This episode, we crack open Saul Alinsky's Rules for Radicals, the 1971 organizing manual that has been studied by everyone from Tea Party activists to Hillary Clinton, and argued over ever since. Alinsky opens the book by crediting Lucifer as the very first radical, frames himself as the answer to Machiavelli's The Prince, and then lays out a worldview where power is the only currency and morality is mostly rhetoric. We walk through his three classes of society (the Haves, the Have-Nots, and the Have-a-Little, Want-Mores), his rules of ethics where the ends justify the means, the martyr strategy of getting branded as dangerous, and some genuinely wild tactics, including the Rochester "fart-in," the O'Hare "shit-in," and the proxy fights that echo in today's ESG battles. Along the way we ask the bigger question: is this a cynical, nihilistic guide to manipulation, or is it just an honest description of how politics has always worked? Either way, once you see the game being played, it gets a lot harder to unsee. Books covered and connected: Rules for Radicals by Saul Alinsky, with detours through Machiavelli's The Prince and Madison's Federalist No. 10.
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