Why does acting “real” now count more than actually knowing anything?
In this episode, Dr. David and Dr. Rob look at the strange status economy that rewards confidence, combativeness, and anti-elite branding over competence. They start with Markwayne Mullin’s performative war language, move through RFK Jr. and the MAHA world, and land on a bigger pattern: in a culture that distrusts institutions, people who look authentic can get away with being wildly unqualified.
This is not really about any one person. It’s about the reinforcement loop. Expertise gets framed as elitism. Performance gets framed as honesty. And once that trade gets accepted, public health, public trust, and reality-testing all start to erode at the same time.
Also: bear carcasses, shirtless fitness signaling, and the psychological difference between sounding credible and being credible.