cover of episode Gad Saad Survived War in Lebanon. He’s Warning About One in the West.

Gad Saad Survived War in Lebanon. He’s Warning About One in the West.

2024/10/24
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Bari Weiss: 我一直在思考,我们现在应该有多担心?我是否过于危言耸听?是否有办法阻止这种反文明的冲动? Gad Saad: 我作为移民,在缺乏西方自由价值观的社会中长大,因此我比大多数人更能理解西方文化和政治生活中所面临的风险。许多西方理想的最坚定捍卫者都是移民,因为他们亲身体验过缺乏西方自由的社会。 Gad Saad: 我在黎巴嫩的经历让我深刻了解了身份政治、部落主义和非自由主义的极端后果。我所在的康考迪亚大学充斥着反犹太主义,这让我意识到西方正在进行一场反对逻辑、科学和常识的战争。左翼的自我中心主义导致对社会的仇恨,这种集体主义的自我中心主义与个体层面的自我中心主义不同。大学教育体系中左翼思想的盛行导致学生对社会的仇恨,这并非偶然。我所在的大学将“去殖民化”作为首要任务,这与科学精神相悖。

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Gad Saad was born in Beirut in 1964 into one of the last Jewish families to remain in Lebanon. But the country that was once called “the Paris of the Middle East” began to turn.

Saad remembers one day at school when a fellow student told his class that he wanted to be a “Jew-killer” when he grew up. The rest of the kids laughed. By 1975, Lebanon descended into a brutal civil war and Saad said death awaited him at every millisecond of the day.

Even through the danger and turmoil, his family thought, This will pass over. We will be fine. Until someone showed up to their home in Lebanon to kill them, at which point his family fled the country and rebuilt their life in Canada.

In 2024, many of us in Western democracies find ourselves saying the exact same things: This will pass over. We will be fine. Even as Hamas flags and “I love Hezbollah” posters wave in cosmopolitan capitals across the West. How worried should we be? And, is there a way to roll back admiration for anti-civilizational groups? Those are just some of the questions we were eager to put to Saad in today’s conversation.

Saad said that witnessing the Lebanese Civil War gave him a crash course in the extremes of identity politics, tribalism, and illiberalism. He argues that immigrants like himself, who have lived without the virtues of the West—freedom of speech and thought, reason, and true liberalism—uniquely understand what’s at stake right now in Western cultural and political life. It’s no coincidence, Saad said, that the most prominent defenders of Western ideals are immigrants, people like Ayaan Hirsi Ali), Salman Rushdie), and Masih Alinejad).

Saad is a professor of marketing and evolutionary behavioral sciences, and if you’re on X, we suspect you know his name. Unlike most professors, he has a million followers, and a knack for satire—so much so that Elon Musk seems to be one of his biggest fans. 

Outside of his X personality, he’s been teaching at Concordia University in Montreal for the past 30 years. But he’s now having second thoughts. Concordia is today widely regarded as the most antisemitic university in North America. Saad is now a visiting professor and global ambassador at Northwood University in Michigan. He said he can’t bear the possibility of returning to Concordia given the antisemitism on campus.

All of this, he argued, constitutes another war: a campaign against logic, science, common sense, and reality here in the West, which he explains in his book: The Parasitic Mind: How Infectious Ideas Are Killing Common Sense

Today, Bari Weiss asks one of the most insightful and provocative thinkers about the risks of mob rule and extremism on the left, where these “parasitic ideas” came from and why they’re encouraged in the West, if progressive illiberalism is waxing or waning, and if these trends are reversible.

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