You can also, according to this, get every episode on the app for a total of $2.99. The podcast is consistently very high-quality, with a surprising number of original ideas given its mainstream reputation. I recommend it highly.
Podcast addict. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bambuna.podcastaddict
Best podcast app on Android IMO: highly configurable, pretty stable, updated frequently, and supports Android auto.
I'll be honest. I didn't understand a lot of the ideas in this episode, and that's on me. There seemed to be a lot of bringing over capitalist economics to the post scarcity world, and I'm not sure if it was as a prediction, desire or just shorthand since we are good at talking about things in that model. Zizek had a review of Blade Runner 2049 that I saw on the Slate Star Codex sub, that I thought was really interesting. It argues that "what we are witnessing today is nothing less than an attempt to integrate the passage to post-humanity into capitalism."
For most of the discussion in this episode, I felt like a lot of relatively recent assumptions about humanity were being applied unnecessarily to a post scarcity world. For example, in Nicomachean Ethics Aristotle said, "He is happy who lives in accordance with complete virtue and is sufficiently equipped with external goods, not for some chance period but throughout a complete life." Although, by this definition, your virtue has to be active (working) the idea that you need to be working at a job to be happy isn't some fundamental part of the human condition. Similarly, the idea that our society must be based on fulfilling the four Fs, or else we've someone become post-human and no long ourselves, seems way too strong to me. Even now, we've built elaborate societal structures to avoid fighting and fleeing (in the evolutionary sense, where if you fail to do one or the other you'll be dead) whenever possible. Having these responses activated too often isn't good for us.
Finally, near the end Eneasz said David Finch twice, and I'm pretty sure he accidentally combined David Fincher and David Lynch, which would create a truly awesome director.
there are more Latinx to the south other than Mexicans... https://www.openstreetmap.org/node/36966069#map=3 just saying, know your neighbors so you can teach them about rationality ;)
and i think i had listened to the same npr show, found it in my antennapod history with keyword chicken http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2018/08/13/white-workers-minority-washington-post
I'm not sure you're right about "not making even a teeny budge in production". Here's something I read today in Doing Good Better.
Still, as you said you can make a larger impact by paying others to convince people to become vegetarian or vegan.