The Joe Rogan ExperienceJoe Rogan Experience #1500 - Barbara Freese
Joe Rogan and Barbara Freese on how Corporations Deny Harm: From Slavery to Climate Change.
In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Joe Rogan and Barbara Freese, Joe Rogan Experience #1500 - Barbara Freese explores how Corporations Deny Harm: From Slavery to Climate Change Barbara Freese, an environmental attorney and author, explains how industries systematically deny the harms of their products and practices, from the British slave trade and radium to tobacco, fossil fuels, CFCs, and Wall Street finance.
How Corporations Deny Harm: From Slavery to Climate Change
Barbara Freese, an environmental attorney and author, explains how industries systematically deny the harms of their products and practices, from the British slave trade and radium to tobacco, fossil fuels, CFCs, and Wall Street finance.
She describes recurring denial patterns: attacking science, questioning opponents’ motives, framing themselves as saviors, and exploiting corporate structures that diffuse responsibility and prioritize short‑term profit.
Freese links past campaigns of denial to today’s climate change obstruction and emerging problems with social media manipulation, arguing that these are extensions of the same psychological and structural dynamics.
While the history is often infuriating, she notes that public pressure, regulation, and scientific institutions have repeatedly overcome denial, and will be essential again for tackling climate, corporate power, and information abuse.
Key Takeaways
Denial follows a repeatable playbook across centuries and industries.
Whether it’s slavery, tobacco, leaded gasoline, radium, CFCs, or fossil fuels, industries repeatedly: question the science, impugn scientists’ motives, exaggerate benefits, minimize harms, and warn that regulation will destroy the economy or freedom.
Corporate structure amplifies self‑interest and weakens responsibility.
Limited liability, shareholder primacy, and fragmented roles allow individuals to tell themselves they’re just doing their jobs or serving investors, making it easier to ignore or rationalize serious harm to the public or environment.
Creating doubt is often more effective than outright lying.
Industry strategists know they don’t have to win the scientific argument; they just need to muddy the waters enough that the public and policymakers feel uncertain and delay action—preserving the status quo and profits.
Ideological networks can outlive and outflank the companies that funded them.
Think tanks and ‘free‑market’ advocacy groups originally supported by industries like tobacco and oil have evolved into independent denial machines, sometimes even attacking former funders for being too moderate.
Climate change is as scientifically solid as smoking‑cancer links but more complex.
Freese stresses that the evidence connecting greenhouse gases to dangerous warming is as strong as the evidence connecting cigarettes to cancer, yet the lag in effects and complexity of climate systems make denial easier to sell.
Past victories like the Montreal Protocol show global regulation can work.
The world successfully phased out CFCs to protect the ozone layer, even under a conservative U. ...
Social media is emerging as a new, unregulated denial amplifier.
Algorithms that reward outrage and engagement, anonymity, and the ease of astroturfing make it simple for states, corporations, and ideological groups to polarize the public, spread misinformation, and erode trust in institutions.
Notable Quotes
“If you were a super villain and you wanted to create a society that would ultimately destroy itself, you would probably create something that looks a lot like our current corporate‑dominated global economy.”
— Barbara Freese
“You do not need to convince people you are right. All you need to do is raise doubt. Doubt paralyzes people.”
— Barbara Freese (describing an industry strategist’s approach)
“The link between putting greenhouse gases in the air and dramatic climate change is actually as well‑established as the links between smoking and cancer.”
— Barbara Freese
“It’s almost like a diabolical vehicle… to be able to do something and say, ‘We’re gonna do this as a collective and therefore no individuals are responsible for the results of the collective.’”
— Joe Rogan (on corporations)
“I realized early on there was just no way to write this book if I was gonna try to parse out when people were lying and when they were deceiving themselves.”
— Barbara Freese
Questions Answered in This Episode
How can legal and corporate governance structures be redesigned to prevent the diffusion of responsibility that enables harmful denial?
Barbara Freese, an environmental attorney and author, explains how industries systematically deny the harms of their products and practices, from the British slave trade and radium to tobacco, fossil fuels, CFCs, and Wall Street finance.
What specific regulatory or market mechanisms could rapidly phase down fossil fuels while protecting workers and communities dependent on those industries?
She describes recurring denial patterns: attacking science, questioning opponents’ motives, framing themselves as saviors, and exploiting corporate structures that diffuse responsibility and prioritize short‑term profit.
Given what we now know about the denial playbook, how can journalists, scientists, and citizens more effectively counteract it in real time?
Freese links past campaigns of denial to today’s climate change obstruction and emerging problems with social media manipulation, arguing that these are extensions of the same psychological and structural dynamics.
What kinds of laws or platform changes would be both practical and ethical for reducing large‑scale manipulation and polarization on social media?
While the history is often infuriating, she notes that public pressure, regulation, and scientific institutions have repeatedly overcome denial, and will be essential again for tackling climate, corporate power, and information abuse.
How do we build cross‑ideological, ‘post‑tribal’ conversations around climate and environmental risks so that they stop functioning as left‑versus‑right identity markers?
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