At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Jack Carr, Vietnam 1968, AI, and America’s Fractured Future Explored
- Joe Rogan and author/former SEAL Jack Carr discuss Carr’s new Vietnam‑era novel set in 1968, detailing the extreme research he did to authentically capture the mindset, language, and culture of that time, especially around MACV-SOG operations and the human cost of that war.
- They dive into how Vietnam exposed the darker realities of American power—false flags, profiteering, media distortion—and how fiction can humanize those events more deeply than history books by building empathy through characters.
- The conversation then shifts to modern threats: the collapse of reading, AI-generated art and media, deepfakes, and how technology, social media, and political polarization are reshaping culture, free speech, and even what it means to be human.
- They also cover Carr’s TV adaptations (The Terminal List, Dark Wolf, True Believer), stunt work, Hollywood notes vs. creative freedom, hunting, watches, military selection standards, border policy, political manipulation, and the growing sense of societal fragility.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasHistorical fiction can restore emotional truth missing from bare facts.
Carr argues that while statistics (like 58,000 Americans killed in Vietnam) are abstract, inhabiting characters in meticulously researched fiction lets readers viscerally feel those costs and carry that experience forward, building compassion and context.
Writing convincingly in another era requires thinking with that era’s limits.
To avoid dropping a modern thriller into 1968, Carr used period dictionaries, maps, manuals, music, and contemporary sources so every sentence reflected what people *then* knew—without hindsight about Tonkin, profiteering, or the war’s ultimate futility.
Vietnam exposed the gap between America’s myth and America’s reality.
Rogan frames WWII as the story we tell ourselves—fighting clear evil—while Vietnam, with its lies, false flag (Gulf of Tonkin), profiteers, media spin on events like Tet, and broken veterans returning to scorn, revealed a far messier, more cynical America.
Deep reading is becoming a rare superpower in the attention economy.
Carr links the crash in reading since 2003 almost directly to smartphones; he believes kids who choose books over TikTok, combined with physical training and combat sports, will be dramatically more capable, empathetic, and independent thinkers than peers.
AI will flood culture with convincing content, forcing us to revalue the human.
Rogan shows hyper-real AI interviews and AI music, noting it can already outperform many humans; both men foresee a world where labeling AI vs. human-created work may matter, and truly human art—imperfect but personal—could become a premium niche.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesWorld War II was what we think America is. Vietnam is what America really is.
— Joe Rogan
Any sentence had to be written through the lens of 1968 without the benefit of 50 plus years of hindsight.
— Jack Carr
If kids today put down that phone and just read, that is a superpower.
— Jack Carr
AI is not a cover band. AI’s a lot smarter than us. That’s the problem.
— Joe Rogan
I’m not writing this for a reader. I’m writing this for the story, and that’s the way I honor the reader.
— Jack Carr
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