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Joe Rogan’s endorsement of Sanders proves divisive amongst progressives

Knuckle Ball

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Bernie Sanders’s Joe Rogan experience
Joe Rogan’s controversial endorsement of Bernie Sanders, explained.


Joe Rogan is one of the most popular talk show hosts in the world, a hero to politically disenchanted men across America in particular. Rogan’s show covers an eclectic range of topics, from sports to science to politics, and has millions of dedicated followers on YouTube alone. He’s described himself as “left on everything” politically, and said on Tuesday that he would vote for Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary.

It’s the kind of endorsement that strengthens Sanders’s electability argument: that he can reach out to audiences beyond progressive activists.

But when the Bernie Sanders campaign made a short video trumpeting Rogan’s announcement on Thursday, it immediately kicked off a controversy over whether the campaign should have trumpeted the endorsement so publicly. That’s because Rogan, despite his claims to be left-wing, also has a very long history of offensive commentary, especially about trans people. He’s had friendly interviews with right-wing extremists like Milo Yiannopoulos, Candace Owens, and Alex Jones — and even voiced some support for 9/11 conspiracy theories.

The progressive world immediately split into competing camps. Some are arguing that Bernie was right to trumpet Rogan’s support because beating Donald Trump will require alliances with people who you disagree with on some issues. Others argue that Rogan’s views on transgender people — in a 2013 show, he referred to a trans woman as “a fucking man,” saying, “I don’t care if you don’t have a dick any more” — should place him beyond the pale, just as an endorsement from a prominent racist would.

This Twitter exchange between two prominent left-leaning Washington, DC, journalists — the Justice Collaborative’s Chris Geidner, a longtime reporter on law and LGBT issues; and The Intercept’s Ryan Grim, who covers Democratic party politics — cuts to the core of the disagreement:

This is one of the most revealing spats in the 2020 primary so far. It touches on a core moral question about politics: what views should render someone unacceptable in polite discourse. It’s also a dispute about how to win in 2020: should Democrats water down some of their commitments to win over potential Trump voters and, if so, which views?

And it’s also yet another piece of ammunition in the war over Bernie Sanders among progressives, a sign that the 2016-era fight over how much he can be trusted on issues outside of economic inequality still hasn’t been settled.

Why you should care about Joe Rogan’s endorsement

For about ten years, Rogan has been the host of the Joe Rogan Experience, an internet talk show that’s become astonishingly popular both in podcast and video form on YouTube. It’s been the No. 2 show in the world on iTunes Podcasts for the past two years; its YouTube channel, PowerfulJRE, has over 7 million subscribers.

It’s given a new relevancy to the 52-year-old media veteran. He started his career as a standup comedian, starred in the ’90s sitcom NewsRadio, and then worked as the host of the gross-out reality show Fear Factor from 2001 to 2006. He’s also a passionate mixed martial arts fan who has worked as an announcer at MMA fights.

Rogan’s show is a meandering interview series with a very strange panel of guests that reflect the host’s personal interests, ranging from MMA fighters to comedians to evolutionary biologists to Dr. Phil. His most famous episode is a 2018 interview with tech mogul Elon Musk, where Musk smoked a blunt with Rogan and floated a proposal to sell his company stock at $420 (get it?). The interview kicked off a panic in the business world about Musk’s mental competency.

Rogan is an engaging host, one who lets conversations float freely on a range of diverse and often quite interesting topics. When you watch some of Rogan’s more thoughtful interviews, it’s easy to understand why he has such a massive cult following.

But the show’s treatment of politics, a common topic in the interviews, is something else entirely. While Rogan claims to be left-wing, the show’s principal political enemy appears to be liberal identity politics. He’s a leading light of the “Intellectual Dark Web,” the loose confederation of anti-PC thinkers including Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson and right-wing gadfly Ben Shapiro. In fact, the question that led to his Bernie endorsement came from the IDW’s chief popularizer, New York Times columnist Bari Weiss.

Rogan’s contempt for political correctness comes through throughout the show. In a 2013 episode, for example, he “joked” that seeing a screening of Planet of the Apes in a mostly black neighborhood was “walk[ing] in to Planet of the Apes.” He described the experience of finding out that his comedy hero Richard Pryor had sex with men as “a spike to the heart.”

He has a particular distaste for the trans rights movement. In a 2017 JRE episode with Shapiro, he describers his radicalization on the issue as stemming from anger at Fallon Fox, a trans woman who competed in women’s MMA fights:

I didn’t have a dog in this fight. I was completely open and liberal about it — until there was a case where a man who had been a man for 30 years became a woman for a little less than two years and then started MMA fighting women. Beating the fuck out of these women, and then not proclaiming that he or she used to be a man ... if you ever watch the fights, she wasn’t winning because she was skillful. She was fucking manhandling these women, it was ugly.
This very short paragraph contains all the classic tropes of transphobia: a denial of the authenticity of trans people’s identity, a sense that they’re a threat to cis folks, and that they’re using their gender identity to somehow get ahead in life. It is, to quote Rogan, ugly, and one of many such examples when it comes to trans issues.


Trying to understand the nature of The Joe Rogan Experience, what connections there are between its often-offensive content and immense popularity, is a kind of tricky question. One plausible conclusion, exemplified by this piece by Slate’s Justin Phillips, is that they’re deeply intertwined — that the show succeeds because it’s a kind of dangerous faux-intellectualism for shallow bigots:

By routinely disparaging the credibility and intentions of traditional centers of learning while giving idiots hours on end to profess their theories, Rogan allows his guests to establish themselves as the real fonts of mind-expanding knowledge. Many of his listeners are buying in. ‘My generation has hit the jackpot with this new way of learning. If you don’t watch or trust television and school feels like it has failed you, there is still hope to claim back your humanity, this show is the answer. … You’re welcome,’ wrote one podcast reviewer at the iTunes Store. Another: ‘Great Show please have Richard Spencer on.’

A second and opposing view, embodied in an Atlantic feature by Devin Gordon, is to understand Rogan as a way to reach a unique and underserved audience of men. “Most of Rogan’s critics don’t really grasp the breadth and depth of the community he has built, and they act as though trying is pointless,” he writes:

The bedrock issue, though, is Rogan’s courting of a middle-bro audience that the cultural elite hold in particular contempt—guys who get barbed-wire tattoos and fill their fridge with Monster energy drinks and preordered their tickets to see Hobbs & Shaw. Joe loves these guys, and his affection has none of the condescension and ironic distance many people fall back on in order to get comfortable with them. He shares their passions and enthusiasms at a moment when the public dialogue has branded them childish or problematic or a slippery slope to Trumpism. Like many of these men, Joe grumbles a lot about “political correctness.” He knows that he is privileged by virtue of his gender and his skin color, but in his heart he is sick of being reminded about it. Like lots of other white men in America, he is grappling with a growing sense that the term white man has become an epithet. And like lots of other men in America, not just the white ones, he’s reckoning out loud with a fear that the word masculinity has become, by definition, toxic.


It is the gulf between these two ways of seeing of Rogan and the subculture he speaks to that defines the debate over how Sanders should have handled Rogan’s endorsement.

Joe Rogan, Bernie Sanders, and the big debates about 2020

After Rogan said he’d vote for Sanders on this Tuesday’s JRE episode, Sanders’s team released an edited version of Rogan’s comments, tweeting them out on the senator’s heavily followed personal account Thursday afternoon:

The online backlash started more or less immediately on Twitter, with numerous high-profile users accusing the campaign of promoting a transphobe. Via email, Sanders National Press Secretary Briahna Joy Gray argued that these criticisms were largely off-base.

“Sharing a big tent requires including those who do not share every one of our beliefs, while always making clear that we will never compromise our values,” she writes. “The truth is that by standing together in solidarity, we share the values of love and respect that will move us in the direction of a more humane, more equal world.”

There’s a lot implied in both the initial arguments against releasing the video and Gray’s response. Broadly speaking, the issues under debate deal with three different issues: one moral, one tactical, and one about the identity of the Sanders campaign itself.

Let’s start with the moral dispute: whether someone with Rogan’s views should be outside the realm of acceptable political discourse.

On the one hand, politics inevitably requires a degree of compromise and coalition-building. You simply can’t win elections and pass laws without appealing to a broad group of people who disagree internally, and in a country like the United States that will likely include some people with social views progressives find odious.

At the same time, though, there has been an idea that some people’s views are so odious that they can never be acceptable political partners. In 2008, for example, Nation of Islam leader and notorious anti-Semite Louis Farrakhan endorsed Barack Obama for president. Obama denounced Farrakhan’s bigoted comments but faced criticism for not saying more explicitly that he rejected the endorsement itself. Virtually everyone called on Donald Trump to reject former KKK Grand Wizard David Duke’s endorsement in 2016; the fact that he didn’t really do it kicked off a major political firestorm.

The question, then, is where Joe Rogan falls on this spectrum. Is his history of offensive comments, especially about transgender people, so odious that the Sanders campaign shouldn’t ethically promote him, or maybe even should denounce him? Or is it a case where trumpeting Rogan’s support is worth it for the greater good of beating Trump?

The idea that Rogan’s endorsement is helpful to the Bernie campaign also depends on a particular theory of victory: the idea that winning the White House requires appealing to both disaffected non-voters and working-class, non-college whites who populate the Rust Belt states. You hear this sort of argument a lot from the Sanders campaign and its media surrogates, particularly at the flagship socialist publication Jacobin. In this view, Rogan’s audience is a uniquely persuadable subset of these people, which helps explain why Sanders actually appeared on Rogan’s show last August.

A competing vision, though, is that focusing on winning over these demographics — which include a healthy number of Trump supporters — is a huge mistake because they’re animated primarily by their resentment of marginalized groups, and winning them over would require selling out the Democratic base: racial minorities and women and LGBTQ voters. Any gains, in this view, would be offset by depressed turnout in the base.

There’s a lot of room for nuance here. It can be true that, broadly speaking, the second view is correct, but also that the Sanders campaign rejecting the endorsement would still ultimately do more harm than good because Rogan’s fans are obsessive, while most non-fans don’t care all that much. It’s possible the smartest move politically would have been to say nothing about Rogan’s comments, letting it reach his hardcore fans without trumpeting it to a more mainstream audience (and kicking off a controversy).

But broadly speaking, the differences in big-picture strategic assessment help explain why Sanders and his allies are at odds with other people in the progressive camp.
https://www.google.ca/amp/s/www.vox...-joe-rogan-experience-endorsement-controversy
 

Butler1000

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Or.......

Rogan also said on the Podcast that Warren, Biden and Buttigieg had all reached out to Rogan to be on the show and he declined.......or in his words "they can eat shit".

And so now the trolls of their campaigns out of fear and jealousy are firing up a few idiots.

Of course this will pass in a bit, unless Rogan decides to have some fun with it.
 

bver_hunter

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Or.......

Rogan also said on the Podcast that Warren, Biden and Buttigieg had all reached out to Rogan to be on the show and he declined.......or in his words "they can eat shit".

And so now the trolls of their campaigns out of fear and jealousy are firing up a few idiots.

Of course this will pass in a bit, unless Rogan decides to have some fun with it.
The same Rogan who made these racist comments and mocked the Blacks with his laugh:

https://www.mediaite.com/politics/j...ing-black-neighborhood-to-planet-of-the-apes/

The only ones who you label as "trolls" are the Sanders supporters who are pissed off with this endorsement.

This could blow back into Sanders' face. Not sure whether Sanders is pleased with this endorsement, as it is a Trump like move. After all Trump had no problem with the likes of David Duke, Alex Jones and the rest of the extremists endorsing Trump. Trump welcomed them into his fold!!
 

Butler1000

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The same Rogan who made these racist comments and mocked the Blacks with his laugh:

https://www.mediaite.com/politics/j...ing-black-neighborhood-to-planet-of-the-apes/

The only ones who you label as "trolls" are the Sanders supporters who are pissed off with this endorsement.

This could blow back into Sanders' face. Not sure whether Sanders is pleased with this endorsement, as it is a Trump like move. After all Trump had no problem with the likes of David Duke, Alex Jones and the rest of the extremists endorsing Trump. Trump welcomed them into his fold!!
Trying to use identity politics against Sanders worked out well for Warren didn't it?

This is great! Now more people will check out the podcast he was on. Over 10 million have already.

And remember your boy Biden chased after him to be on too. Only he was turned down. Lol.

Rogan has huge reach. Another deal endorsement with real impact for the Sanders campaign.
 

bver_hunter

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Trying to use identity politics against Sanders worked out well for Warren didn't it?

This is great! Now more people will check out the podcast he was on. Over 10 million have already.

And remember your boy Biden chased after him to be on too. Only he was turned down. Lol.

Rogan has huge reach. Another deal endorsement with real impact for the Sanders campaign.
He could start alienating the Blacks, Hispanics and other minorities in this respect. That is the danger of doing so.

Biden did not chase after him. He claimed that the other candidates wanted to appear on his show. Good that he turned them down as Biden has a lot of support from the minorities.

We will see how long this love affair with Rogan lasts!!
 

Valcazar

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Rogan also said on the Podcast that Warren, Biden and Buttigieg had all reached out to Rogan to be on the show and he declined.......or in his words "they can eat shit".
And you think that makes this look better for Sanders?

Of course this will pass in a bit, unless Rogan decides to have some fun with it.
This I agree with. Rogan isn't that important an endorsement and most people aren't going to care after a while. Celebrity endorsements get you some press for a bit but don't move the needle much even from people who are much more famous.


Trying to use identity politics against Sanders worked out well for Warren didn't it?
And this is the dilemma. Sanders is signalling that he thinks Blacks and Women don't matter. He is giving people permission to use this line of attack.
You have said repeatedly that you think it can't hurt him. That "Sanders isn't racist or sexist, he is just endorsed by racists and sexists" is a winning approach.
You may be right. Trump may be so obviously bad that people don't hold this against Sanders.
But when of the things people are worried about you is that you will throw them under the bus to get a deal, this kind of thing doesn't help.

And remember your boy Biden chased after him to be on too. Only he was turned down. Lol.

Rogan has huge reach. Another deal endorsement with real impact for the Sanders campaign.
No, thinking this has huge impact is silly. Rogan's not that important.
Being ON his show helps you reach people, but celebrity endorsements aren't that huge because few people decide politics based on celebrity.
 

Knuckle Ball

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Or.......

Rogan also said on the Podcast that Warren, Biden and Buttigieg had all reached out to Rogan to be on the show and he declined.......or in his words "they can eat shit".
Wait a minute...so Rogan will happily have people like Milo Yiannopoulos, Candace Owens, and Alex Jones on his show but when Warren, Biden and Buttigieg ask for air time he tells them to, “Eat shit”? Are you really sure you want Bernie associated with this guy?

I don’t think this is as much of an overwhelming win for Bernie as you’re portraying it to be. Division and ill will just seem to follow Bernie around.

Don’t get me wrong...I actually like Bernie and would have no trouble supporting him...but I worry that he’s ultimately unelectable.
 

Knuckle Ball

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This I agree with. Rogan isn't that important an endorsement and most people aren't going to care after a while. Celebrity endorsements get you some press for a bit but don't move the needle much even from people who are much more famous.
Bernie needs to reach out to Cardi B to come to his rallies. She has already endorsed Bernie and she was posting last week about getting more involved in politics and start to “rock the table!”
 

Butler1000

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And you think that makes this look better for Sanders?



This I agree with. Rogan isn't that important an endorsement and most people aren't going to care after a while. Celebrity endorsements get you some press for a bit but don't move the needle much even from people who are much more famous.




And this is the dilemma. Sanders is signalling that he thinks Blacks and Women don't matter. He is giving people permission to use this line of attack.
You have said repeatedly that you think it can't hurt him. That "Sanders isn't racist or sexist, he is just endorsed by racists and sexists" is a winning approach.
You may be right. Trump may be so obviously bad that people don't hold this against Sanders.
But when of the things people are worried about you is that you will throw them under the bus to get a deal, this kind of thing doesn't help.



No, thinking this has huge impact is silly. Rogan's not that important.
Being ON his show helps you reach people, but celebrity endorsements aren't that huge because few people decide politics based on celebrity.
Yes it does make him look good. There is a large swaths of the American People tired of identity politics getting in the way of structural change. The the little trolls who gave created cancel culture.

They want healthcare, the wars to end, and debt relief. They don't care about pronouns.

This endorsement reaches 10 million+ people who think highly of Rogan.

And yes his appearance is, I believe the most watched video interview he has done.

In no way is he signalling blacks don't matter, or why would the Nevada Black Caucus just endorse him? The California Nurses union, the Nevada Teachers union, the Sunrise Movement, on and on.

You are getting more ridiculous as time goes on. You need to stop watching MSNBC, it's rotting your brain.
 

Butler1000

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Bernie needs to reach out to Cardi B to come to his rallies. She has already endorsed Bernie and she was posting last week about getting more involved in politics and start to “rock the table!”
She will. Watch her in SC when the time comes.

But honestly she is best to signal boost on social media as a get out the vote champion. That's where her audience is, not a rally.
 

Butler1000

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Wait a minute...so Rogan will happily have people like Milo Yiannopoulos, Candace Owens, and Alex Jones on his show but when Warren, Biden and Buttigieg ask for air time he tells them to, “Eat shit”? Are you really sure you want Bernie associated with this guy?

I don’t think this is as much of an overwhelming win for Bernie as you’re portraying it to be. Division and ill will just seem to follow Bernie around.

Don’t get me wrong...I actually like Bernie and would have no trouble supporting him...but I worry that he’s ultimately unelectable.
It is a win. Right now the publicity is huge.

Remember what Trump did with do called negative publicity.

Thus is really a signal boost.
 

The Oracle

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On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
So the SJW's are just tripping over themselves trying to cancel out Joe Rogan......Good luck with that,lol. God forbid someone should have a different opinion than you. The audacity,lol.

He's going to have a field day with this. They think his anti political correctness stand was bad before. Wait until now.

Rogan is one of the needle movers with middle America and this is a significant boost to Bernie's campaign.

Looks to like Butler was right all along.
 
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