From ‘The Constitution of Knowledge’ with Jonathan Rauch: So to Speak podcast · · FIRE
“Donald Trump is the greatest propaganda innovator since maybe Goebbels. He figured out how to take Russian-style propaganda tactics like flooding the zone with lies to swamp good information.”
On , Jon Rauch, Vice President & Chief Accounting Officer at CHURCHILL DOWNS INC, spoke about propaganda during ‘The Constitution of Knowledge’ with Jonathan Rauch: So to Speak podcast on FIRE.
Jonathan Rauch, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and contributing editor for National Journal and the Atlantic, has been active in discussions on free speech, the nature of knowledge, and the intersection of gay rights and religious liberty. In a 2021 podcast appearance, Rauch discussed his book "The Constitution of Knowledge: A Defense of Truth," describing the "constitution of knowledge" as a system of norms and institutions that keep society "moored to reality." He argued that free speech alone is insufficient for producing knowledge due to inherent human biases, and that structured social conversation and institutions are necessary. Rauch characterized attacks on this system as a deliberate disinformation campaign, attributing them to Donald Trump and his allies, as well as to "cancel culture" on campus. He also stated that social media companies face a "Herculean job" in building barriers to propaganda and intimidation. In a 2017 lecture at the University of Illinois College of Law, Rauch addressed the conflict between gay rights and religious liberty. He described the Equality Act and the First Amendment Defense Act as emblematic of a hardening of positions into "legal and political trench warfare." Rauch argued that religious people and institutions have a "legitimate and well-founded claim" to accommodation, even if their actions are seen as intolerant. He contrasted an "absolutist" model of non-discrimination, which he said militates against balancing interests, with a more flexible approach that he argued offers less social resistance and more political hope for future claimants, including transgender people. Rauch characterized the conflict as a "canary in the mine shaft" for whether society will adopt an absolutist or pluralistic interpretation of non-discrimination.