

The Ayn Rand Institute Podcast
Ayn Rand Institute
The Ayn Rand Institute Podcast explores pressing cultural issues from the perspective of Rand’s philosophy, Objectivism.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 8, 2024 • 47min
A Year After October 7: What the Conflict Is Actually About
https://youtu.be/Lsm2sRbywwg
Podcast audio:
In this episode of New Ideal, Onkar Ghate and Elan Journo discuss Western misconceptions around October 7 and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Among the topics covered:
Why the war is really between Israel and Iran;
How pragmatism effects the West’s inability to understand Iran;
How Palestinian grievances help pragmatists evade Iran’s ideology;
Why most Palestinian grievances are deliberately made up;
How October 7 demonstrates the power of philosophy.
Mentioned in this podcast are Onkar Ghate and Elan Journo book Failing to Confront Islamic Totalitarianism and Elan Journo’s book What Justice Demands.
The podcast was recorded on October 4, 2024 and posted on October 7, 2024. Listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Watch archived podcasts here.

Oct 7, 2024 • 1h 4min
Space: The New Commercial Frontier
https://youtu.be/IBopAUk3s4A
Podcast audio:
In this episode of New Ideal, Mike Mazza and Tristan de Liège discuss the private space industry and Ayn Rand's philosophical thoughts on the subject.
Among the topics covered:
How state monopolization forestalled the development of the private space industry;
Why Rand saw the Apollo 11 mission as a philosophical, not a political achievement;
How pull peddling threatens space entrepreneurship;
How the goal of making a profit enables progress in the private space industry;
What's wrong with the objection that private business will corrupt science;
How space exploration benefits us.
Recommended in this podcast are Rand’s piece “Apollo 11,” the essay “Common Fallacies About Capitalism” in Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, and Keith Lockitch’s “Ayn Rand on Apollo 11.”
The podcast was released on October 2, 2024. Watch archived podcasts here.

Sep 30, 2024 • 1h 7min
The Vicious Antitrust Case Against Google
https://youtu.be/5Bpu-bAQXMs
Podcast audio:
In this episode of New Ideal Live, Ben Bayer and Robertas Bakula discuss the recent antitrust case against Google and what it reveals about the nature of antitrust law.
Among the topics covered:
Why Ayn Rand regarded antitrust law as immoral and un-American;
What evidence the DOJ’s antitrust case against Google is based on;
How antitrust law is non-objective in theory and in practice;
Why the DOJ’s antitrust case against Google is non-objective and unjust;
How antitrust law criminalizes businesses for being successful as such;
How the DOJ’s antitrust case equivocates political and economic power;
Why we need to fight for the moral right of businesses to be successful.
Mentioned in this podcast are Ayn Rand’s articles “The Age of Envy,” “America’s Persecuted Minority: Big Business,” and “Antitrust: The Rule of Unreason,” as well as our previous New Ideal podcast episode “Recent Antitrust Attacks on ‘Big Tech’.”
The podcast premiered on September 25, 2024. Listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Watch archived podcasts here.

Sep 23, 2024 • 1h 6min
Trump and Harris on Immigration
https://youtu.be/pKCfFCED9XA
Podcast audio:
In this episode of New Ideal Live, Agustina Vergara Cid and Ben Bayer analyze the anti-American immigration platforms of both the Trump and Harris campaigns.
Among the topics covered:
The tribal and arbitrary nature of Trump's anti-immigration rhetoric;
Why Republicans rely on fear-mongering to push their anti-immigration agenda;
Harris’s shameful evasion of the immigration topic and the racism of her opponents;
How both Democrats and Republicans share a collectivistic view of immigrants;
The role of altruism in shaping the anti-American approach to immigration.
Mentioned in this podcast are Vergara Cid’s essay “Rethink the Term ‘Illegal Immigrant,’” Ayn Rand’s essay “‘Extremism,’ or the Art of Smearing” and her answer to “Should There Be Open Immigration?” Also referenced are the New Ideal Live episodes “The Problem With Pro-Immigration Arguments,” “A Legal Crisis in Immigration,” and “Who Is a Communist?”
The podcast was recorded on September 20, 2024. Watch archived podcasts here.

Sep 20, 2024 • 1h 7min
How to Defend Free Speech
https://youtu.be/emKgc2aO7x8
Podcast audio:
In this episode of New Ideal, Agustina Vergara Cid interviews Gregory Salmieri about his essay “Free Speech as a Right and a Way of Life.”
Among the topics covered:
What free speech is and why a defense of it is needed;
How to respond to acts of de-platforming and cancellation;
Why the right to free speech is absolute;
How public education violates free speech;
Non-governmental violations of free speech;
The difference between thought and action;
When protests and civil disobedience are justified;
How to promote a culture of free speech.
Mentioned in this podcast are Gregory Salmieri’s essay “Free Speech as a Right and a Way of Life” and Tara Smith’s book The First Amendment: Essays on the Imperative of Intellectual Freedom.
The episode was released on September 18, 2024. Watch archived podcasts here.

Sep 18, 2024 • 31min
Who is a Communist?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1C-eEwx1jv0
Podcast audio:
In this episode of New Ideal, Onkar Ghate and Nikos Sotirakopoulos discuss the question of whether Kamala Harris is a communist, and if not, what the real problem with her views is.
Among the topics covered:
The essence of the Marxist ideology;
Why Harris is not a communist;
How the “communist” label helps New Right tribalists hide their own anti-Americanism;
The importance of using concepts precisely;
How mislabeling someone as “communist” whitewashes real communism.
Recommended in this podcast are Ayn Rand’s article “The Left: Old and New” and Sotirakopoulos ’s lecture at AynRandCon Europe 2024 “Lessons From the Intellectual Success of Marxism.”
The podcast was recorded on September 9, 2024 and released on September 14. Listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Watch archived podcasts here.

Sep 16, 2024 • 44min
How America’s 9/11 Response Enabled October 7
https://youtu.be/FpjW9B8aE8Q
Podcast audio:
In this episode of New Ideal, Onkar Ghate and Elan Journo discuss how the failure of American post-9/11 policy led to the October 7 attacks.
Among the topics covered:
How the failed American response to 9/11 paved the way for October 7;
How religion and altruism undermined the response to Islamic totalitarianism;
How the West lies to itself about the nature of Hamas;
Why there are no voices articulating a positive strategy for the Middle East;
The need to rethink the philosophic principles guiding American foreign policy.
Recommended in this podcast are Ghate and Journo’s book Failing to Confront Islamic Totalitarianism: What Went Wrong After 9/11 and Journo’s Winning the Unwinnable War: America's Self-Crippled Response to Islamic Totalitarianism.
The podcast premiered on September 11, 2024. Listen and subscribe from your mobile device on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube Music. Watch archived podcasts here.

Sep 14, 2024 • 8min
Contrarians of the New Right
The new Right’s absurd positions cannot be explained by their adherence to any coherent ideology, but only by their tribal view of the world.

Sep 11, 2024 • 1h 40min
Free Speech as a Right and a Way of Life
Explore the philosophical roots of free speech and its critical importance in society. Delve into historical examples that highlight the dangers of suppression. Examine the intricate balance between individual rights and societal pressures. Discover the need for intellectual diversity and open dialogue, especially in today's polarized climate. Analyze how social media platforms navigate content moderation amid political influences. Finally, confront the challenges faced by academic institutions in upholding freedom of expression.

Sep 10, 2024 • 59min
Was Ayn Rand a Jewish Thinker?
In this discussion, Alexandra Popoff, the author of "Ayn Rand: Writing a Gospel of Success," shares insights into the life and philosophy of Ayn Rand. They delve into the misconceptions linking Rand's Jewish heritage to her philosophical beliefs, emphasizing that her identity was shaped by choice, not ethnicity. The conversation critiques how some interpretations overlook her independence and the central role of individualism in her work. Popoff's analysis of Rand's novels and her rejection of Nietzsche’s ideas illuminate the depth of Rand's philosophical contributions.


