Vox

Sean talks with psychiatrist and neuroscientist Amir Levine about attachment, insecurity, and why our relationships shape us more than we think. They discuss his updated framework for anxious, avoidant, and secure attachment styles, why being ignored or excluded can feel so threatening, and how small everyday interactions can either calm the brain or send it spiraling. They also dig into childhood dynamics, therapy, conflict, friendship, loneliness, and different ways we can build more secure lives.
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Host: Sean Illing (@seanilling)
Guest: Amir Levine, psychiatrist, neuroscientist, and author of Secure: the revolutionary guide to creating a secure life
00:00 Intro
01:39 What is attachment theory?
08:17 Why is it so hard to feel secure?
12:11 The stories that fuel our insecurity
17:21 Why we overthink our relationships
20:50 Why being ignored feels so threatening
29:58 Why predictability isn’t boring
32:36 It may not be you. It may be your environment.
37:18 How to build a more secure life
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Hasan Piker has become one of the most prominent leftist voices in the US, serving as an online guide for a Democratic Party trying to navigate the new internet. But his rapid rise has sparked a furious backlash from the party's centrist establishment.
Vox’s Astead Herndon sits down with Jonathan Cowan, president of the premier centrist think tank Third Way, who argues that Piker’s history of inflammatory rhetoric makes him a toxic liability that Democrats must cast out. Then, we put those exact claims to the Twitch streamer himself.
00:00 — Introduction: Is Hasan Piker toxic?
01:12 — The centrist case against Piker with Third Way's Jonathan Cowan
04:47 — Comparing Piker to far-right extremists
07:34 — Evaluating rhetoric and the threat of violence
10:19 — Electoral strategy: Moderates vs. deep blue progressive pushes
18:14 — The apology question: Third Way's challenges for Hasan
21:26 — Hasan Piker responds: Addressing the "cringe" past content
23:55 — "Pig dog" and allegations of antisemitic tropes
26:01 — Rick Scott hyperbole and streaming accountability
30:37 — Quadrupling down on Hamas and Israel stances
35:19 — Piker’s theory of political change and the Democratic Party
40:45 — Why liberals fail to capture Twitch and streaming culture
44:00 — Closing message to the Democratic establishment
Sources and further reading:
Democrats Are Too Cozy With Hasan Piker, WSJ Opinion:
https://www.wsj.com/opinion/free-expression/democrats-are-too-cozy-with-hasan-piker-2ecee4cc
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Sean talks with writer Sigal Samuel about AI successionism, the growing movement that sees artificial intelligence as humanity’s rightful successor. They discuss why some people in the AI world think humanity should be replaced, how this vision borrows from old religious ideas about salvation and transcendence, and why artificial intelligence is a dangerous thing to worship.
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Host: Sean Illing (@seanilling)
Guest: Sigal Samuel (@SigalSamuel)
Click here to read Sigal’s article on AI successionism.
00:00 Intro
01:15 What is AI successionism?
07:26 Intelligence vs consciousness
09:59 The disturbing politics of AI successionism
12:12 Is AI secessionism a religion?
23:04 Is this a way to escape our mortality?
24:49 Is intelligence the most valuable thing in the universe?
33:28 Is it wrong to put humans first?
44:49 Is successionism a way of reframing the ‘AI takeover?’

We would love to hear from you. To tell us what you thought of this episode, email us at [email protected] or leave us a voicemail at 1-800-214-5749. Your comments and questions help us make a better show.
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