


    In this episode, we speak with Dr. Erec Smith. We discuss his field of rhetoric, what led him to it, African-American Vernacular English versus Standard English, the implications of what activists call "linguistic justice," what it's like teaching rhetoric in our polarized climate, the utility of ridiculing bad ideas, interacting with Nikole Hannah-Jones, Candace Owens' "Blexit," and the publication he co-founded called Free Black Thought. Dr. Erec Smith is an associate professor of rhetoric at the College of Pennsylvania, whose focus is in the rhetoric of anti racist activism, theory, and pedagogy. He is also the co-founder of Free Black Thought, a website dedicated to highlighting viewpoint diversity within the black intelligentsia.

    Depolarizating America with John Wood, Jr. -Ep 13

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 71:51


    In this episode, we speak with John Wood Jr,. We discuss why John is so suited to tackling the seemingly intractable problem of polarization, the issues with the media today, the legitimacy crisis in our institutions, how to maintain social cohesion, how to get society talking again, and the jarring implications of Will Smith's Oscars slap. John Wood Jr, is a former nominee for Congress, former Vice Chairman of the Republican Party of Los Angeles County, musical artist, and a noted writer and speaker on subjects including racial and political reconciliation. He is also a national leader for Braver Angels, a nonprofit dedicated to political depolarization that runs workshops, debates, and other events where Red and Blue participants attempt to better understand one another's positions and discover their shared values. 

    Is There Hope for the Future? with Sarah Haider - Ep 12

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 77:43


    Today, we speak with Sarah Haider. We talk about her founding of Ex-Muslims of North America, why she refuses to throat-clear about her progressive credentials anymore, the effects of engaging in the activist space on her personal morale, the complexity of social problems and the issues with oversimplification, the similarities between “wokeness” and religious fanaticism and how “wokeness” pervaded the atheist movement, tokenism and its effects, Joe Rogan and censorship, our lack of trust in news media, and whether there is hope for the future. Sarah is a Pakistani-American writer, public speaker, political activist, and co-founder of the advocacy group Ex-Muslims of North America, which seeks to normalize religious dissent and to help former Muslims leave the religion by linking them to support networks. Sarah has also recently launched her new Substack, Hold That Thought, where she discusses politics, religion, culture, and more.  

    People are People with Dr. Marilyn Singleton - Ep 11

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2022 78:18


    In this episode we speak with Dr. Marilyn Singleton about her upbringing in a multicultural neighborhood and Catholic school in California, her and her peers' views on race and racism throughout the 1960's, her getting into Stanford University, her approach to dealing with sexism and bigotry in her life and how it differs from the way others approach it today, individuality versus conformity, and the goals of FAIR in Medicine.  Dr. Marilyn Singleton is a physician, lawyer, and educator who was among the first women of African descent to attend Stanford University as a freshman. Dr. Singleton studied at UC Berkeley Law School, went on to practice insurance and health law, and currently teaches classes on the detection of elder abuse and constitutional law for non-lawyers. Dr. Singleton is also a fellow for FAIR in Medicine, a nonpartisan professional network dedicated to advancing the highest ethical standards in medical practice, and to promoting a common medical culture based on critical thinking and the pursuit of excellence in all medical endeavors.

    Getting Curious with Mónica Guzmán - Ep 10

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 81:41


    Today, we speak with Mónica Guzmán. We discuss what makes Mónica so good at being curious, how being an immigrant helped open her eyes to the benefits of curiosity, and her concept of SOS—Sorting, Othering, and Siloing—and how it affects our discourse. We also discuss whether we've always been this divided or if we're uniquely divided now, the ways technology and social media affect communication, the tension and interplay between fear, ignorance, and uncertainty—and how these emotions affect our ability to be curious, how to foster curiosity in others, and much more.    Mónica is the Director of Digital and Storytelling at Braver Angels, a nonprofit working to depolarize America. She's also co-founder of the award winning Seattle newsletter The Evergrey, host of the Crosscut Interview series Northwest Newsmakers and author of the recent best-selling book, I Never Thought of it That Way: How to Have Fearlessly Curious Conversations in Dangerously Divided Times.

    Learning to Love with Chloé Valdary - Ep 9

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2022 88:32


    Today's guest is Chloé Valdary. We talk about her new podcast, art and working in multiple mediums, the Theory of Enchantment and how it differs from other antiracism programs, how pop culture can be a tool for teaching people how to love, how obsession with identity in art divides us, Beyoncé, The Kardashians, the victimhood mentality, responding versus reacting, and whether we can transcend race. Chloé is a writer and entrepreneur whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, Newsweek, USA Today, Tablet Magazine, The New York Post, and many other publications. She is also the founder of Theory of Enchantment, a startup that provides a compassionate version of anti-racism training. Chloé is also the host of her own podcast, entitled The Heart Speaks.

    Critical Lenses with Kimi Katiti - Ep 8

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 57:05


    In this episode we speak with Kimi Katiti. We discuss her formative years growing up in Uganda, Tanzania, and South Africa before moving to the United States, her experience learning about America as a college student in Los Angeles, the ways critical pedagogy was infused into her coursework, the unhealthy emotional and psychological effects becoming “woke” had on her outlook and personal life, her slow transition out of that mindset, the power of forgiveness, and the value of having different lenses from which to view the world. Kimi is an interdisciplinary artist based in Los Angeles. She creates visual art, music, and writing on a variety of topics and themes, and is also an avid skateboarder who devotes much of her time to advocacy and initiatives meant to empower young girls through skateboarding.

    We're All Raceless with Dr. Sheena Mason - Ep 7

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 90:52


    In this episode, we speak in-depth with Dr. Sheena Mason about her 'Theory of Racelessness,' whether race is a biological reality or a social construct, how racism creates race and not the other way around, the conflation of race with culture, class, and ethnicity, Whoopi Goldberg's views on race and the Holocaust, the difficulty of communicating racelessness to the public, common pushbacks and misconceptions to Theory of Racelessness, and whether a raceless future is even possible. Dr Sheena earned her Ph.D. “with distinction” from Howard University in Washington and is currently a tenure-track Assistant Professor in African American Literature at SUNY Oneonta. She is also the President and Co-Founder of the educational firm Theory of Racelessness, as well as the author of the forthcoming book, Theory of Racelessness: A Case For Antirace(ism), which presents a skeptical and eliminativist philosophy of race and racism.

    Identity & Integrity with Zander Keig - Ep 6

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 75:02


    In this episode, we have an in-depth talk with Zander Keig about why there is no such thing as the “trans community,” Zander's transitioning experience, why there's a reluctance in acknowledging natal sex among trans individuals, how gender ideology inadvertently strengthens gender stereotypes, the potential backlash against the movement's XXer's, gender ideology in K-12, and how to handle a situation if your child wants to transition. Zander Keig is an award-winning licensed clinical social worker, educator and author who served in the US Coast Guard. Zander helps develop and deliver corporate diversity training, emotional wellness, and interpersonal growth courses for FAIR. As a trans man and first-generation American of Mexican heritage with subject matter expertise in psychotherapy, social care, and mental wellness, Zander brings a unique perspective to all aspects of his work.

    Oppositional Language with John McWhorter - Ep 5

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 69:09


    In this episode, we take a different tack from discussions about John's most recent book Woke Racism. We discuss whether "anti-wokeness" is a new religion, how to engage with and persuade the people John calls "The Elect," how grave a threat "wokeness" really is compared to other contemporary issues, Critical Race Theory in schools, and the consequences of centering race in one's identity. We also go on to chat about language and semantics, the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, the popularity of "Latinx," the ever-evolving social taboo that is "the N-word," and more. Dr. John McWhorter is an associate professor of linguistics at Columbia University, an op-ed columnist at the New York Times, and the author of a number of books on topics ranging from linguistics to race relations such as the Power of Babel: A Natural History of Language, and Losing the Race: Self Sabotage in Black America.

    Building Bridges with Daryl Davis - Ep 4

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 85:38


    In this episode, we discuss how to bridge divides, the importance of dialogue, how to change minds effectively, how these ideas may apply in corporate training, Black Lives Matter, and why it's time to get rid of Black History Month. On the topic of Black Lives Matter, Daryl made some assertions about BLM structural organization that Melissa and Angel didn't necessarily agree with, they push back only lightly in the interest of continuity and free flow of conversation. Both hosts' are fully aware that BLM is a legitimate organization with multiple chapters. Although Daryl is also right to say that there is a large overarching movement that isn't necessarily directly affiliated with the organization. Daryl Davis, is an accomplished jazz and blues musician, author and one of the most prominent racial justice activists. Daryl's methods to end racism is unique and groundbreaking. As a travelling musician he went around the country attempting to dispel racism from those who hated him the most by befriending members of the Ku Klux Klan and collecting their robes as they disavow their hatred. To date, he has come into possession of no less than 200 robes.  

    Skepticism & Self-Correction with Michael Shermer - Ep 3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 80:31


    In this episode, with Michael Shermer we discuss conspiracy theories, group identities and differences, tribalism, systematic racism, religion and more. Michael Shermer, who is the founding publisher of Skeptic Magazine, the host of the Michael Shermer Show, and a Presidential Fellow at Chapman University, where he teaches the class Skepticism 101. For 18 years he was a monthly columnist at Scientific American. He's the author of several New York Times bestsellers, including Why People Believe Weird Things, The Believing Brain, Why Darwin Matters, the Moral Arc and more.

    Narratives & Reality with Wilfred Reilly - Ep 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2022 57:38


    In this episode, we discuss the disparities between perception and reality, why these narrative gaps persist, the crisis of expertise, censorship, the true costs of ignoring reality, denying biological sex, the Stop Asian Hate movement, and how it does nothing to address the very real tensions between the black and Asian communities. Professor Wilfred Riley, is an associate professor of political science at Kentucky State University. He's the author of Taboo: 10 Facts You Can't Talk About, and Hate Crime Hoax: How the Left Is Selling a Fake Race War. Professor Reilly has a knack for speaking about forbidden truths, slaughtering sacred cows and probing the boundaries of political correctness.

    Breaking Binaries with Coleman Hughes - Ep 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022 63:13


    On the first ever episode of FAIR Perspectives, we talk with Coleman Hughes. Coleman is a writer, podcaster and opinion columnist who specializes in issues related to race, public policy and applied ethics. Coleman's writing has been featured in The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. We discuss Blasphemy, his new single which premieres today, January 17 2022. We discuss how he came to music and see a more personal side of Coleman that we haven't seen in his career as a public intellectual before. We also talk about how his ideas and his musical career connect. For more exclusive content visit FAIRperspectives.org

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