Coleman Hughes on Colorblindness, Jazz, and Identity

Primary Topic

This episode delves into Coleman Hughes' perspectives on colorblindness, jazz, and cultural identity, interlacing his personal experiences with broader societal issues.

Episode Summary

In this engaging episode of the Mercatus Center Podcasts, host Tyler Cowen speaks with Coleman Hughes about his book "The End of Race: Arguments for a Colorblind America," his career in jazz music, and his views on identity. Hughes discusses his belief in colorblind policies and social interactions as a path toward racial harmony, advocating for a society where race does not dictate one's opportunities or societal role. The conversation also covers his musical career, highlighting how jazz has influenced his views on race and creativity. Hughes' experiences as a mixed-race individual shape his unique perspective on the cultural and political landscape of America.

Main Takeaways

  1. Coleman Hughes advocates for a colorblind society, where public policy and personal interactions transcend racial distinctions.
  2. Hughes credits jazz music as a significant influence on his understanding of racial and cultural dynamics, emphasizing its historically integrative nature.
  3. Discussion on identity and race reflects Hughes' nuanced view that cultural identity can coexist with a colorblind societal framework.
  4. Personal anecdotes from Hughes' life illustrate the practical implications of his theories on race and identity.
  5. The importance of cultural exchange and understanding is highlighted, suggesting that appreciating and participating in diverse cultural practices can promote societal cohesion.

Episode Chapters

1: Introduction to Coleman Hughes

Brief overview of Coleman Hughes' background and his multifaceted career as a writer, podcaster, and musician.
Coleman Hughes: "I have a great new book out, The End of Race: Arguments for a Colorblind America."

2: Jazz and Identity

Exploration of how jazz music has shaped Hughes' views on identity and race.
Coleman Hughes: "The ethos of jazz was more colorblind, in my sense, than the American average at the time."

3: Colorblindness in Society

Discussion on the potential and challenges of implementing colorblind policies in America.
Coleman Hughes: "This book is an attempt to rescue colorblindness from the jaws of disdain."

4: Personal Reflections

Hughes reflects on his personal experiences with race, identity, and music.
Coleman Hughes: "I think there's something to the idea that kids from interracial unions are drawn towards the idea that race isn't all that important."

Actionable Advice

  1. Explore diverse cultural expressions to broaden understanding and appreciation of different communities.
  2. Engage in conversations about race and identity with an open mind and a willingness to listen.
  3. Advocate for policies that emphasize socioeconomic status over racial identity to address inequalities.
  4. Cultivate personal relationships across different racial and cultural backgrounds to break down stereotypes and foster inclusivity.
  5. Support artists and thinkers who promote a colorblind society through their work and public discourse.

About This Episode

Coleman Hughes believes we should strive to ignore race both in public policy and in our private lives. But when it comes to personal identity and expression, how feasible is this to achieve? And are there any other individual traits we should also seek to ignore?
Coleman and Tyler explore the implications of colorblindness, including whether jazz would've been created in a color-blind society, how easy it is to disentangle race and culture, whether we should also try to be 'autism-blind', and Coleman's personal experience with lookism and ageism. They also discuss what Coleman’s learned from J.J. Johnson, the hardest thing about performing the trombone, playing sets in the Charles Mingus Big Band as a teenager, whether Billy Joel is any good, what reservations he has about his conservative fans, why the Beastie Boys are overrated, what he's learned from Noam Dworman, why Interstellar is Chris Nolan's masterpiece, the Coleman Hughes production function, why political debate is so toxic, what he'll do next, and more.

People

Coleman Hughes, Tyler Cowen

Companies

Mercatus Center at George Mason University

Books

"The End of Race: Arguments for a Colorblind America"

Guest Name(s):

Coleman Hughes

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

Tyler Cowen
Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real world problems. Learn more@mercatus.org dot for a full transcript of every conversation, enhanced with helpful links, visit conversationswithtyler.com.

Hello, everyone, and welcome back to conversations with Tyler. Today I'm here with Coleman Hughes. Coleman has a great new book out, the End of race, arguments for a colorblind America. But Coleman is more than just a book author. He is a well known blogger.

He has a very famous podcast, Conversations with Coleman. He has been a star in rap music. He plays jazz music, trombone, professionally in New York City nightclubs, and he's all around a public intellectual and famous person. Coleman, welcome. Thank you so much.

Coleman Hughes
And I have to apologize for stealing the name of your podcast for mine. I figured I have alliteration, so I have extra reason to do it. If your name was Tyler, it would be bad, but in fact, it's totally fine. Now, before we get to your book, I have just some random questions for you. What have you learned from JJ Johnson?

Hmm. What was most interesting about JJ Johnson is that he was an extreme perfectionist. What people don't realize about JJ, at least people that aren't deep kind of connoisseurs, is that most of his solos on his records were prepared to an extent that is not true of his other contemporaries, like Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, et cetera. Most of their solos were truly improvised. Like, if you go to the alternate takes on those records, it's a different solo.

Coleman Hughes
If you go to JJ's alternate takes, it's almost the same solo. And I think that rather than be a bug, that was a feature of his success. Cause if you consider the challenges required to make the trombone into a bebop instrument, which nobody thought was possible before JJ Johnson did it, it's kind of a catch 22, because the. The level of perfectionism you would have had to have in order to be the first successful bebop trombone player would also preclude you from being a truly improvisatory musician, which is generally characteristic of jazz musicians. Are most of your trombone solos prepared?

No, but in a way, I benefit. This is why you can't compare modern players to players of the past. I benefit enormously from having studied and learned all of many of JJ Johnson solos. So there are things he had to invent that are now second nature to most tromboneists, which make it easier to improvise in that style than it would have been for him physically. What's the hardest thing about playing the.

Trombone, it's actually not the slide. The slide, in my view, that's what attracted me to the trombone, the fact that you push and pull rather than pressing buttons or valves, and that's what makes it distinct. But the slide motion is not actually the trickiest thing about it. The trickiest thing about it is the same thing that's tricky about every other brass instrument, which is the embouchure. That's what separates great trumpet players from poor trumpet players.

In my view. The finger technique is not nearly the hardest part. It's always the small muscles of the mouth and coordinating those to play the instrument effectively. And how was it you ended up playing trombone in Charles Mingus big band? I participated in the Charles Mingus High School jazz festival, which they still do every year.

It was new at the time. They invite bands from all around to audition, and they identify a handful of good soloists and let them sit in for one night with the band. And I sat in with the band and the bandleader knew that I lived close by in New Jersey, and so essentially invited me to start playing with the band on Monday nights. And I was probably 16 or 17 at this point. So I would take the NJ transit into New York City on a Monday night, play two sets with the Mingus band, sitting next to people that had been my idols and were now kind of my mentors, people like Kooumba, Frank Lacey, who was a fantastic trombone player, played with art Blakey and D'Angelo and so forth.

And then I would go home at midnight and go to school on Tuesday morning. And why is the music of Charles Mingus special in jazz? Because it is to me. But how would you articulate what it is for you? I would wholeheartedly agree that it's special, even within jazz.

The way I would describe it is there are certain jazz musicians that seem to have created their own autonomous island within the landscape of jazz. Whereas most of the great jazz musicians sort of resided in the same country, certain people were like off in Taiwan on their own island. I would put Mingus in that category. I would put someone like monk in that category. Ornette Coleman, people like that.

Mingus music is my favorite of all of those because it sounds like Duke Ellington. If Duke Ellington had had an acid trip and composed things that were broadly in his idiom, but just everything was changed a bit. That's how I would describe Mingus. And where should a podcast listener start if they don't know Mingus? I think you should start with Mingus.

A um, because it's the album that would most broadly appeal to someone who didn't know any mingus. I would also very much recommend watching his interviews as his personality as part of the experience of listening to him. And then my favorite Mingus is probably black saint and the sinner lady is, I think, a masterpiece. And the lesser known Mingus piece, that is a beauty and was part of his multi. His several hour long composition called epitaph, which I think he never finished.

But it's a song called Pinky don't come back from the Moon, looking for love, man. And it's a beautiful ten minute or so, just gorgeous piece. And he had a penchant for giving really long names and funny names. So he has another one, for instance, called. It's a contrafactor of the song, all the things you are and contrafact, meaning same chords, different melody.

And he called it all the things you could be if Sigmund Freud's wife was your mother. So he had these very funny titles. I'm a lifelong Mingus fan and blessed to play in the band. If I want to be charmed by puerto rican music, where should I start? Oh, you should definitely start with Hector Laveau.

I would say Hector Laveau's music, it's incredible. It's incredible to dance to. It stands the test of time. A lot of it is thematically dark, actually, many of his most famous songs. I mean, so, for instance, el dia de mi suerte is an extremely sad song about how his mother died and then his father died and he had a tragic life.

But you would never know that because it sounds so happy and it makes you want to dance. And it's also probably the best example. Of how trombones can be used because. Most of that music was performed with Willie Colon, who's arguably the greatest latin trombone player. And they would essentially, you know, they could sustain the whole harmony of the band if they wanted to, without a piano or guitar, simply by having two trombones playing triple forte.

And that's another thing I really love about that music. Is Billy Joel at all any good?

That's a good question. You know, I love piano man. I think it's an incredible song. I can't really speak to that much, Billy Joel being great outside of the few hits, but piano man, I think, is a correctly rated song. I've been thinking about him a lot lately because he has immense talent, but I don't like most of it.

Tyler Cowen
And that raises interesting questions. But when I hear it on the radio, I. I don't dislike it. I sort of want to dislike it more than I actually do. So which aspect bothers you?

Coleman Hughes
In what sense? Does it matter that he's not talented? If you like it, most of the. Time it feels dumbed down. I grew up in New Jersey, as you did.

Tyler Cowen
It appeals to a particular culture that I feel I ought to be rejecting a bit more than perhaps I do. I don't know if I'm allowed to say this, given the topic of your book, but in some ways, it's too white for me. Rhythmically, it can be flaccid, but, like, if I hear moving out and, you know, heart attack, ack ack ack. I enjoy that. Am I wrong?

Coleman Hughes
So is it that it was so influential that it's become banal for me? Yeah, I heard it all the time growing up. Probably in a way, you did. How did it strike you when you were growing up? The exact same way.

Oh, interesting. Yeah. So, I mean, I was wondering if it's just that it was so influential, it influenced everything else, and now sounds banal in retrospect, but it sounded banal. At the time, and I think purposely so. But it's interesting, when I listen to satellite radio sometimes Billy Joel is on as a disc jockey.

Tyler Cowen
He's an a plus quality teacher about music, how he explains things, and I have great respect for that. Yep. I don't think there's much correlation between being able to explain it well and being able to do it well is one thing I've noticed of musicians. Now, you were a philosophy major at Columbia. That's now a while back, but what is it you liked most about continental philosophy?

Coleman Hughes
The truth is, I didn't resonate with much of any continental philosophy. It struck me as not respecting what I value in writing, which is brevity and clarity. And so I might like to read someone who really gets Nietzsche, explain what Nietzsche was trying to say. But reading Nietzsche itself was not a very fun experience for me, and so I gravitated strongly towards analytic philosophy. The expositors are often worse, right?

Tyler Cowen
You think, oh, they're going to clarify Nietzsche, but you get something longer and more convoluted. The ones that are, please give me back Nietzsche. Right? The ones that are hyper obsessed tend to be very unclear. What would you change in american high schools if you had a magic wand?

Coleman Hughes
That's a good question. I mean, so there is research suggesting that longer school days are a good thing. I mean, you know Roland Fryer's experiments in Texas, where he randomly selects schools. And extends the school day, among other. Things, gets good results.

On the other hand, there just are a lot of kids that don't resonate with the structure and skillset of high school or public school and schooling in general, and their talents lie elsewhere. I mean, I know countless musicians that may have even been diagnosed as quote unquote ADHD in school, but the reality is they had no trouble focusing in general and certainly had no trouble focusing on practicing their instrument for 5 hours at a time, but had no interest in school as it was structured. So I'd be curious, what can be done to make school more tolerable for those kinds of kids? We'll get back to miscellaneous questions, but now let's get to your book again, the end of race politics, arguments for a colorblind America. How would you give us your bottom line message in the book?

Tyler Cowen
I don't usually do this, but how would you explain it? Yeah, I would basically explain it by saying the idea of colorblindness, by which I mean trying to treat people without regard to race, and having colorblind, race neutral public policy, that's become a dirty word and a dirty concept in particular on the left in the past couple decades, and really in the past decade. So this book is an attempt to rescue colorblindness from the jaws of disdain and argue that it is the best overall philosophy by which to view the idea of race, that we want to raise our children, even if it's a watered down version of MLK. We ought to raise our children on that message, and we ought to get race out of public policy and wherever possible, wherever plausible, use socioeconomics where we want to deal with issues of disadvantage. If I understand you correctly, you're also suggesting in our private lives, we should be colorblind.

Coleman Hughes
Yes. Broadly, yeah. Or we should try to be. We should try to be. This is where I might not agree with you.

Tyler Cowen
So I find if I look at media, I look at social media, I see a dispute. I think 100% of the time, I agree with Coleman pretty much on these race related matters. In private lives, I'm less sure. So let me ask you a question. Could jazz music have been created in a colorblind America?

Coleman Hughes
Could it have been created in a colorblind America? In what sense do you mean that question? It seems there's a lot of cultural creativity. I mean, one issue is it may have required some hardship, but that's not my point. It requires some sense of a cultural identity to motivate it, that the people making it want to express something about their lives, their history, their communities, and to them, it's not colorblind.

Interesting. So my counterargument to that would be, insofar as I understand the early history of jazz, it was heavily more racially integrated than american society was at that time, in the sense that the culture of jazz music as it existed in, say, New Orleans and New York City was many, many decades ahead of the curb in terms of its attitudes towards how people should live racially, interracial friendship, interracial relationship, etcetera. So, yeah, I'd argue the ethos of jazz was more colorblind, in my sense, than the american average at the time. But maybe there's some portfolio effect here. So, yes, Benny Goodman hires Teddy Wilson to play for him.

Tyler Cowen
Teddy Wilson was black, as I'm sure you know, and that works marvelously well, and it's just good for the world that Benny Goodman does this. But can it still not be the case that Teddy Wilson is pulling from something deep in his being and his soul about his racial experience, his upbringing, the people he's known? And that that's where a lot of the expression in the music comes from, and that is most decidedly not colorblind, even though we would all endorse the fact that Benny Goodman was willing to hire Teddy Wilson. Yeah, it may be. I'd argue it may not be culture blind, though it probably is colorblind in the sense that black Americans don't just represent a race.

Coleman Hughes
That's what a, you know, a black american would have in common. That's what I would have in common with someone from Ethiopia, is that we're broadly of the same, quote unquote, race, we are not at all of the same culture. And so to the extent that there is something called african american culture, which I believe that there is, which has had many wonderful products, including jazz and hip hop. Yeah. Then I'm perfectly willing to concede that that's a cultural product in the same way that, say, country music is like a product of broadly southern culture.

Tyler Cowen
But then here's my worry a bit. You're going to have people privately putting out cultural visions in the public sphere through music, television, novels, a thousand ways, and those will inevitably be somewhat political once they're cultural visions. So these other visions will be out there, and a lot of them you're going to disagree with. So it might be fine to say it would be better if we were all much more colorblind. But given these other non colorblind visions are out there, do you not have to, in some sense, counter them by not being so colorblind yourself and say, well, here's a better way to think about the black or african american or ethiopian or whatever identity.

Coleman Hughes
Yeah, I think that's right. I think they're compatible in the sense. That you can sort of push for. The soft version of something and the harder version of something, if not at literally the same time. Then by turns what ive sort of been arguing for is a kind of firewall between the cultural versions youre talking about and the political aspects.

But I think youre right that in practice they may bleed into each other. They might correlate very highly. Right. Maybe I, Coleman Hughes, have no problem separating the fact that I grew up with black and puerto rican music and have a special attachment to it, also have a special attachment to puerto rican food, for instance. I have no problem separating that aspect of me from a demand that the state treat me and my racial group differently or a political program based on race broadly.

But it might be the case that for many people, those are just kind of one in the same, or they draw on the same impulse. Now, I'm irish American, and sometimes I go to Ireland and other times I go to Scotland, and I enjoy them both. I don't really think intrinsically one is better or worse than the other, but I would admit that I honestly feel somewhat better about being in Ireland. For some weird, arbitrary reason. I think I'm irish American.

Tyler Cowen
This, to me, is just a bit more interesting, and it's probably me fooling myself, but some parts of it even feel a little bit more familiar than Scotland would. And I fully admit that might be placebo or my own self delusion. Should I feel bad about thinking that way? No, I don't think you should feel bad about thinking that way. And I think that I know much more about Puerto Rico than I would if I weren't one half Puerto rican.

Coleman Hughes
I know much more about it than I know about the Dominican Republic, say. However, I would ask you a question. I would turn it around. I would ask you, if you were to write an mister post about some issue in irish or scottish politics, do you think you would analyze them differently, or do you think you would put that little feeling to the side? I think I would know more about Ireland.

Tyler Cowen
It would be different. I don't think I would consciously be biased, but I don't think I could quite do it neutrally either. And I'm pretty distant from Ireland, like no relatives there. I've only been a few times. I'm not like an irish American.

You know, sending money to the IRA and drinking in a stereotypical irish american pub. There's not really much in my life that would. Well, you're not drinking, period. Yeah. But this is what worries me a bit.

So if I went to, say, Ireland and Africa, and then when I'm in Ireland, I feel a bit better there because, oh, I'm in Ireland. That's the place with white people. I definitely would feel bad if I had that opinion, and I don't. In fact, I actually, if anything, am. I kind of prefer to embrace that which is in some ways distant from me along those margins.

But it would be wrong, right, if I said, oh, well, I'm in Ireland, you know, I'm white. That's the white people's place. I can feel a little better about that than being in Ethiopia. Yeah. Then there again, I would underscore the distinction between race and culture.

Coleman Hughes
I don't think anyone should feel bad about the inevitable fact that we have more cultural attachments to the things that we know and the places we're from and the foods we grew up with and the music we grew up with, that's all inevitable. And I even don't begrudge someone saying, look, I'm jewish. I would frankly prefer to live in a jewish community. I would prefer to marry a jewish person and so forth. All of those kinds of feelings, I would argue, are inevitable, and you shouldn't fight within yourself.

However, I think there should be a strong firewall between saying all of those things and saying, the state ought to treat my group special because of this, that or another reason. And like I said, that might be a too hard a distinction for some people to draw. It's not a hard one for me to draw. And so maybe I falsely assume it's realistic to advocate other people draw it. But that seems to me a sensible place to draw the line, given we have to draw it somewhere between everyone's irrational individual with no attachments whatsoever.

And any and all expressions of racial. And group pride are okay, I agree. Fully when it comes to the state. But in terms of separating race and culture, they seem quite intertwined to me. And a lot of people's cultures talk about their race.

Tyler Cowen
It can be in quite unpleasant ways in many cases, as we both know. So is there really that firewall there? I would argue race and culture are fairly distinct. The fact that in America right now. Arguably the most bitter kind of differences between two different white cultures.

Right. I think. Was it David French who wrote the piece about the great white culture war, something like that a few years back where you have sort of white Americans of a blue culture and white Americans of a red culture, some who grew up with 50 guns thinking it's normal, and some who literally couldn't tell you the difference between a shotgun and a rifle, looking at each other and feeling really all of the sociological feelings of tribal hatred towards one another, but are totally of the same race. I think that kind of underscores the difference between race and culture. Let me try another hypothetical on you.

Tyler Cowen
You might ask, well, should we be race blind? But should we be autism blind? So if I meet a person who is autistic, or I think they're autistic, I'll make a point of speaking to that person more directly. You could say I would treat them differently. I think it's efficient, I think it's welcome, it leads to better outcomes.

But I wouldn't say I'm autism blind. Now. Autism isn't culture. It's not race. But it is mostly genetic.

Right? It's a thing you were born with. Should we be autism blind or ADHD blind or whatever else blind? No, I don't think we should be autism blind. I think insofar as, you know, someone has a totally different communication style, you know, that they don't read facial expressions.

Coleman Hughes
Well, it makes sense to take that into account in all of your interactions and communications with them. And for instance, I don't argue that we should be gender blind because at least not in the same sense, we should try to be race blind because there really just are important differences between men and women that shouldnt be ignored. Right. You shouldnt treat anyone worse. But I also wouldnt necessarily treat my brother and my sister and my mother and my father the same in every possible conversation or scenario.

Right. So its not about a hierarchy of treatment, it's simply non identical treatment. Right. But my point about race, I think, is that race really is, whatever you think about its constructed nature, it's much more socially constructed than all of these other categories. Right.

Coleman Hughes
Autism is just, it's. There's no, if we have autistic people in a thousand years, they're going to have the same symptoms that they did a thousand years ago. The classic differences between men and women today are quite similar to what they were 50 years ago, and there will be differences between men and women in 100 years. But race is not really like that. What we think of as a racial difference is heavily influenced by culture, and in that sense, they're intertwined.

I think it's much more fertile ground for progress to advocate that people treat those of different races without regard to their race, then to treat people with, say, different personality conditions or genders or so forth, things that are frankly less malleable to begin with. In its most fundamental terms, if you had to present the micro foundation for why does race get so much blindness in your view? So culture is extremely contingent, and yet there you don't want us to be culture blind, and then autism, say, is mostly genetic, and you don't want us to be autism blind. So the extreme contingent and the extreme non contingent, you don't want blindness. But there's some point in the middle where blindness makes sense, or how does the whole model operate?

So I guess the model operates in the following way. If I meet two people of a different culture, I'm not going to treat them differently. In other words, let's say to dissect out the variables, I've got an ethiopian and a black american, same race, totally different cultures, and they're both applying to work at my podcast. I'm neither going to consider their race nor their culture if they're editing my podcast, say, right, I really only care about their competence there. The sense in which you might not be culture blind is I wouldn't fault the ethiopian guy for saying, look, I want an ethiopian wife, and I like Injira better than I like barbecue.

In that sense, I allow him his non culture blindness, and I don't make him feel guilty in the sense that I don't make you feel guilty when you feel a bit more. Bit of something for Ireland. But I would still insist on not treating them differently, right? Not treating them differently where the different treatment might amount to some kind of injustice. I wouldnt insist on being deliberately obtuse about the differences between people with different mental competencies, like autism or depression or, God forbid, schizophrenia, right?

Schizophrenia. Blindness is just being obtuse, right? The problem is that schizophrenia is actually a perfect proxy for having a different mindset. That's definitionally, that's what it is. Whereas a person's race is not a very good proxy for having a different mind at all.

And it's certainly not a good proxy the moment you have more information about them, right. The only situations where it might be. A good proxy if you picture a. Quadrant with stakes and information. So if you're in the quadrant that's high stakes and low information, you know that there's a bomb in Times Square and you've only got 2 seconds, and you have to decide between the guy that looks like a terrorist and looks like the race of most terrorists, you know.

Okay, well, I'm not going to fault you for paying attention to race in that particular corner case. In most of our life situations, we're in the other three quadrants of situations that are either low stakes high information, low stakes low information, or low stakes low information. Or did I get all three? I might have messed that up, but you get the point. We're meeting friends at coffee shops, we're introducing each other and so forth in scenarios where we can learn about each other.

And the moment we have that, race falls away as a very useful proxy. As you probably know, a disproportionate share of american CEO's are quite tall. How do you feel about lookism?

Yeah, lookism is another one where I would feel. It's not that I don't think it's an injustice of some kind, it's that I would feel silly spending very much. Time trying to budge that particular variable. Because I don't think it's that budgeable. Not saying it's not movable at all.

But I would argue that, for instance. In my view, attitudes towards racism have changed pretty dramatically in the past 50 years. In the past hundred, certainly. I dont know that attitudes towards lookism have. And that leads me to believe that lookism might be something more like closer to a constant, whereas attitudes towards race are fairly influenceable by, let's say, those of us who are in the marketplace of ideas.

Coleman Hughes
I don't want to exaggerate our influence as a whole profession, but I would feel somewhat silly trying to budge variables that might not be very budgeable. I worry sometimes that blacks in America face more lookism, even from people who would not typically be considered racist. But when they meet a black person, they really pay more attention to the looks. And, you know, Obama once said, when he was president, when I'm on tv, the one thing I can't do too much is to get angry. And you look very friendly.

Tyler Cowen
You are very friendly. I know you. How would things have gone for you if you looked more savage? I mean, do you think blacks in America face more lookism? Yeah, I mean, I think probably, yes.

Coleman Hughes
It's interesting. Our friend Noam, who was also on this podcast, said the same thing. He said, if I had a look that was more threatening, for lack of a better word, that I might have a different black experience than the one that I have and that it's not, you know, we often reduce things to race that aren't all racial. Right. Like whether I can say there's only one time I've ever been accused of stealing something from a store that I did not in fact steal, which is often talked about as a ubiquitous experience.

For black men, black people in general. It's only happened once. I've been living in New York for ten years, and I buy a lot of stuff from Delis, and I've lived in Harlem, and I've lived above Harlem, in Hamilton Heights and the kinds of neighborhoods where a black teen might be accused of this kind of thing and so forth. And is that partly because I have a certain look, even if I dress shabbily, I have kind of a certain non, vaguely non threatening look, although for some reason it's enough to make employees at Ted feel unsafe, but not deli owners in Harlem. I think there's something to that.

Absolutely. Do you think being half Puerto Rican has given you additional or different insight into racism? And if so, what? It's a good question. I think there may be something to.

The idea that kids who are products. Of interracial unions are more drawn towards the idea that race isnt all that important, because if you grow up in a scenario, especially if you grow up with two happy, loving parents, as I did, who are clearly of different races and different cultures and so forth, my mother grew up speaking Spanish and my dad was as american as you could get. It becomes difficult to believe that there are deep dividing lines between groups of people because your immediate context says otherwise. The two people that are most important, your parents, have formed the deepest union any two people can form. And so it belies the notion, it belies the people that would want to tell you that there are important divisions between the races.

Coleman Hughes
So insofar as that's a part of my experience, I think it's possibly influenced me. The white conservatives who are your fans, what do you think they're most likely to get wrong about race?

That's a good question. That's a very good question. And then I'll ask you about the libertarians and whether the conservatives and libertarians get the same things wrong.

That's a stumper. But is there some way in which you feel uncomfortable by their embrace of you, that they haven't quite earned the opinion in a way you might feel you have or that doesn't enter into it? No, I feel that sometimes I feel a kind of undeveloped discomfort and inarticulable discomfort with some of the people that like me. I couldn't exactly say why, but yes, it does come from some sense that the opinion is unearned, or that what is an opinion I've come to with great emotional weight, and frankly, psychological wrestling is an opinion that they've come to reflexively. And that that doesn't sit well with me in some sense.

I would prefer. It makes me feel. Feel better about my message if I. Feel. People who wouldn't otherwise come to the views that I have are coming to it not reluctantly, but knowing the counterarguments against it and taking them seriously, taking, for instance, just the fact and kind of sanctity of the legacy of racism in black culture as a meme, taking all of that seriously and nevertheless coming to the opinion that basically the dominant narrative on race is importantly wrong, sits better for me than someone that takes it reflexively and without fully appreciating the counterarguments.

So to the extent that white conservatives over index on that way of engaging with me, it does make me uncomfortable. However, if I had stopped doing things. That made me uncomfortable, I just never would have. I never would have gotten to where I am right now. And I think that is one of the.

The biggest things stopping many black people and people of color in general, from agreeing with me publicly is not that they disagree with me privately. It's that they don't want to tolerate those same feelings of discomfort from the white conservatives who will agree with them. And so I've made the choice that I'm willing to tolerate that discomfort, and I think that's the right decision. How do ageism and racism interact? So it's a common racist trope to take a young black male and call him boy.

Tyler Cowen
Historically, I've noticed sometimes when people talk about you, maybe it's me that's off, but they say pretty often that you're young or very young. You're not actually that young anymore. I mean, do you feel people see you as too young in part because of racial issues, or is there some underlying condescension when people refer to you as young, or you just don't notice or don't think any of that's there? I don't think that it's a racial issue. So, for example, you know, I.

Coleman Hughes
When I started playing with the Mingus band, which is on most nights a majority black band, it certainly was in those days, I would always be introduced as young, even up to the point when I was, like, 24. And I guess it was a relative thing because most guys in the band were older. But there is just this general phenomenon of youth worship that I do dislike about. I don't know if it's american culture or if this is the same everywhere. I don't really like that we put 17 year old activists on tv if their school was shot up.

I think it's a disservice to them. And to that extent, I don't really like being praised because I'm young, because there's a part of me that worries. That people are kind of correcting, giving. Me a mulligan on certain things because I'm younger and I don't like. I don't like even the intimation of false praise.

So there's that. However, I don't think it's a racial issue. In fact, I would probably. It's the opposite in the sense I hear many more people complaining that black children are viewed as older than they in fact are. Like the case of Tamir Rice, who is twelve, but actually did come across as much older than twelve.

So, in other words, teenagers being seen. As adults is probably the bigger issue. Or you game for a round of overrated versus underrated? Of course, these are easy ones. Of course.

Easy to you, maybe? No, very easy. The West Village overrated or underrated? Underrated. Based on how much time I spend there, though a lot of that time is admittedly spent at the comedy cellar.

It's an amazing, culturally vibrant place. There's still great music, there's great comedy, and there is a really beautiful cacophony that goes on there. Yeah, I wouldn't trade that for anything. It's beautiful. The Beastie boys overrated.

Tyler Cowen
To me, they're just a bunch of whiners. I'm very glad to hear you say that. I think that they have. They even made, really, a mark in the history of hip hop. I think they came around at a time when people were looking for white rappers and Eminem wasn't on the scene yet.

That's right. However, Eminem made a very important mark in the sense that I don't think you could find a single great rapper from the past 20 years that doesn't cite Eminem as an influence, especially early Eminem. All of the great black rappers would absolutely give him his due in the lineage, whereas almost no one would. Would cite the Beastie boys. Kareem Abdul Jabbar, overrated or underrated?

Coleman Hughes
I would say overrated as a commentator. Perhaps it's because he's often writing about things that were within my pet purview, and because we may have disagreements that are kind of small in the big picture, but seem large to me. He's much more likely to jump to racism as an explanation for phenomena in the. In the media. And I do think, in the same.

Way that some people have probably given me some false praise for being young or have sort of, you know, that's added to their opinion of me. I think the fact that he's Kareem Abdul Jabbar and a former basketball player who happens to have this other skill might lead people to rate his output in that other domain somewhat more highly. Gershwin's Rhapsody in blue.

I will go overrated only because I think it's been played to death on airplanes. I think in some way the worst thing that could have happened to it is for it to become the anthem of whichever airline. It's the anthem for Franz Fanon. I would say overrated in the sense. That I really don't like his idea.

I remember almost being offended at the idea of the colonized mind, the idea that a colonized people, that the colonization sort of infects the mind in a. Way that a colonized person must constantly. Interrogate whether they are parroting the words of the colonizer or whether they're actually holding their beliefs in good faith. I remember rejecting that in a very knee jerk way, because it is so easily used as a way of shutting down a person like myself. And I knew from introspection that my own views were not coming from a kind of, like, love of whiteness or white supremacy or something, you know?

In fact, I remember as a kid, I remember there's this meme of the self hating black person. I recall as a kid looking in the mirror and being very happy at what I saw, being very happy that. I was black and thinking that had. I been white, that it just. It would look wrong, you know?

So I remember having, frankly, high racial self esteem as a kid, and I knew that's not where my opinions were coming from. What have you learned from Noam Dwarmin, who's also been a guest on conversations with Tyler? I've learned a lot from Noam Dorman. One thing I've learned is that if you have warmth and humor and charisma. You can get away with being a lot more disagreeable in the psychological, in the psychologist sense, than otherwise.

I've also learned that there's such a thing as a bull detector, and some people have it in spades and others. Don'T, and Noam does. You're saying Noam has the best bullshit detector that I know, the highest batting average of knee jerk responses to emerging stories being correct, say, both in personal life and in the media, you know, knowing when people are lying without strong. Evidence, what's your favorite movie? My favorite movie of all time or my favorite recent movie?

All. Well, both. All time. Start with that. Okay, I will say probably my two favorites.

Coleman Hughes
I'll give you two. One would be interstellar and one would. Be little Miss Sunshine. And why are those two special? Interstellar, I think, is Nolan's masterpiece.

I'm a big fan of Nolan. Many of his movies are the same, but I think he perfected his. Calling it a schtick is not the right thing, but he perfected his thing with Interstellar. It was just a marvelous movie in its marriage of emotionality and the humanity of Matthew McConaughey's character and the kind of abstract playing with time thing that Nolan likes to do. So, for example, his early movie, memento, I think, kind of overindexes on the fun of the playing with time without enough real, raw human emotion.

And I think interstellar strikes the perfect balance. Little Miss Sunshine, I would say, is a perfect film in my view. It's hard to say why, but it makes me cry almost every time I watch it. It's a story of a lot of kind of people. I guess that's one thing that's interesting about it.

Basically, everyone, except for the young girl in the movie, is kind of a person. The mom is constantly angry for no reason. The husband's like a fraud and a bit of a car salesman and a fake success. The son is an who only cares about himself. Steve Carell's character is maudlin and depressed.

They all have character traits that you should 100% avoid. But by the end of the movie, they have to come together around this thing that it should be totally meaningless, and then it erupts in, like, a totally inappropriate kind of dance at the end. It's just a perfect film. I have a few questions about politics. Why are more blacks voting republican these days?

Tyler Cowen
And is that mainly a Trump thing or a more permanent shift? Well, this is a very tricky issue. I'm not actually sure what the trend is. So one thing is that it predates 2020. Trump got more of the black vote in 2020 than he did in 2016.

Coleman Hughes
So something was going on in the first term that started the trend. It could have just been the economy was great. It could have also been a Trump effect, in that people on the left talk about Trump's racism as one big phenomenon. But really, his problem was always with immigrants and his denigrating comments, at least the ones that are confirmed and on the record, almost all of them were directed at immigrants, not black Americans. And black Americans are roughly as broadly as anti immigration as white Americans.

And so the apparent paradox is that Trump is this quote, unquote, racist, but black people seem to be going towards him in greater and greater numbers. Well, his racism, to the extent you'd agree it's racism, has always been directed at immigrants, not at black people. By and large, he passed lots of policies in his first term that, on their face, seem very sort of pro black. Right. The first step act was very progressive criminal justice reform, making funding for historically black colleges automatic.

These are things that had Obama done them, he'd have been lampooned by the right as playing identity politics. And in a way, that's why Trump was able to do them and Obama wasn't. So there's all of that, and then there's just the fact that Biden is a uniquely, especially weak candidate. And then there's this theory, of course, that the indictments have led to a kind of rallying around Trump from within the black community because he seems to be unfairly persecuted. And being unfairly persecuted by the criminal justice system may be something that resonates with black people.

I don't actually know that that's true. But you put it all together, and you can see how such a trend might ensue. Do you think there are any common patterns of political views amongst black jazz musicians? Obviously a lot of diversity, but on average, what do you observe, on average. Black jazz musicians that I know are.

Frankly, probably, like, more in the conservative. Democrat domain than many people would assume. So for, you know, that this is not always widely talked about, but black Americans in general are the most conservative wing of the democratic base in the sense that almost all black people vote Democrat. But there's quite a high degree of kind of social conservatism, conservative viewpoints on things like immigration and so forth. And if you're white and you have those views, you go to the Republican Party.

Coleman Hughes
If you're black and you have those views, you probably don't go to the Republican Party. You probably just vote Democrat with a basically a conservative ideology. And that's like a third of black Americans. I would say that there's a lot of black jazz musicians that fall into that category. Quiet as it's kept in black hip.

Tyler Cowen
Hop, there seems to be a lot of gender conflict and gender divides. Is that reflecting something real, or it's just an aesthetic in the art, or what do you make? What do you mean by that? Men talking about women in a way that many women would find very objectionable. I think it's higher in black hip hop than white hip hop, but feel free to contradict me.

Coleman Hughes
Oh, I think, yeah, I would agree. It's higher in black hip hop. I was always amused when I was in college that there was a very intense variety of feminism around. But some of those same women would go to, say, a trippy red concert or an xxxtentacion concert and hear some of the most brutally misogynist lyrics that have ever been written in any song without any contradiction. And there was a sense, I guess, this unspoken sense that if you're a black man, it's okay to say those things or that it's not really meant or that who cares?

Whereas if a white artist had said the same thing, it would be, you know, it would. There'd be a bevy of articles the next day. Yeah. I'm not exactly sure what is behind that trend, but I have to think that the success of someone like Drake is partly because he bucks that trend. Like, women love Drake, and Drake is the most popular rapper to ever exist.

And I think one thing that makes him popular is the very fact that he was squarely within the tradition and school being a disciple of Lil Wayne, the school that said the worst possible things, the most dismissive, misogynist possible things. And he was accepted and loved that school. But the route he went was to make music for women to say things that were sweet to women, not to say that that's all he says, but he really bucked a trend and in that sense, was vulnerable to the critique that he was kind of soft and feminine, which is the greatest possible sin, you would think, in the rap world, but actually led to the greatest possible. Success in the 19th century. It seems that Beethoven and also Queen Victoria, or especially popular with a lot of black communities in the United States.

Tyler Cowen
Should we think that strange or you find that intuitive? Well, I've heard it said among the kind of conspiracies in the hotel world, that Beethoven, quote, is black. That's something that some people believe. That's not. I'm not putting my name to that.

Coleman Hughes
Yeah, I have nothing else to say about that. That's interesting, though. Here's a reader question, and I quote, for other men who share your political views, what's your advice on dating women? It's hard to find ones who are not woke and not socially ignorant, crazy conspiracy theorists at the same time. My advice would be, do not talk.

About politics on the first date. In fact, I would say, don't raise it at all. It will inevitably come up, but delay the time that it comes up as long as possible. You're not there to discuss politics. You're there to meet a woman that might potentially be a life partner.

Right. So insofar as you go on a. First date and a second date, and you begin to like each other's non political attributes, once politics comes up and there are differences between you two, you may be surprised in her ability to tolerate those political differences once she's realized that she likes a lot of your non political attributes. And, in fact, she may surprise herself in her ability to tolerate different opinions, and you may surprise yourself. Let me now turn to the Coleman Hughes production function.

Tyler Cowen
I hope you don't feel this is unmerited praise, but what makes you so good at so many things? What's your simplest theory of that? I guess I've always had a monomaniacal focus on the things I do like, so I'm bad at a lot of things that I just never do. But you think you're good at learning curves for the things you do. Yes.

Coleman Hughes
However, it's not really. That's a false way to frame it. The way to frame it is that I've invested heavily in the things where my learning curve was naturally the best. So, for instance, I tried to switch to trumpet when I was 17, but. I was no good at it when.

I started playing trombone. I got good fairly quickly, and so I invested and tripled down in the areas where I was learning fastest. I used to be very into languages. I was good, not great. I ditched it completely when I was twelve.

So I guess I've tripled down on the areas where I have the highest natural genetic advantage as an individual. And this extreme willingness to specialize, where do you think it comes from? You were born with it. You developed it. Your parents taught you?

No, born with it, 100%. I mean, I've always had just an intense, natural desire to focus on whatever I want to get good at to the exclusion of almost everything else. Do you think your jazz education and background has helped you when you have to improvise, when you're podcasting, giving a public talk or otherwise in the public arena? Not at all. Hasn't helped me in the speaking domain one bit.

What it did do, I think, is that growing up so deeply in the. Jazz world, which is very diverse, multiracial. Multinational, advertised the possibility of true, deep interracial friendship and interracial working with people of different cultures and not seeing anything weird about that towards a common goal and towards a common passion. And I think not everyone has that. What is your most unusual successful work habit.

Most unusual successful work habit. I don't know if I have any unusual successful work habits. They're successful, but they're not unusual. Or they're unusual, but they're not successful. Like I said, I can be very monomaniacally focused on things.

So it's possible, for instance, for me. To go to accidentally skip meals because I'm working and I don't get hungry. And it used to be very hard for me to stop or get interrupted. I've gotten a little bit better at that and become a more balanced person. But I would say, yeah, like working for long stretches of time with no break at all.

Coleman Hughes
As opposed to what might be more common advice, which is, you know, every. Hour, take a 20 minutes break. What do you think you optimize for? When I work? No, in life.

Oh, I like to think that I optimize for happiness, broadly construed, not just. Pleasure or joy, but a balanced amount. Of that mixed with meaning. I'm definitely of the school that though I work a lot, I don't think that work is life. I would like to have a family and do all of that.

And so I try to optimize for being a balanced and happy human being. And I think that's a good thing. Because to get too into the world. I'm in with politics and debate and so forth, can be taxing and toxic without balance. What do you think is the fundamental reason why that world can be so toxic?

I guess where other things in life value or incentivize kind of relaxed, open minded and loving attitude, things such as music, the incentives in the domain of public conversation about politics are towards nastiness, in a way towards dissatisfaction. You're supposed to point out the thing you're pissed about. Whereas in other domains in life.

Such. As at church or with your family, you are supposed to think about the thing you are grateful for. So it's a kind of precise turning. On its head of the wise lessons about how you should spend your time and attention for your own happiness inverted to maximize the kind of the toxic things. Could you imagine a world where you just say goodbye to politics, do something else, and you're simply happier?

Coleman Hughes
I think the truth is, if I wanted to do that, I would have done it and vice versa. If I wanted to not do music at all and just go fully into it, I think I would have done that too. I think the truth is, when I was a full time musician gigging trombone every night, I had an itch to scratch. That was not getting scratched. Like, for instance, when I was at juilliard, I would go to the music library and try to pull out books about philosophy.

And, you know, when I was at Columbia, I was always itching to get off campus and go play some music. So there are just two sides of me that both need to be fed. Before the final question, let me just repeat Coleman Hughes, the end of race, politics, arguments for a colorblind America, which I enjoyed very much. Very last question, Coleman. What will you do next?

What will I do next? Well, I'm going to keep doing my podcast. I'll probably write another book, and I will continue to play music, perhaps take up a new instrument and continue optimizing for happiness. Coleman Hughes, thank you very much. Thank you, Tyler.

Tyler Cowen
Thanks for listening to conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. If you like this podcast, please consider giving us a rating and leaving a review. This helps other listeners find the show on Twitter. I'm Tylercowen and the show isowinconvos.

Until next time, please keep listening and learning.