Know Your Enemy

Matthew Sitman

A leftist's guide to the conservative movement, one podcast episode at a time, with co-hosts Matthew Sitman and Sam Adler-Bell.

  1. Great Books and the AI Apocalypse (w/ Matt Dinan) [Teaser]

    22 HR AGO

    Great Books and the AI Apocalypse (w/ Matt Dinan) [Teaser]

    Listen to the rest of this premium episode by subscribing at patreon.com/knowyourenemy. We were excited to record and share this conversation with Matt Dinan, a professor who teaches in a Great Books program at St. Thomas University, a liberal arts college in New Brunswick, Canada. It brings together longtime preoccupations of the show — Saul Bellow's late novel, Ravelstein, Allan Bloom, Straussian political philosophy — with the fraught emergence of LLMs like ChatGPT. This past semester, Dinan took a fairly radical approach to confronting AI in the classroom, and it seemed to work. We consider the art of teaching, the qualities of great teachers, and what it all reveals about an insidious technology's effect on how we live and learn as citizens in, at least for now, a democratic republic. Listen again: "Unraveling Allan Bloom and Saul Bellow," June 21, 2021 Sources: Saul Bellow, Ravelstein (2000) Allan Bloom, The Closing of the American Mind (1987) Matt Dinan, "Saul Bellow's Ravelstein," Hedgehog Review, Spring 2025 — "Permission Structures," Prefaces, Dec 10, 2025 — "It's Not Just a Calculator," Prefaces, Aug 28, 2024 Jorge Luis Borges, "The Lottery in Babylon," Collected Fictions (1999) Jonathan Malesic, "ChatGPT Is a Gimmick: AI cannot save us from the effort of learning to live and die," Hedgehog Review, May 21, 2025 — "Taming the Demon: How desert monks put work in its place," Commonweal, Feb 2, 2019

    6 min
  2. UNLOCKED: Trump's Big, Beautiful Ballroom (w/ Kate Wagner)

    22/12/2025 · BONUS

    UNLOCKED: Trump's Big, Beautiful Ballroom (w/ Kate Wagner)

    This episode originally aired November 17, 2025 on Patreon — we're unlocking it as a holiday treat.  If there's a Trump-era topic that manages to fascinate without being entirely depressing, it's probably the ongoing arguments about architecture that his ascension has occasioned. Proponents of a RETVRN to the architectural ideals of ancient Greece and Rome are prominent in MAGA circles; partisans of a neo-classical revival populate government commissions, and their prescriptions find expression in various executive orders again. To understand who these people are, what their movement wants, and the kernel of truth in their grievances, we talked to architectural critic and proprietor of McMansion Hell Kate Wagner. We start by analyzing Trump's ballroom and the demolishing the East Wing of the White House — the perfect way into MAGA architecture and the mind of their Beautiful Builder himself, Donald J. Trump. Sources: Kate Wagner, "Duncing About Architecture," New Republic, Feb 8, 2020 — "Trump Will Not Make Architecture Great Again," The Nation, Jan 7, 2025 — "The Real Problem With Trump’s Cheesy Neoclassical Building Fetish," Feb 12, 2025 — "what the fuck are we doing anymore," The Late Review, Jan 9, 2025. — "Wrecking Ballroom," The New York Review of Architecture, Dec 17, 2025. Charlie Nash, "Trump Admits He Could've Built Ballroom Without Destroying the East Wing, But 'It Looked Like Hell,'" Mediate, Nov 10, 2025 Jonathan Edwards & Dan Diamond, "Trump hires new White House ballroom architect," WaPo, Dec 4, 2025.  ...and don't forget to subscribe to Know Your Enemy on Patreon for access to all of our bonus episodes!

    1h 1m
  3. The Furious Minds of MAGA (w/ Laura Field)

    24/11/2025

    The Furious Minds of MAGA (w/ Laura Field)

    Laura K. Field's Furious Minds: The Making of the MAGA New Right, published earlier this month, is a book we simply had to discuss. Listeners to this podcast will recognize its cast of characters—conservative intellectuals like Patrick Deneen, Michael Anton, John Eastman, Adrian Vermeule, and Harry Jaffa, among others—whose ideas and influence Field carefully categorizes and evaluates, bringing order to an unruly decade of intellectual history. Topics include: Leo Strauss and the problem of great teachers; the use and abuse of grand narratives by the right; how the Claremonters went all in on Trump; the permission given by postliberals to some of the nastiest impulses on the right; and more! Sources: Laura K. Field, Furious Minds: The Making of the MAGA New Right (2025) — "Revisiting Why Liberalism Failed: A Five-Part Series," Niskanen Center, Dec 21, 2020 Patrick Deneen, Why Liberalism Failed (2018) — Regime Change: Toward a Postliberal Future (2023) Matthew Sitman, "Liberalism and the Catholic Left," Commonweal, Dec 3, 2018 Publius Decius Mus/Michael Anton, "The Flight 93 Election," Claremont Review of Books, Sept 5, 2016 Adrian Vermeule, "Integration from Within," American Affairs, Spring 2018 The Editors, "The Fight is Now," The American Mind, Nov 5, 2020 Anemona Hartocollis, "On Campus, Trump Fans Say They Need 'Safe Spaces,'" New York Times, Dec 8, 2016 Further Listening:  KYE: "Rise of the Illiberal Right," July 12, 2019.  KYE: "Midnight in the Garden of American Heroes (On West Coast Straussians)," Feb 11, 2021.  KYE: "Unraveling Allan Bloom and Saul Bellow," June 21, 2021.  KYE: "The Afterlife of January 6," July 19, 2021. ...and don't forget to subscribe to Know Your Enemy on Patreon for access to all of our bonus episodes!

    1h 10m

About

A leftist's guide to the conservative movement, one podcast episode at a time, with co-hosts Matthew Sitman and Sam Adler-Bell.

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