By Austin Araujo
Bad Faith - Episode 502 – “Join Us, We’re Libbing Out” (w/ Nathan J. Robinson & Alex Skopic)
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Founder and editor-in-chief of Current Affairs Nathan J. Robinson returns to Bad Faith along with CA associate editor Alex Skopic to discuss the buzz around the new Substack "magazine" The Argument, which makes the case that "liberalism deserves better." This collection of former Atlantic and Vox journalists (including Derek Thompson and Matt Yglasias) has $4 million in backing, has launched with a piece against cash payments to the poor, and is led by a woman who earlier this year famously wrote the case for Democrats to support DOGE. Nathan and Alex weigh in on the battle independent journalism like Current Affairs is waging against well-funded, billionaire-backed media, and whether outlets like The Argument will successfully launder a Newsom 2028 candidacy to the left -- even though Gaza has emerged as a litmus test that has already tripped up Mayor Pete. Why are liberals so damn gullible, why is the left always right before the libs, and why are conservatives so much better at ideological consistency when compared to the empty, superficial takes coming out of liberals? We discuss Zach Beauchamp's latest piece on that very question ("How conservatives help their young thinkers — and why liberals don’t"), along with Alex's "The Left is Always Right Too Early," and CA's takedown of Gavin Newsom.
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The Commentary Magazine Podcast - Here’s Some Stuff We Don’t Like
On another special summer podcast, the crew delves into great works of art that leave us cold or angry or depressed or that we just don't enjoy. Give a listen.
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Cato Podcast - Capital Punishments
As President Trump’s “crime emergency” puts troops on D.C.’s streets, socialist Zohran Mamdani surges ahead in the New York mayoral race. On the panel, Cato scholars debate whether America’s capitals of politics and finance are becoming laboratories for failed ideas.
Featuring Ryan Bourne, Gene Healy, Clark Neily, and Marian Tupy
Ryan Bourne, “Zohran Mamdani’s ‘War on Prices’,” Commentary (June 13, 2025) cato.org
Scott Lincicome, “State-Run Supermarkets: A (Bad) Statist Solution in Search of a Problem,” Commentary (July 10, 2025) cato.org
Marian L. Tupy, “Marian L. Tupy Discusses His Experiences Living Under Communism on Prager U’s Stories of Us Podcast,” Media Highlights TV (November 14, 2023)
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Everything Everywhere Daily - The Invention of the Telephone (Encore)
The 19th century was one of rapid technological advancement.
Of all of the innovations to come out of this century, and there were many, perhaps none was more important than that of the telephone.
The telephone radically changed communications, allowing personal communications over long distances.
Despite what many people are often told, this invention wasn’t simply the genius of one man, but was rather something developed over decades.
Learn more about the invention of the telephone and the controversial story surrounding it on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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First Things Podcast - The Death of the Oxford Don (ft. Jaspreet Singh Boparai)
the memory palace - Summer Reading: Two Transcendent Poems About Public Transportation
Order The Memory Palace book now, dear listener. On Bookshop.org, on Amazon.com, on Barnes & Noble, or directly from Random House. Or order the audiobook at places like Libro.fm.
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While Nate takes a little summer break, he reads you two poems.
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choicesThe Indicator from Planet Money - What happens when railroads get hitched
Two freight-rail giants could make history if their $85 billion merger gets approved. Union Pacific’s proposed marriage with Norfolk Southern would create the first coast-to-coast rail network. So why hasn’t it happened before now? Today on the show, the business of train mergers.
Related episodes:
How Yellow wound up in the red
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NPR's Book of the Day - ‘Atlantic’ writer James Parker says his odes are exercises in gratitude and attention
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