Know Your Enemy: When the Clock Broke

Know Your Enemy: When the Clock Broke

Matt and Sam interview John Ganz about his new book, When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s.

Cover art from When the Clock Broke

Know Your Enemy is a podcast about the American right co-hosted by Matthew Sitman and Sam Adler-Bell. Read more about it here. You can subscribe to, rate, and review the show on Apple Podcasts and Stitcher, and receive bonus content by supporting the podcast on Patreon.

Something happened to America—and to American conservatism—in the early 1990s: an unspooling, a coarsening, a turn from substance to symbol and from narrative to fragment; prevailing political myths ceased to make sense or have purchase, and nothing sufficiently capacious or legible emerged to replace them, leaving only a dank, foggy climate of conspiracy, bellicosity, and despair. Victorious in the Cold War, America was supposed to be riding high; instead the whole country was experiencing a crisis of confidence.

Why? What happened? And did we ever get over it—or are we still somehow stuck in the “long 1990s”? No one is better equipped to tease out answers to these questions than our great friend John Ganz, whose riveting new book is called When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990sWith his characteristic wit and panache, John guides us through a lively discussion of Sam Francis’s middle American radicalism; Pat Buchanan’s “culture war” speech; Ross Perot and POW-MIA; Carroll Quigley’s influence on Bill Clinton; John Gotti’s appeal; and how these figures, and this era, prepared the way for Donald Trump. It’s a barnburner, folks! Enjoy!

 

Further Reading:

John Ganz, When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s (2024)

The Year the Clock Broke: How the world we live in already happened in 1992, The Baffler (2018)

Jennifer Szalai, The 1990s Were Weirder Than You Think. We’re Feeling the Effects. New York Times (2024)

 

Further Listening:

The Year the Clock Broke, with John Ganz, Know Your Enemy (2020)

Christopher Lasch’s Critique of Progress, with Chris Lehmann, Know Your Enemy (2022)

 

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