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Joshua Citarella
Joshua Citarella

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Doomscroll: Emily Jashinsky

Hello, new readers. This weekend, as you might have seen, I had a profile in The New Yorker. Writer Chris Wiley does an amazing job at capturing the spirit of this project:

Its been an exciting ride for the first year of this show. If you’re new here, you may want to read this key piece: A New Pipeline.

Find audio episodes of Doomscroll on Apple, Spotify and all other podcast apps.

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Welcome to Doomscroll. My guest is Emily Jashinsky, a political commentator and a co-host of Breaking Points. You may recognize her from her new live-stream series After Party with Emily Jashinsky. She is also a frequent guest on The Megyn Kelly Show.

Last year, Emily appeared on The Ezra Klein Show to discuss the shifting factions of the American Right: MAGA Is Not as United as You Think. On today’s episode, I wanted to dive even deeper into the “New Right” and to offer an analysis that I have rarely heard discussed in mainstream publications.

Over the past few years, we have seen historic political shifts. “Fusionism” has held as the dominant conservative ideology since the 1960s — it is now being redefined in ways that would have been unimaginable a few years earlier. We spend a lot of time talking about the “New Right” and “Old Left” on this show. This episode lays out why these developments are so significant. The first 25 minutes of this discussion will cover an enormous amount of ground.

Many readers will be familiar with the infamous “Bernie to Trump” pipeline, popularized by journalist James Pogue and others, but less will be aware of the Marxist origins of certain canonized thinkers on the New Right. Chiefly among these voices is James Burnham, an early Troskyite who later became a key conservative thinker. Emily and I explore the rise of economic populism and the new spectrum of political factions on the right. We discuss:

From the beginning of Doomscroll, I’ve been committed to platforming a range of perspectives that differ from my own. This conversation with Emily is more than just an interview, its a collaboration in which we both seek to understand these new political currents emerging online and offline:

Emily Jashinsky: New Right Materialism | Doomscroll

I’m taking a few creative risks on this episode. I think the deep dive into these topics and ideologies is important. The things we discuss here will be very influential over the next few years. If this is the type of episode you’d like to see more of, let me know in the YouTube comments today.

Lastly, if you’re a loyal viewer of this program, I strongly recommend that you watch this week’s bonus episode. (I don’t care if you start a free trial and then unsubscribe.) But if you’re a dedicated reader, I want you to be aware of these more niche topics and political factions. Sometimes our bonus episodes are more casual and fun — but this one includes a number of sensitive topics that are better left as private conversations and off of the public feed. There is also some big picture analysis that I lay out towards the end of the episode that will give an orientation as to where this project is heading and what its broader goals are:

Doomscroll: Emily Jashinsky II

Explore these related episodes:

Doomscroll: Krystal Ball II

Doomscroll: Kyle Kulinski II

Doomscroll: Aella II

Doomscroll: Dasha Nekrasova II

Doomscroll: Emily Jashinsky

Comments

No I think you are right here. That’s how she sees it but it felt unsupported imo

Joshua Citarella

Clearly brilliant person with valuable insights, but when she said “this is where I diverge from my friends on the democratic socialist left” [sic], and then proceeded to say all this stuff about how it was primarily cultural events/shifts w the Vietnam war and the mythology of jfk’s assassination that motivated the neoliberal rightward turn on economic policy in the 70s-80s, that didn’t hold water for me… How does that math check out? The vibes based history here felt a bit weak. Maybe I just didn’t understand her point well enough though

Maurice


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