 Good morning, John. This video has spoilers through the end of season three of The Good Place. The Good Place has a good show about four not-very-good people who have died and ended up in a very bizarre afterlife. Through its first two seasons, the show explored really deep questions, many of the same ones we've been dealing with as humans for thousands of years, but then in season three, as The Good Place is good at doing, it swerves on ya, and suddenly the show isn't about how to be a good person, it's about how to be a good person in 2019. Earth is a mess, y'all. Spoiler's in earnest now. The bad place is going to get all of them eventually. Even your precious pee-pee king, Doug Forsett. In season three, we find out that everyone goes to the bad place, even the guy who knows the rules and has been doing everything he can his whole life. The proposal here is that the modern world is so messed up, you can't live in it without being a bad person. The last time someone got enough points together, The Good Place was 521 years ago. This is kind of a rough thing for me to hear personally because, like, I kind of believe it. The bad place isn't tampering with points, they don't have to, because every day the world gets a little more complicated and being a good person gets a little harder. For more than 10 years, one of the central themes of this channel on YouTube has been to engage with the complexity of the world. But if you do that, what you find isn't that everything's bad, it's just that nothing's all the way good. The book that you love that was written by a misogynist, the terrible things done in the name of your religion, the historical atrocities that, like, all of society is based on and that you may still benefit from. Every beautiful, genius expression of human creativity and hard work has a dark side. Like, there's this chicken sandwich, that if you eat it, it means you hate gay people. Now unlike Jason's friend Big Noodle, and I love the Big Noodle allegory, I'm the kind of guy who actually has time to figure out whether oat milk is better for the world than almond milk, it is. But what does better than really mean? What's this scale here? How bad am I if I choose to drink almond milk because I like the taste better? And how much worse is that than, like, being mean to a friend or, like, putting Sprite in my water cup at McDonald's? The good place's answer is the accounting department. Beings who judge every action you take and determine how many points you get or lose. Anastasia in the stuff vegetable department. We've got Hector over in American Coins, and my dear buddy Matt in Weird Sex Things. And if you don't hit a threshold, you go to the bad place. The math is cold, objective, and airtight. Maybe it is in their universe, but it is not in ours. One thing the internet has been really good at for certain people is highlighting all of the many ways unintended harm can be done. For others, oddly enough, it's been really good at insulating them from that. It's almost as if the internet amplifies your world, dear! But for people who are open to the complexity, the reality of reality is just way too complicated for the accounting departments of our brains to handle. It's almost as if utilitarianism relies on a hyper-individualist worldview that isn't reflective of reality. Individuals make decisions. I will never say that's not the case. But there are many decisions that are much harder than others and that have much greater costs associated with them. Themes of Season 3 quietly but geniusly highlights that our current system of consumerism-fueled pop utilitarianism mostly isn't a tool we're using to make the world a better place. It is instead a way to rapidly and inaccurately judge the goodness and badness of ourselves and each other. So here are four really important things that I learned from this very good content. One, not everyone has the capacity to weigh every choice they make and that does not make them bad people. Two, it is harder to be the kind of person who seeks complex truths rather than retreats into simple lies, but it is also better. Three, morality should only be one part of that curiosity because if it is only about morality, then you only view the world through the lens of judgment. And number four, our accounting departments will always be flawed and so we should not judge ourselves or others as if they are not. John, we are down to just two days of pizza mess. I will see you tomorrow.