Andrew Schulz's Flagrant with Akaash Singh - Pete Buttigieg on Trump Tariffs, Taxing Billionaires, and Republican Gays
Episode Date: April 23, 2025YERRR – former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg came on to talk about fixing America’s crumbling infrastructure, fixing the Democratic Party, & his political aspirations. He gets in...to policy, public perception, parenting, his coming out story, and what it takes to run for president. All that and more on this week’s episode of FLAGRANT. INDULGE. 00:00 Intro 00:32 White Lotus recap 3:11 Commercial space travel + Air travel is unbelievably safe 5:37 Taxing the ultra wealthy + Corporate tax avoidance 11:17 Tariffs are a tax + Reducing incentives to hoard money 15:05 Urban decay, Corporate profiteering & Wealth tax 23:12 What would Pete do differently with tariffs? 28:26 Finger-wagging, Compassion + Dems’ direction 33:59 AOC + Bernie messaging & Policies 38:14 DOGE is about power not efficiency 44:56 Huge transportation projects in NYC 48:50 Power play + Limits on power 54:00 Where do our taxes go? 1:00:47 Best results aren’t seen + Slow progression = bureaucracy 1:08:11 Perception of Dems’ states + Facts are debated 1:15:20 Stocks & politicians + Misunderstanding data 1:19:14 Willing to correct mistakes 1:22:00 NBA playoffs time 1:23:55 Echo chambers + Courting some controversy 1:32:28 What do Americans really need? 1:38:57 Right to choose and tax cuts + Address our feelings 1:41:31 What would Pete do? 1:45:46 Coming out, “Just In Case” letter + Radical Empathy 1:59:42 Reaction to coming out + White boy fun 2:04:40 Telling parents was not easy + Challenges 2:11:30 Fatherhood 2:19:20 Raising Black children 2:22:39 If Pete runs for president, what are the costs? 2:26:58 What drew Pete into public service? 2:32:46 Is America ready for a gay president? 2:34:53 How do keep the US at no. 1? A1 not AI 2:41:14 Addressing the wage gap + Poverty 2:46:17 Tax Cuts being passed right now Follow Us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/flagrant/about Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up guys? Today we are joined by the Democrats secret weapon. He's an Afghan war veteran and the former secretary of transportation.
He's also one of the first gay men to run for president. And today he's here to explain how he kept the planes in the sky, how billionaires legally dodged taxes,
why Trump's new tariffs could be hurt in America, what he ate in Afghanistan that made him gay, and most importantly, why every Republican
national convention, Grindr is on fire.
Give it up for Pete Buttigieg.
You started a conversation when you sat down on the couch
and said that Lachlan should have died.
Which is not the first thing we often hear
from a future president.
He said Lachlan should have died and White Lotus
talked to us, like this is should have died in White Lotus. Talk to us.
Like this is a big time, you know.
Yeah, I hate to say it.
I love him.
He's a good kid, right?
But just from a narrative perspective, right?
And having like-
From doing that to his brother.
Yeah.
I'm like.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Jesus, he just got started.
Yeah, he just got started.
No, I mean, you know, I think the dad has to sit with Chastain, my husband and I have
been talking about this a lot.
The dad should have to sit with like what he did.
The guilt, yes.
And there were so many parallels to what happens with Tonya where he's like floating, right,
when he seems like he's dying or maybe sort of dead.
Yeah, I think just story wise that otherwise, you know, I don't have a lot of notes
for this year's Why Lotus.
I mean, it was incredible.
I guess the one thing would be,
does anything really happen to the ultra wealthy?
Yeah, good question.
Maybe that's what he's trying to showcase.
Which is kind of what always happens
on that show. They always get away with it.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, even the kid.
Even the kid.
Yeah.
Yeah, because by the time they're on the boat,
it's like, none of that even happened, right?
Yeah.
And then the poor security guards that are guarding the guy, they die.
Yeah.
No one talks about them.
No, I forgot about them.
They're assholes.
I am like a...
They were mean to what's-his-name.
God thought.
Yeah.
Fuck them.
Yeah.
I'm okay with that.
That's a good point.
They were bullies, dude.
You really fell in love with that guy. Yeah, yeah, yeah, dude.
He had a center pure heart.
Don't bully this guy.
Yeah, that is true.
And then the three women seem fine after witnessing a mass shooting.
Like they're just lashing each other.
Just on the boat, having a good time.
Yeah.
But yeah, in season one, if you remember, the guy, the really rich kid stabs the guy
and then he's just in the airport 20 minutes later or whatever.
No questioning, no nothing.
And I think that's kind of Andrew's point is like, I think the point of that show is
the ultra wealthy. One guy has his wife killed, nothing seems to happen. They just kind of get
away with it. But there is social mobility because Belinda joins the club. The second she joins the
club, what happens to her? She seems fine. She becomes the woman that she's always hated. She
leaves out corn chai. Doesn't she use the same language? I think she's like the woman that she's always hated. Yeah. She leaves out corn chai.
She doesn't use the same language.
I think she's like the same words that Tanya used.
I have to do something for myself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But like the whole show, I was worried about her.
Yeah.
Physically, not morally.
Yeah.
And then it turns out, I was...
And I thought that was a genius choice is,
you're worried about her wellbeing,
and then she gets the five million, you're so happy,
but then she also just kind of becomes gross right after.
Yeah.
You know what I mean? I thought that was a really good way to do it.
Money corrupts, baby.
Money corrupts. Speaking of, how do we corrupt you? No. What do we do? I keep on hearing
conversations about how we're going to tax people and make a lot of money. I've been
very fortunate. I've made a lot of money and they're doing a really good job at it. How
do we tax the people who really are making a lot of money, like the guys
who like send their wives to space for fun? How do we make sure? What did you think about that?
The space flight? Yeah. I'm glad they got back okay. I mean, yeah, I guess, I mean, it seems to
be there's some other things we could probably be paying a little more attention to, but you know,
it's exciting. Look, we're in this era of commercial space flight, which is exciting.
Yeah.
I worked on this, my circuit area transportation like that.
Oh, you were part of that.
Yeah, I mean, it's transportation, right?
Our main thing was just making sure on the way,
it's actually a very wild west right now, big picture wise.
The main concerns are making sure you don't hit anything
on the way up, because you've got to go through
the national airspace, and that if anything blows up
on the ground, you don't hurt anybody on the ground.
Like those are kind of the main concerns.
But eventually we'll have to start regulating that like we do commercial air travel, right?
In order to make it, like now I think there's a sense of fly at your own risk, right?
You understand if you're being blasted into the space.
Do you have to ask permission when you're ready to go?
I'm guessing there's all kinds of, I haven't seen it, but I'm guessing there's all kinds
of releases and paperwork. If only we could talk to the
Transportation Secretary. But there's an understanding there's a different level
of risk. Yeah. Whereas on commercial aviation we have zero tolerance for risk
and actually that's worked out pretty well. I think one thing that we
always talk about the things that are going poorly, we pay attention to the bad thing before we notice the good thing.
It does feel like that a little bit recently that the planes aren't making it as much.
Yeah, well, we can get into that. But we had 15 years with zero commercial airline fatal
crashes. 15 years. Think about that. Like just in the time I was secretary,
we had about four billion people get on airplanes.
Look, statistically, if you took your seat on an airplane
and you were sitting there, buckle your seatbelt,
eating your snack, you would be statistically more likely
to randomly die of natural causes
than to be involved in a fatal crash, right?
And that didn't just randomly happen.
That happened years of technology, regulation, policy, like a lot of things go into that.
And that's what it looks like kind of on the other side of that process where with commercial
space light, it's very new, it's understood that it's very risky, and I guess that's
okay.
But I don't want to lose the first thing you asked about, which is taxation, because I
think a big thing, I think most Americans, definitely my party, but I think most Americans believe that if you're making a billion dollars, good for you, but you should
at least be paying an effective tax rate that's comparable, or I would argue more, than a
firefighter.
And that's not true right now.
Right now.
Because nobody really makes a billion dollars.
Right, because it's all equity.
Oh, yeah.
And the actual rate of return is $5. Because nobody really makes a billion dollars. Right, because it's all equity and it's like, you're not getting a paycheck.
Nobody makes income, like anybody that's generating that type of wealth is not making income.
So it's almost like, and this is not like a woohoo, like we got it so tough, but it's
almost like the people who are, I think Miles used the term, like middle rich, like middle
class, like they're the ones that are actually paying what they should pay. If they're adhering to the tax code, they're not hiring these tax attorneys,
they're going to attack it all willingly and try to reduce whatever they're paying in.
But let's assume, let's take it for face value, right? An athlete or somebody that's making
five million bucks and let's say that they pay two and a half million around, right?
The concern I have really is potentially the corporations.
And I'm not smart enough to even know about this stuff, but it seems to me, and I think
tariffs plays into this, so I'd love to get your technology, but like it seems to me on
the surface, and again, I'm giving a very emotional argument.
You can give me tons of data, call me an idiot for even thinking this, but it's possible.
I doubt it. Right. OK. It seems to me that there's been an effort that
has been supported to send the manufacturing of some
of these products overseas to increase profits, right?
Sure.
Or maybe it's more effective to manufacture them overseas.
Maybe it's not all nefarious.
But the idea is to increase shareholder profits,
or increase the profits of the company,
which I'm not necessarily against.
What I'm against is when you also put these shell companies overseas to decrease, like
you create the headquarters and you put it in Dublin or something like that so you can
avoid taxes.
And it's a PO box, nobody's even there.
Exactly.
So you can't do both.
You can send the manufacturing overseas.
But at least if we're taxing the revenue of that company that's generating billions of dollars,
you would like to believe that that money would come back to the American people,
and then we could reinvest in the American people.
And then maybe there's other industries that would pop up and
those jobs could transfer from manufacturing to those new ones.
Or vice versa.
Or vice versa.
But you can't do, to me it just feels like if you do both,
you are using the marketplace that America is.
The entrepreneurship, all of that, but not really giving back.
And then stealing from it.
Yeah, there's no question, especially because a lot of what that tax revenue goes into or
is supposed to go into here in the US is what then turns
around and makes it possible for businesses to thrive. Can you give us an example of that?
Yeah, my favorite example is probably the smartphone. So, have you ever noticed like
in talks or like whenever somebody mentions a smartphone they like start to
pull it out of their pocket or touch it. But so the federal government could not have invented the iPhone, right?
Like I don't think anybody, any of us would want a phone that was like invented by the
federal government.
That thing would suck.
That is like all of the design, the manufacturing supply chains, that's the kind of thing that
corporations can do very well.
And Apple did it very well and their competitors.
But what makes the iPhone work?
Well, among other things, the internet.
The internet was literally invented by a federal research project. And it would never have been
possible to invent the internet with a private company because you wouldn't have got the kind
of capital virtue, even though it's a trillion dollar idea or a multi-trillion dollar idea.
Companies can do multi-billion dollar ideas,, but a trillion-dollar idea like inventing
the internet, that requires basic research, and that's the kind of thing the government's
supposed to do, among many other things.
It requires basic research?
What does that mean?
Yeah, by basic research, I mean things that are so fundamental that you actually don't
know for 50 or 100 years if they're going to have a return.
They might never work out.
Oh, Guy, yeah, you can't look at it as this thing is going to be profitable. It has to be a benevol going to have a return. They might never work out. Oh, yeah. You can't look at it as
this thing is going to be profitable.
It has to be a benevolent endeavor versus that.
Yeah. It's different from research on
like a pharmaceutical company researches a new medication,
expecting that they're going to-
There's going to be a return in the next 10, 20 years.
Right. At least within the profit.
But public parks is another version of this and stuff like that.
Yeah.
You can't privatize the public park. Right. This is the whole idea of public goods. This is why
we have governments, why we collect taxes. We're turning into such libs already, dude.
But there's a handshake, right? There are the things that only the government can do,
and then there are the things that the private sector can and should do. And they meet in
the middle. But if you start shorting, and part of what really worries me right now about this kind of war on academia, and there are some things about academia
that need to change, but the war on academia, the cuts to cancer research, the cuts to science
research, this kind of like general anti-science atmosphere that I think is emanating from the
administration, like that costs us in ways that don't show up on a corporate profit and loss
statement six months from now or a year from now. But in terms of whether a country, a
society, an economy is productive and is growing and is innovating, that starts to really cost
you over time. And if we're shorting that or if corporations and extremely wealthy people
don't want to be paying into that through taxes. That is, I think, a classic example of a kind of short-term gain that causes long-term
pain. I'm really worried about that.
And I think that's why there seems to be a lot of support for the administration right
now, or one reason why. And even support for the administration when it comes to tariffs.
When the tariffs happen and you hear about the stock market being deeply affected, most Americans are not invested in the stock market.
So they're like, I don't give a fuck.
Oh, rich people are losing some money or 50%.
We can go off the numbers, meaning there's a large swath of Americans that don't feel
directly impacted.
But here's the thing, right?
The tariff, so part of what's happening is the markets are responding to their belief
that the tariffs will probably make the world economy less productive and make a recession
more likely.
But a tariff is a tax that people pay on stuff they buy every day.
And proportionally, if you're, what do you call it, middle rich versus like people in
the neighborhood I grew up in in South Bend, Indiana.
Like proportionally, it's the people in Indiana who are spending a much bigger portion of
their income at, let's say Walmart.
And everything at Walmart is about to get more expensive.
You're 100% right.
I'm talking about the knee-jerk emotional reaction when you see people who have money
and have seemingly left you behind as they've gotten richer start to suffer a little bit.
You go, yeah, I don't really care if you're suffering.
In the same way that when the Palisades fires happened, there was this sentiment of like,
oh, a rich person's third home is on fire, they'll figure it out.
Not this person's entire life and belongings just went up in smoke.
So I think that there is this sentiment amongst a lot of Americans, you probably experienced
it where you're from, just this kind of being left behind.
And I think this taxation of these corporations is a perfect example that really justifies
that sentiment.
It's like, why are you using the American marketplace and
the support that we've given you and the lack of regulation?
There's a reason why these companies don't sprout up in other countries, right?
They sprout up here.
And it's not just because they happen to be these unique smart individuals,
it's because there is this marketplace that allows them to thrive here.
You don't get to remove the headquarters so
that you can not pay your fair share of taxes
that's going to then support the next generation of people who do the same thing.
How do you tax them?
What do you do?
But look at what's about to happen, right?
As we speak, congressional Republicans are working on a budget framework that's going
to cut corporate taxes.
That's one of the biggest things it's going to do.
Even this president, the least popular he ever was last time around was when they
passed his tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy.
So a lot of this is about, look- Guys, a question about that real quick.
Is there a world where, and I doubt that this is possible, but is there a world where if
they do that, it will influence companies that have gone abroad with their headquarters
to come back here?
I think it's less about the- I'm not trying to defend the administration.
No, I get that argument.
But honestly, there are ways to structure taxes so that they capture where the value
and the wealth is actually created.
How do we do that?
You can have a PO box in the Bahamas or Ireland or whatever.
So one of the things, for example, that happened in the last administration was an international
agreement on a threshold, a minimum.
So that, and now it only works if everybody agrees on it.
This is part of why diplomacy matters so much, right?
But no other country really wants to see too much of that happening either.
So there's a way to create a floor that gets you a more level playing field.
International agreement for taxation of corporations.
Yeah, the basic case.
So even if your account is in Switzerland, if you have a trillion dollars in Switzerland or the Cayman or whatever, you're a trillionaire,
you're going to get taxed as such. Exactly. So it reduces the incentive to offshore your
books. Now it kind of seems like you're making the argument for a tariff on Lesotho, right?
Why? I don't know why they're beating up on Lesotho. No, I think the justification for
that was so that someone can't go put a manufacturing
factory on the place.
Yeah, yeah, fine.
And look, tariffs are their place, right?
I mean, we, you know, less administration data.
We're not talking about tariffs, yeah, but just on the tax issue.
But again, what really worries me about tariffs is those don't amount to a tax on corporations.
They amount to a tax on consumers.
They amount to a tax on consumers.
With that, I'm out of time.
May I just push back, sorry?
I want to push back.
And this is something Andrew brought up on a call that I completely agree with, and I'm an idiot.
But I feel when people say these things,
oh, the buck gets passed onto the consumer.
That only happens because the corporations
have exploited profits to the highest possible degree
to keep their shareholder share price as high as possible.
Things have gotten more expensive
over the past 50 years every year.
It's not just inflation.
I think corporate greed is a big part of it.
So why is it that now that there's a tariff,
their profit has to stay the exact same
and nobody's looking at them
as perpetrators of any kind of greed.
And it's just, oh, the United States government
is deciding here's a measure to help middle America.
And now we have to eat that.
But how is making middle America pay more
a measure to help middle America?
Right. I mean, well, I would.
And I don't I do think I get more frustrated with the Democrats
because I want very badly to be that I definitely do not identify as conservative.
But I find there's this I when I go to middle America and I'm sure you go there,
we travel the country.
Yeah, you live there. Yeah, that's what I meant to say.
But it's like, oh, there's like decay in some of these places.
And it doesn't feel like the party that I want to identify with has any empathy for them.
And this, to me, was an idea that could help bring jobs back there.
And I don't think the execution has been great from what I'm seeing, but this could help them.
Why don't we look at any measure that could help them beyond let's keep things the way they are?
Because the way status quo is not helping. Yes, I agree on that. Yeah, I think that's really
important. And I think what my party has to do is respond to this in a way that doesn't make it
sound like our whole argument is let's just go back to 2024. Right? Like, yeah, if things like
this moments like this movements like the one that's in charge of the White House right now,
don't spring up in a country or an economy where everything's going along fine. And look, I
lived this too. I grew up in South Bend, Indiana. People think South Bend, they
know Notre Dame. But the big employer that propelled South Bend wasn't Notre
Dame, it was Studebaker. Studebaker made cars. Before the big three, it was the big
four. And we were one of them. It dominated our city, grew
our city. And then in 1963, they shut down. That's 20 years before I was born. And we
were still dealing with it 20 years later. We were still dealing with it 50 years later
when I became the mayor there at the age of 29. And what had happened was, I mean, when
we were going to a school, I would go in between
just acres of collapsing factories that literally looked like a war zone.
I have been to war zones that looked very similar to the way a lot of places in the
industrial Midwest like where I grew up looked because of some of these things you're talking
about.
Right.
Which is why I think there's an appeal to saying we're going to bring back manufacturing, right?
And by the way, again, I don't want to like move away from what I was saying that we shouldn't
go back to where we were because I think a lot needs to change.
But I would point out that in our entire lifetime, the year when there was the most investment
in factories in the United States, the most factories being built was last year.
Because there were a lot of policies, the chip stuff, the manufacturing stuff, trying to get more of the green economy
stuff to be built on US soil, that led to a lot of these factories. Now, a lot of them
are still in construction as we speak. Some of them actually open, some of them still
haven't. But right now, in Kokomo, Indiana, I just read a story today about 370 workers
at Stellantis who just got laid off.
Auto workers who got laid off because of the tariffs.
So this is a tool that you can use for sure,
but it's absolutely critically important
that you know what you're doing when you do.
And if you're just making shit up as you go along,
or if you're doing it for a reason
that's actually less about helping middle America
and more about consolidating power, which is what I think is actually happening,
we can get into that, then it's not going to work. But I don't want to completely disagree
with what you're saying earlier. Like, yeah, part of what's happening is like, part of why
things cost more is that they actually cost more. But also we've seen a lot of expansion of the corporate profits that people cash in
on, right?
Which helped to explain why a lot of things cost more.
But to me, the answer to that is, okay, let's have a fairer tax system that says, well,
I mean, at risk of sounding simplistic, like you pass a law, like we can do this, right?
It's not like profoundly mysterious.
But what law, for example, it's like, it's not going to be income tax, right? Because
they'll find a way to not have income.
So you can adjust capital gains, right? It doesn't have to be like all the way at the
level that it used to be, but it could be more.
But even with capital gains, you're only, you're only taxing them when they cash out.
And a lot of these guys won't cash out. They just take loans against their investments
and then loans aren't taxable. So they live for free.
So that's where the idea of wealth taxes come in, right?
And what is that?
If you're just sitting on it at a certain point, especially if you're past a certain
point in how much you're sitting on, you've got to contribute a little bit.
This is not a novel kind of property taxes are that way.
You don't wait, depends where you live, but usually you don't wait until you sell a home
to have to pay property tax on every year.
You contribute a little bit of the value of the real estate you're sitting on.
And that goes to the county roads and the school and the sheriff's department or whatever
else you count on.
Right?
So there is a way to do that nationally.
We just haven't had the political will to do it.
But property tax is going to close that gap?
I don't think it's going to close that gap.
I mean, if you had all of these, well, you have pieces of that.
A lot of pieces.
No, I'm not saying we shouldn't do it.
I think that there is this feeling, this sentiment sentiment I think that Akash was tapping into as well
And there there's two things like you seem like somebody's very knowledgeable very aware of all these thinking
You know these people that were fired in this random
Factory and which is it was I'll come on Indiana in Indiana, right?
It's like the average person might not know about that
They don't know about these factories being built but you have to meet the average person where they feel emotionally
Yeah, and like I think you do a really good job. I've seen a lot of your interviews is like They don't know about these factories being built. But you have to meet the average person where they feel emotionally.
And I think you do a really good job,
and I've seen a lot of your interviews,
is acknowledging the emotions of the people
that you're talking to before giving them evidence
that might be contrary to them.
Instead of this finger wagging approach,
which is, oh, you're stupid if you don't agree with me.
Really important, but just quick.
I think the average American isn't even aware
of what Amazon makes a year and what they pay in taxes. I think they paid zero dollars
last year.
A whole bunch of these corporations.
And I get what they're doing. It's like they're writing off losses from other parts of the
business or they're reinvesting that money and growing the business.
And I don't want the pendulum to swing so far that you can't start a business and you can't grow and thrive.
And I think that's like one of the great things about America.
But there has to be this middle ground.
And if we don't do something about it, the American people should at least be aware of the,
I don't want to say the CEOs, but the people that own these companies that are essentially stealing American people should at least be aware of the,
I don't wanna say the CEOs, but the people that own these companies
that are essentially stealing from the American people
and using the system.
We should be aware of who they are.
Now I'm not saying we should do anything to them,
but they should be shamed.
Or taxed.
If they're not gonna pay the taxes,
you get to pay it emotionally.
Because that's like,
I don't really care about their emotions,
I just wanna tax them.
I do think there's a sociopathic to these people that you might underestimate.
Yes true but like maybe their partners like there will be no more chick flights of space.
I promise you after the reaction to this there'll be no more chick flights of space.
I promise you it will not happen again and the next one that happens it will have like
a real purpose.
That's a fight when they get home.
When she gets home, he's gonna be like,
you see how much shit I had to deal with?
You just clutched me with your stupid fucking face.
To have a girl's trip to the moon.
Also guys, tour dates, May 9th and 10th,
Virginia Beach, June 19th, and through 21st,
I'm gonna be in Salt Lake City at Wise Guys.
All those dates and plenty more at AkashSingh.com.
Now let's get back to the show.
Hold on a second, don't skip forward guys,
because it's the world's fastest ad read.
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I could be assuming wrong, but it seems like you're against the current administration's
tariff plan.
Yeah.
What would you do different?
Because no one's giving actual solutions.
Yeah.
So I think what you do is you peg it, basically you do what they're pretending to do.
So what they said they were doing is
they're kind of scanning all of the different countries
and they're saying, okay, here's some countries
that are really not trading with us on fair terms.
Like they're restricting our trade with them
or they're artificially manipulating their currency.
China does this for sure.
What does that mean? Art artificially manipulate your currency?
So in a nutshell, the cheaper the exchange rate,
the more you're gonna export
because the cheaper your goods are, right?
So the strong dollar, right?
Basically the weaker the dollar is actually,
the cheaper our stuff looks to the rest of the world
and the more they're gonna purchase our things.
So if you're China, one thing you're gonna do is,
it sounds counterintuitive, like usually you think
like a nationalistic country, we want our currency
to be super strong.
You make your currency cheap, so you have
a competitive advantage.
Now how does that impact?
Think about it, if you ever traveled in like Southeast Asia
and the dollar's doing really strong, you're like,
wow, I'm gonna buy everything here in Thailand.
It's the first thing, like when you go to Europe
and you find out the euro's like, there are moments
where it's like under the dollar and you're like,
oh my God, let's go. I'm getting this hotel.
If I go to India, I want a five-star hotel.
It's 200, 300.
Right.
So that applies on everything from your experience as a tourist to major industrial productions.
Right?
And how does one do that?
Do they print more money?
So you can print more money.
You can buy and sell bonds.
You can, some countries just officially set an exchange rate and then use their central
bank to do, there's all kinds of ways to do it. But the point is, part of trading deals is you're
supposed to promise not to do it. And so what I'm saying is, what you do is you look for a place
where there's an unfair trading practice, and then you respond and you say, okay, you either drop this
trading practice, or we're going to impose these restrictions on how you trade with us, which again,
is exactly what they say they're doing, but it is not what they're doing.
What are they doing?
They came up with this weird formula.
It's actually the same thing that Chad GPT would suggest if you just ask Chad GPT,
like make up a table of how he's trading shares.
They used a totally different measure called the trade deficit, which we could get into,
and said, okay, whatever the trade deficit is, we're going to do this formula for that.
And by the way, there was a math mistake that a conservative think tank discovered in the
way they did it.
And they just randomly applied.
There were islands that don't even have people.
There are islands that are actually like US, UK.
I heard that this is a little bit of a misnomer, though.
I heard that there was a language,
there's a little confusion with language where they said reciprocal, but it was supposed
to be proportional.
Either way, it showed the sloppiness of the process.
Sure, in terms of the communication. But if the actual process, and I don't want to seem
like I'm defending the administration, but I do want to seem like it's important that
we get true information out there. So it's like if they're doing proportional tariffs to that trade deficit, that would
make sense.
If it's reciprocal, it doesn't make sense because there's no way you can match a trade
deficit from a country that is.
But what I'm saying is I think it also doesn't make sense as policy.
Like a trade deficit may or may not be helpful to us economically.
It's not just a simple thing like trade deficit bad. So what I'm saying is you use the tariffs in a much more targeted and specific way when
you know that you either have that kind of unfair trade situation or you're trying to
protect a certain industry that you think is vulnerable domestically. But it's really
important to know what you're doing or else a whole bunch of people get screwed in the
process. Like the other day I was having breakfast in Michigan out and a couple of people came
up to me.
They were on a little shop that was right next to the breakfast place where I was eating.
And the woman who runs it said, I'm not sure what we're going to do.
It's like clothes, like bags and stuff.
And they, they store stuff from, from all over the world.
And she said, you know, we just put an order in.
We don't even know how much it's gonna cost us.
And I don't know what I'm gonna do for next month.
I got some inventory here I can use this month,
but we're gonna be screwed,
especially if we don't even know how to plan.
Because the other thing you need to do,
it's like any form of diplomacy.
Like you do shots across the bow,
you make clear what, you know, if you do this,
we're gonna respond that way.
And there has to be some
like logic to it or order to it if you want to shape the behavior of other countries.
Right. And what we're seeing instead is this like really like chaotic, like grab ass policy
where like he changes his mind every couple of days on things. Right. And that makes it
that much harder, especially if you're a small business or if you're a giant corporation, you have all kinds of hedges and like ways you can maneuver through this.
Or they'll just remove the tariffs. That was another thing that really frustrated me. If you're going to put the tariffs on, put them on everything.
Seems to me like, hold it.
Yeah, you know, they're like, picking and choosing what they're going to buy.
So now Apple doesn't have the tariffs. And it's just like, but to me, that frustrated because Apple is the one that should be paying more than anybody. They're the one that parks their money overseas. They're the one that's that's skirting the taxes. The mom and pop
businesses that are fucked by the tariffs are still going to have to pay. So now you're
disproportionately punishing the people that are actually doing the right thing for the country
in the first place. Yeah. They're building their small businesses. They're paying into the system.
And I do think one thing that again, I don't like the way it's executed. I don't agree with a lot of things that are happening in this administration.
But I do like that it kind of shone a light on something that didn't seem like it was
getting talked about by either party, which is there is a lot of decay happening, which
I do.
That's one thing I really, I have a lot of hope for you is that you live there, you reside
over it, you've experienced it and you speak to it.
And I sometimes wonder if you get frustrated. You have to, I mean, you can find a more diplomatic way of saying it, but've experienced it and you speak to it. And I sometimes wonder if you get frustrated,
you have to say, I mean, you can find a more diplomatic way of saying it, but have you
been frustrated at all with the, the way that it's worded amongst the Democratic Party,
where it seems like it's a lot more identity politics, which matters, but not to me, it's
not as prescient as, I don't know, some people are pressing as people who can't afford to
feed their families and are losing jobs.
Yeah, especially because like there are a lot of people
that I think Democrats are understood to care about.
Like low income people, black and brown people
are disproportionately caught up in the economic pain
when something like this happens.
And so I do think my party needs to do a much better job,
especially with the kind of finger wagging
that you're talking about.
I think we are very prone to that.
And I've seen it happen on any side.
I think a lot of people, you
get this sense of moral conviction and you're so sure of it that you start to think it makes
it okay to be an asshole because you're deep down. And this is far right and far left movements
through the ages, but I think it's definitely true of far right and far left in the US right
now.
You just think like you can you can treat people however you want.
You say whatever you want about them because like they're evil.
You're.
Yeah, they're evil.
And if they win, all is lost.
Yeah.
And their pain becomes intellectualized.
Like you'll see like think pieces of like, why does the South love MAGA?
Like how can we like why why is neo-Naziism on the rise through like a chart? And I feel like it
misses the feeling of, you know, low income people saying like, no, we're in we're in pain.
Yeah, yeah. And I think pain is a really important place to start. Because if you
encounter somebody in pain, and you approach that with compassion, and you actually listen,
that's a very different place to come from than like, either how can I use this or how
am I going to judge the choices that this person made while in pain?
Especially if they have developed very understandably a distrust of everybody.
So what are things a Democratic party can do better?
Because I let you go speak to both sides.
We begged so many Democrats to come on this platform.
You were the only guy that agreed
and then you had to back out allegedly because you had to do debate prep. Oh, okay. Sorry.
That seems like a big deal. I'm glad it worked out in the end. Good excuse. But we've been
trying to. It was like Mark Cuban, who was obviously a surrogate for the party, he came
on, he was fantastic, but like everybody we asked, you know, they just wouldn't
do it.
Yeah. Look, there's this even like going on.
I don't want to get away from Alex's question.
Yeah. No, but I mean, to your point, like part of it is like, where do we go? Right?
To me, especially after we lose, our party or any party has this debate of like, what
do we have to say and how do we say it? To me, there's actually three things we need
to deal with. What do we have to say? I mean we say it? To me, there's actually three things we need to deal with.
What do we have to say?
I mean, like the policies, the ideas.
If they're right, we should hold to it.
If we're not so sure they're right, we should rethink them.
Or this is that.
Then there's how do we say it?
That's the tone, the message, the style,
whether people feel like you're wagging a finger
at them or not, whether people think you get
the kind of pain they're going through or not.
And then the part nobody talks about is where we say it.
And I think right now where we say it is kind of everything because there are so many spaces
where people, like I'm sure you don't think yourselves as maybe a political show or a
news show.
Like the reality is there's probably a lot of folks who like this is where they're getting
their news because like they're not sitting watching CNN. I mean, I remember the
moment when I was back in college that I realized I was getting more of my news from the Daily Show
than I was from like news sources. And so I think it's really important for anyone practicing
politics and definitely my party after what just happened
to it, to be saying, okay, where else do we need to be? And like, it's all well and good
for me to keep going on Fox News, and I will, although they don't seem to be inviting me
as much lately.
But, you know, a lot of-
He just called y'all pussy.
I like that.
Talk your shit.
Talk your shit, Pete.
I'm just saying.
We were really close to having a conversation about the whole like signal gate, put the
wrong dude on your class phone.
Yeah, yeah.
And what happened?
Then they cancelled it?
It just didn't quite get around.
Was it debate prep?
They were working on something.
They were busy.
But like, you know, a lot of people aren't watching Left Rider Center, they're not watching like television cable news all the time, right? I mean, I think that's a good point. I think that's a good point. I think that's a good point. I think that's a good point. I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point. I think that's a good point. I think that's a good point. I think that's a good Twitter election, like that has been true less. Right?
Yeah. So saying we need to be prepared to go everywhere. And that's always been, that's
always been my style. I mean, largely because I had to, when I was first running for president,
I would talk to anybody who would listen, which at first wasn't a lot of people and
I would go to any, any place that would have me. But, you know, to, to go back a little
bit in, in what I was saying, like, I do think we also need to revisit like what it is we're offering. Because if it sounds like what we're
offering is, let's just go back. This isn't working out. Obviously, the terrorists are
hurting people. He's consolidating absolute power. Like lots of things are bad about this,
which is true. Therefore, let's go back to that.
You have Bernie and AOC who clearly have a message that's resonating.
Why isn't the party getting behind that?
So I think a lot of what they have to say will get more and more traction in the party,
especially on the economic piece.
This idea that you have a lot of regular people in regular life getting screwed over by the
way things work.
And if we don't have better services and fairer taxes, like we're just never going to get
through that.
And it's thrown in their face.
And it's thrown in their face quite often.
Look how great Biden's economy is.
Look at the stock market.
And they're like, that doesn't affect me at all.
Cereal is $10.
Yeah.
And what are we talking about?
Yeah.
I would feel deeply offended if I was them, especially when you throw that kind of support
behind, you know behind one specific party.
I think that's why you saw a lot of them start to migrate.
So then what do you do?
How do you get working class people back?
Well, first, I think we need to be more disciplined and louder about that economic message.
To be clear, we will be advancing policies that make sure you are economically better
off. What does that mean?
That means that you can, you know, the one thing I think people do give us a lot of credit
for is healthcare, but there's more to do on that, right?
We're not going to let them like tear up Obamacare.
We're going to make sure that there is a fairer tax code, like not just standing against the
tax cuts for the rich that he's about to push through Congress, but actually having a tax
code where there's not a benefit to a corporation, like moving billions of dollars overseas, where there's not a benefit to kind of hiding your worth, where you're
not better off basically with wealth than work, which is where the tax code is right
now.
I think we need to be much more clear about what we would provide in terms of services
for people.
Like we still, we're the only country, I think maybe Papua New Guinea, is the only other country in the world that doesn't do a policy for parental leave. Like some level of national guarantee that when
you have a kid, you will get leave. Don't start this, bro. Don't start this. I've got
people trying to have kids working at this company right here. We cannot recover from
this financially. It can be done, I promise, because we did it when I was mayor.
We did it locally for city employees.
And we, at our company, we pay for anybody that wants to have their eggs frozen.
That's great.
We don't hire women, though.
We will pay.
There's always a little pull.
There's always some type of little pull, dude.
These little rich.
We need to tax them. The cost of eggs are too high, bro.
IT's IT's IT's IT's.
See what you did there.
But yes, we should absolutely pay for it.
Sorry, I had another question based on...
Continue, continue.
But I think there are also some things that we need to kind of rewire in the way government works to make it work better for people.
And I live this.
So, for example, I'm watching them
basically burn the federal government down. And obviously I've got problems with the way they're
destroying cancer research or making it harder for the FAA to keep airplanes safe. Like a lot
of that is bad. But I will also admit that I have been furious and frustrated with the way things work in
our federal government.
And it's actually gotten to where it makes it harder to do things that I think progressives
in particular care about.
Building things, building housing, building roads and bridges, which I lived for four
years, building clean energy projects, like stuff we should objectively definitely be doing.
And we've gotten in our own way with this,
these layers of process, layers of procedure,
all of them introduced with good intentions,
but which collectively have made it almost impossible
or unaffordable to do anything.
So you want less regulations.
We need a, yeah, we definitely need to be smarter
and there needs to be less procedures.
Still powerful regulations to keep people safe.
So we're sure the government is efficient.
I think that's a great, I think that's great.
This is another example.
Do you work on that in the private sector?
Isn't that what was that company that you work for the consultant McKinsey McKinsey.
And isn't that partially like what governments will hire a company like that
to do doge stuff, right? Yeah, I wouldn't call it doge. You're a fucking doge.
Doge was actually about government efficiency. I'd be all for it. But it's not about that. No. What is it about? It's about power.
Look, I'll give you an example.
You tell me people in government are concerned with power.
I know.
It's a shot.
This is interesting.
Hot take.
Truth bombs being dropped on playground.
No, but look at it this way.
So yeah, when I was in government as mayor, when I had my kind of small government that
I was running, we took whole departments apart and put them back together.
We removed people who weren't performing very well.
And by the way, that was hard.
Like one of the reasons I've always had a problem with this president is like he emerged
kind of play acting, like firing people for fun, right?
It's like he's taglines your fire.
For me, at least as like a young like CEO, basically of a city government, other than
dealing with violence and death,
the worst part of my job was firing people. I hated it, especially because they weren't.
It wasn't necessarily a bad person, but you had a person who was in a role that they didn't
fit in and their department wasn't doing as well as I thought it needed to do to serve
residents. I would have this very painful conversation where we'd sit down, I'd look
them in the eye, and that sucked, obviously most of all for them. But anyway, we're not afraid to do that because you have
to do that. But look at what happened when they came in, right? If this is actually about
government efficiency, then the problem you would be solving, which is a real problem,
is that in the federal government, it is too hard to reward your top performers.
So you could be somebody who could be commanding a multi-million dollar salary
in the private sector, working on something wildly important, but there's
just no way that you're getting, you know, you're in your particular pay grade,
same as everybody else. And to remove your bottom performers. A lot of people who've been in and out of
business and government will tell me, like, when I was in the private sector and the public sector,
actually the top 10% were pretty much the same,
these amazing driven people.
The government ones weren't compensated as well,
but they were purpose driven.
But the bottom 10% was completely different
because I couldn't do anything about the bottom 10%.
So imagine if Doge had come in
and they had gone through every department and said,
okay, we're gonna create a way
to reward the top performers.
And we're going to create a way to reward the top performers and we're also going to analyze either whose job description is no longer needed
or their job performance is not there. And even though it's painful, even though maybe it's
politically tough, like we're going to show them the door. That would be one thing. But they just
send an email to everybody, many of whom are in fact top performers. Like some of the people they
fired who got caught up in this thing.
People got fired just based on whether you were in a category called probationary employee.
But to be clear, probationary isn't like you fucked up and you're on probation.
You can actually be because you were promoted.
You could be a seven-year veteran at the FAA or maybe you'd been there as a contractor,
but you were so good that the FAA said, we wanna hire you now as a government employee.
And even though it might've been a little pay cut,
you went for it.
And you're probationary.
And then next thing you know, like you wake up one day
and this office department, whatever Doge is,
clearly hasn't like gone through and checked,
like who's doing a good job or who's,
there's no way, because there wasn't even time to do that.
And it's like, guess what, you're fired.
Too bad.
I think there's, I wouldn't say unanimous support
with the criticism of Doge, but I think that there is a lot of support for the way that
it's been handled. Though I would also say that the idea of an agency that is attacking
bloat and excess spending of the government is a bipartisan supported issue as well. I
think initially when Doge,
when Elon first announces this, and I think it's Elon and Vivek, people are really supportive
of it, I think on both sides. They're like, yeah, let's cut some government spending.
If you're actually doing it for real, and that's another part of the answer to your
question of like what Democrats should be talking about, because I think we're the ones
who believe, some say we believe it to a fault, like we believe it naively, but we're the
ones who believe that there is, the government has to, if you do it right, government has the power to make people better off. But if
we're going to do that, let's actually do it. And part of that does mean like taking
a hard look at everything we do. And I mean, I remember, again, most of my examples will
come from transportation, right? But I remember something that went on with the FAA where
they had to get some special waiver in order to allow a certain
class of airplane to fly because there was a regulation that said there had to be a switch
to turn off the no smoking light.
And this was written back when sometimes you turned off the no smoking light, now obviously
there's just always a no smoking light because you can't smoke on airplanes.
And there's this like scramble, that's the kind of stuff that we should absolutely
be getting rid of.
And there are things that we do,
and governments sometimes are in the military,
we call it a self-licking ice cream cone.
Like there's definitely things that are there
that are just like self-perpetuating processes
that nobody would have come up with on their own,
but they're still there.
I think we should absolutely own that space
because we have a good faith belief
that government should serve people better and should work better. And we should be the
ones who are making that happen.
So on that, so this idea with Doge, it seems to me, and again, I only know like the most
surface level version of it, is that the way that the government becomes more efficient
is just firing a bunch of people. That seems to be like saving money. I don't know if that's
how it becomes more efficient. The efficiency is getting rid of the bureaucracy that stops a plane from flying just because
it doesn't have an on and off switch for a smoking light.
But it's surgery because you don't want to get rid of the part of the bureaucracy that
makes sure the planes don't crash.
That is good and protects people.
I think that there is altruism and benevolence in a lot of these policies.
They're trying to protect people.
They're all there for some reason or another.
Yeah.
And maybe some is like, I don't know, what have you experienced?
Like you were, you know, Secretary of Transportation.
Like when you're trying to rebuild some bridge or whatever like that, what was the biggest
hiccup that you experienced that you're like, we got to just get this out of the way.
There's no way we're going to be able to improve people's lives if this is here.
What is an example of that?
Well, so there's, there's an entire process where to permit
a federal project, you have to listen to every, you have to take in every comment from anybody
who wants to weigh in and then you have to respond to every comment or a human has to kind of review
all of that. Which by the way, one thing I'm really worried about is if you have, let's say
there's some regulation coming and an industry wants to stop it, can they use AI?
Yeah, or can you use AI?
Because it used to be like,
well, you'd have to take the trouble to write a letter
or at least go to the trouble of like getting people
to write form letters, right?
Now you could write customized letters.
It'll look different.
So you use bureaucracy to fight bureaucracy.
Well, you use bureaucracy to stop something from happening.
Yeah, yeah.
Which is is real problem
if that's a thing that needed to happen, especially because you also need to go through that process
to remove a regulation or to replace or to modernize it. Hey, yeah, yeah. There's this
level of pride and I encountered it all the time. Um, I mean right here in New York, right,
there are so many major transportation projects going and I'm proud of worked on them. BQE,
Hudson River tunnel. I mean, that's one of the biggest transportation projects going. And I'm proud we've worked on them. BQE, Hudson River Tunnel,
I mean that's one of the biggest transportation projects
in our time.
Second Avenue Subway.
That's Second Avenue Subway we don't want.
I'm gonna tell you once, as a New Yorker,
we don't want it, we never needed it,
it's never been an issue.
I remember when you got to start a building,
we're like, who the fuck is this for?
Nobody on the Upper East Side,
from where it goes to where it ends, uses the subway.
That's all old ladies. They
take over the taxis. There hasn't been a dumb, I'm sorry, this is your idea, but it's so
fucking stupid. There's never been a dumber idea for a subway. There are so many other
places we could put subways. We could add some more trains, but Second Avenue specifically,
there's a train on Lex. You walk two more blocks, you get a train.
I don't know my New York geography as well as you do, but the really crazy thing about
the Second Avenue subway is the tunnel's already there.
It's been there for 50 years.
Well, just because there's a tunnel, you don't need to put us on.
How is the Jews going to get out?
Yeah, we need to organize like a warm miss for the back.
This is why I don't come on these podcasts. I will always defend second news because I think there's like this is a neighborhood
that like deserves good transit to everybody else.
It has it has good transit.
Yeah, it doesn't go all the way up to what is a 120 fifth to where nobody's ago to 120
I'm telling you we don't use it
I used to live up there. Okay, would you I did I didn't live on the other side of the island. I was on the subway. You're a peace captain.
You're sitting in for a rock.
You're just in my boat or something.
And I used to work in New York.
Come the fuck out of here.
I know, that's crazy.
I used to work in New York Presbyterian, and that walk did suck.
Walking from York Avenue to Lexington.
Okay, so how are you going to get there?
I'm just saying, when that second...
How are you going to get to that second avenue line?
What are you talking about?
It's first day of New York.
We're talking about the subway right now.
Yeah, but I'm talking about the walk
that I would have to do every day going to and from work
to York to Lexsuck.
It would have been great if a second avenue train was there.
And that-
There's not a third lane.
You gotta walk two less blocks.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Avenue's are like, spoiled.
Three blocks.
Cross town blocks, right?
Yeah, those avenues.
Cross town avenues, yeah. Come on, man. Pushing limits to my New York expertise here. No,. Cross town blocks. Yeah, those are avenues.
Cross town avenues.
Come on.
I'm pushing limits to my New York expertise.
No, no, you got this.
You got it down.
And to get to the airport, you punch him clear once we get to the East Coast.
You just did my bike.
We need a subway on second.
You never said one New Yorker.
That's just not true.
I actually went near it.
You went near it.
I didn't go on it.
I went near it.
I went near it and I was like, is that yours?
Nobody even there.
I looked.
I was like, is that yours?
Nobody's here.
Nobody's here. I was like, on it. I went near it.
I went near it and I was like, is anybody even there?
I looked, I was like, is anybody even there?
Nobody's there.
I don't want to like be...
Is there a subway there, be honest.
I don't want to like, you know, challenge your expertise as somebody who once went near
it.
No, I'm telling you.
I went near it.
A lot of New Yorkers seem to really want this because I got a lot of calls and we worked
hard on it, but to think...
That's bots. That's bots, bro. That hasn't been on a subway in 10 years. Why? New Yorkers seem to really want this because I got a lot of calls and we worked hard on it, but to think
The 456 is the most crowded trains very crowded So if you're on it, you're like, you know, if there's something to eat congestion relief, yeah, that'd be nice
There's a great
Safety to be in crowd you never had a homeless guy jerk off on you when it's crowded
Before we get too far away from you said that uh, that's a New York
This is what we do for a living. Before we get too far away from it.
You said that, uh,
That's a New York City term.
You said Doge.
We all agree that there's
money being wasted in government.
And we were for the idea of Doge.
But you said they're only doing it for power.
How is what they're doing for power?
Because it seems like they're just focusing on
cutting down expenditures
so they have something that can be like, look, we saved all this money.
But how did it power play?
Because it makes everything,
because they're not going through the regular,
like any kind of process we have to like check with Congress
or evaluate which of the programs
are actually doing something and which ones aren't,
or which people are good at their jobs and which aren't.
It means all that really matters
is whether you're on the White House's good side.
And this is what is happening.
It sends a message basically, be on our good side, but we won't clip your program. That
is one way of interpreting it.
And they're doing this with everything. The tariffs are like this. In the end, if your
company or your country or your industry gets on his good side, then you get out. That has
nothing to do with whether it's good economic policy or whether it's going to help my neighbors
in Michigan, but it is something that helps consolidate power.
Law firms, he's sending this message like, if your law firm doesn't get on my good side,
then you're going to be screwed because we're going to use, even though it's completely
illegal, we're going to manipulate your access to security clearances or anything else because
I don't like you.
Isn't that what Biden did to Mayor Adams though, when he was just trying to get some upgrades?
No, I would argue the opposite is true.
I would argue what happened was, and I know he was just sitting in here talking about
this, he just wants some upgrades, dude.
He wants to build a 24-hour strip club.
Everybody wants upgrades.
I get it.
That's way better than a second-hand subway if you want to talk about it.
It pulls people to hang on.
But what really happens is... This is why they don't come off of it.
It's different than Fox News, right?
No, like, think about what it means if you get caught or accused of, like in his case,
being mixed up with a foreign government and making policy decisions based on that.
Being a politician.
But that can't be how low our expectations are.
That's how we all look at it.
Hold on, hold on.
During your time as the secretary of transportation, right?
Did nobody try to bribe you or anything?
If I got an upgrade. How'd you keep the planes in the air?
What do you do if I got an upgrade?
And by the way, not because the Turkish government liked me but like because I was a frequent flyer on United or whatever
yeah, if I got an upgrade, I would have my security detail go to the gate agent and
Negotiate the downgrade so I didn't have to deal with not because there was a rule about it
But so I don't have to deal with like a bunch of people on Twitter saying, look at this asshole in first class.
I'll take all your upgrades.
You're better than me, bro.
If you know your global services, I'm not.
That's crazy.
Pete, Pete, Pete, Pete, Pete, Pete, Pete, Pete, Pete.
Pete, come on now.
And don't give me a, I love the upgrade.
You're doing downgrades and trying to build
a second-aview subway.
You're making horrible decisions.
People do not relate to this stuff right here, Pete. Who gets a
downgrade on Delta or United?
Because I don't want people to ask, I'm regulating airlines, I shouldn't be like up there. Now
I take the upgrade.
Just a second.
Private sector.
I love the upgrade. Anyway, this is not about upgrades. This is about whether somebody who
has been indicted for a crime can get out of it by
getting on the good side of the...
The whole point of this country is that no one person should have too much power.
To me, that's the whole point of it.
The king was somebody who had too much power, and we said, we're not going to do it that
way.
There were ferocious debates at the time of the founding over whether to even create a
presidency.
Because Jefferson was worried that if we had a president, it would turn into a king.
And they kind of hit a compromise where we created the president, but we took all these
measures in the Constitution to make sure that it didn't, that presidency didn't become
too powerful.
And this is like a part of the texture of our country.
My favorite fun fact about Washington, D.C. is the Jefferson Memorial, the round domed
column structure with the statue of Jefferson right in the middle, has him perfectly aligned
with the exact center line of the White House so that if you're standing in the blue room,
which is in the middle of the White House looking south, you have just, there's a straight line. He's watching you. Because he's watching.
He's watching the executive saying he doesn't want the executive office president to get out.
Voirism right there. Lincoln, Lincoln Memorial and Jefferson Memorial, right? Both liberal politicians.
For the time?
Jefferson?
You think he was like extreme conservative?
Kind of both, right?
I mean, he was agrarian, he was definitely more kind of libertarian if we were to try
to map it on today's terms.
You're shitting on your old joke right now.
Yeah.
But.
You're not sitting in a fucking idiot book.
I love that.
I love that.
I love that.
He's a flash political.
I was trying to shoehorn a joke.
Let's go with it.
Let's go with it.
Let's go with it.
No, the joke, the joke.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Come on, ready?
I said it.
I said it.
He's so right.
He's not a model, he's so right.
It's a stupid joke.
We stayed in the second avenue so bad for 50 years.
We stayed in the second avenue.
There was never a second avenue, so no.
Okay, Pete, here's the actual question I have.
It's so bad.
I hear a lot of what you're saying is tax the rich,
they need to pay their taxes.
I remember moving from Texas to California, Texas.
I started paying taxes and it was like,
I remember I was working at Verizon Wireless
and doing a horrible job selling cell phones
and my commission would get taxed at like 40%.
And I was like, okay, fair enough.
But then I'm driving, the roads suck,
the schools from what I heard sucked.
New York, same thing, very high taxes.
There's no second avenue subway.
Schools are horrible.
If you have any kind of money,
it seems like you're sending your kids to private schools
or you live in such a rich neighborhood
that the public school is basically a private school.
What?
The tax money seems like it gets wasted
and doesn't get used wisely.
So I have like an aversion to,
oh, they should pay their taxes. Cause my reaction is I've seen what happens when people pay taxes.
I agree with that. What he said about California.
I think what he said about California was pretty good. Yeah. There is obviously a relationship
between the results you see and your willingness to trust that there's anything
you're getting out of your tax dollars.
My trust is very low.
Especially with California.
America's trust is very low.
Yeah.
Right?
And if you look at, I know Democrats always like to point to Scandinavian countries, but
I'm going to do it.
One thing you notice about those countries, which do have a pretty high tax burden, but
the reason there's also a higher sense among people that it's fair
is that they get good results. They have good health care and good education. And that doesn't
just happen because you put the money in. But if you put the money in and you do it
right, then the public's going to be more trusting that you're getting something out
of those tax dollars.
I think it's easy to do when every girl's hot.
Disgusting.
No, like have you been to Scandinavia?
It's like every girl's hot, right?
So you're like, I'm the wrong guy.
Stop, stop, stop, stop.
Sorry, the dudes are hot there too.
The dudes are a good looking guy.
If you're into that look,
I don't know if you're into that look.
Ow, what's going on?
They're so good looking there.
Like awesome and hor'll spend 75%.
Listen, this is a crazier take than
building a fucking subway on Second Avenue.
Who the hell is going to use that, Akash Singh?
Oh, man.
What I'm trying to say is,
if you go to Denmark,
you go to Sweden, Singh, if you're good looking,
there's going to be a higher perception of taxpayers.
You'll spend a little bit more, you know what I mean?
It's something to look at. Because you're just happy to be there.
You're happy to be there.
Have you talked to Scandinavians when they travel abroad
and what they see?
Can I get a real answer for this man?
I know, I'm real fucking, I know.
This is a real experience.
You're asking about girls.
This is a real experience.
I'm asking, I got,
This is a real efficiency.
Dude, still they're tall, they're handsome,
they have facial hair, they're Vikings.
Arrgh.
Darn it.
All right. All right. There's, there's. Where were we? Oh, they're handsome, they have facial hair, they're Vikings. Arrgh! Yeah! Yeah!
Yeah!
There's, there's...
Where were we?
I'm just saying, we have like...
We're getting to a real point.
Where was...
It was skinny.
It got too real like a second Avenue subway.
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
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You're basically saying if you pay, have faith that it will get fixed.
It seems like I'm not saying that.
OK, OK, I back off.
I'm saying if people don't see the results.
Yeah. Especially we're coming along saying like, OK,
everybody's going to have to like pay into this.
Yeah. Well, fuck off.
I'm not I'm not seeing the results. Yeah. Right.
Now, I think there's that's a nuanced story because the best results I'm not seeing the results.
Now I think that's a nuanced story because the best results sometimes, especially when
you're in safety, a big part of my job wasn't just building, it was transportation.
A big part of the results is what doesn't happen.
Good, bad things that don't happen.
You don't notice your school being good, you just notice when it's bad.
And you don't notice your road being smooth, you just notice when there's a pothole in it, right?
And you don't notice when an airplane doesn't crash.
And you don't notice when you have clean, safe drinking water.
By the way, that's okay, like that's the point.
Like you shouldn't have to worry about
whether your drinking water is clean.
Because if you did, you wouldn't be able to worry
about whatever else matters to you in life.
So I don't think anybody can argue
that the American taxpayer has gotten their money's worth.
I think there's lots of reasons for that.
Part of it is though that we under invest and we under invest not because the overall
tax rates are too low.
I don't think that most people should be paying more in taxes.
I do think certain people should be paying much more in taxes.
And that's where we get to like the giant multi-billion dollar corporation that figures
out a way to do their books and pay zero. Yeah, right. And they're
right about just fine. Why is Warren Buffett bragging about
it? Well, I mean, it's look, tell him to pay up. Why the
flight? But we can't you can't blame him for using the rules
of the system. I actually like him calling attention to I find
that if so if they don't, if the whole capitalist system, every, you system, for good and for ill is that if you don't play that to your advantage,
somebody else will and they will beat you.
So instead of asking somebody to leave money on the table,
we should just fix the rules so that they're more fair.
That's the investment side.
But the other side of it is,
throwing money at the problem is not enough.
Like it is clearly true.
And this is the other point about the Second Avenue subway,
which I will defend to my death that it is a good project.
Have you been on it?
We can't, dude.
We haven't built it.
We haven't built it.
You haven't built it yet?
It's not there yet.
I remember reading about this in 2008 on the subway.
They had ads coming in 2015, Second Avenue subway.
Right, so that's my point.
And we were so excited, dude.
We were like, I was excited.
Parades, I was excited.
There was parades in New York City.
I was excited.
I'm telling you, there was parades in New York City.
There was a memo that was sent out there,
like we're building a second avenue,
so we were like, our fucking soccer, our new soccer.
That was the Portland's Indian parade.
They live off the East Side.
I mean, it was.
But what is very hard to defend. It's going to totally reinvigorate that economically
destitute area called the Upper East Side.
What's really impossible to defend is how long it has taken.
I'm not joking when I say it's been there for 50, the tunnel's there for 50 years.
It's a 100-year project.
Yep.
Got started in 1920.
Which is nuts.
And the cost of it.
But it's also, it's not that. It's like obviously the rail project in California.
Classic example.
I was doing a show in Hawaii and there's, it was a joke that everybody kind of makes,
but there's a rail project out there, not underground, and they put $12 billion into
it, it has a mood of a centimeter in 10 years.
And from my understanding of people out there, they're like, it's just pure corruption.
It's not even bureaucracy.
I don't know that that's true, but I know that if you see that much money going in and you don't see results,
I don't blame you for assuming it's corruption.
Right. Well, where could it go?
I think a lot of it is bureaucracy, actually, and it's the inability to get even basic things done.
There are exceptions. We worked on the one thing I worked on that I'm very excited about is another high-speed line that goes from Las Vegas to California, to Southern California.
They could be open
by 2028 if they hit all of their marks and everything goes well. There's some reasons
why that was different though. And part of why it was different was the public-private
partnership which created a different, and it's a red state next to a blue state, but
it's California too, right? So it's Nevada and California, sponsored by Nevada, which
is a swing state by the way, not a red state, I would argue.
Good point.
And they did some right away stuff where a big part of the route is actually just like
right down the median of I-15, so it's easy, comparatively easy, compared to having to
buy the problem of the second avenue subway, the cost of it.
Sounds like you know a lot about this.
Loves trains.
Do love trains.
You're good.
I love trains too.
Don't let him laugh at you. is to love trains. You're good. I love trains too.
Don't let them laugh at you. It's not like this facility to train is over here.
It's like somebody in the room is on board with trains.
It's just you and I in this car. This podcast is now me and you.
Just don't let them laugh.
We love trains the most. We ride on top of them hoes.
So the reason it's costing so much here
is to even put in a little power facility,
let alone a station, you've got to buy real estate out
in one of the most dense and expensive places,
probably the most dense and expensive place
in the entire world.
The tunnel and the most expensive buildings in the world.
It's incredibly complicated to even just do
the signal work in the stations, right?
Anyway, my point is I agree that we have to have better results, better return on taxpayer
money.
But when it goes well, I mean, again, we're all living off of the value, even though the
internet has proven to be a mixed bag.
Many people, including like these Doge guys, right, made all of their money off of something
that was literally invented by the federal government, the internet.
That's a great point, honestly.
So it can work.
I'm not here to say it always does work.
It can work, but you have to actually have people
who care about it working versus just gathering
their own power and making it all about us.
We're not, by any means, and don't let me speak
for you guys, like hardline, the government is horrible
and everything about it is horrible at all.
We live in New York City, like we understand
the importance of like rules and regulations.
You got someone living above you and below you, they're blasting music.
After 10 o'clock you're like, I would like the government to step in here and make a
rule where they can't do that.
It's nice.
So like, I think we understand more than most Americans how important regulation can be
to you living like a happy, fruitful life.
So if you're living in a house somewhere in the middle of nowhere, your next neighbor's three miles away, I get why you're like, government, get the fuck out of fruitful life. So if you're living in a house somewhere in the middle of nowhere,
your next neighbor is three miles away, I get why you're like, government, get the fuck
out of my life. I get it. When you live on top of people and below people, you see the
importance.
No, I think that's true. When you live in a city, when you live in a dense neighborhood,
you're like more aware of the importance. Although I'd also argue wherever you live,
right?
Sure.
You count on things from national defense to, you know, railroads.
I'm not saying you don't, but I think that it's easier for them to ignore them.
Yeah, it's more in your face.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, because you can't confuse yourself for not living, if you get on the subway,
which I still can't tell if you ever have.
You want me?
I don't know. I'm just trying to...
Me?
I grew up, I was born and raised on a subway.
Oh, this is great.
You're the only one in the subway.
I was born and raised on a subway.
You were born on a subway. Listen, I know. OK the only one that has a new mattress. I was born and raised on a subway.
You were born and raised on a subway.
Listen, I know.
Okay, so when you're sitting on a subway...
Name one stop, I'll tell you what it is.
You can't miss...
What?
Name one stop, I'll tell you what it is.
59th Street.
59th Street.
Name any train.
Name any train.
I think you have sugar train.
Name your favorite train.
I apologize. I'm off sugar from left. Name your favorite train. I'll tell you my favorite. Guys, guys, come on.
We're saving America.
Listen.
When there's big projects like that, that nothing happens, it feels like when construction,
where it's like the construction crew tells you, oh, we'll get this done in three months
And then they take three years because they just want to squeeze it out. So it's like
We have no faith in
Government getting shit done because we don't see a lot less less faith
I'm gonna be completely transparent. I have almost no faith anything will get done. And I think that that is specifically positioned on liberals.
I think that Republicans have done a really good job of projecting that on Democrats.
Like you hear a lot of rhetoric, whether it's right or wrong, whether there's data backing
or not, who knows.
But they've done a really good job of going, hey, look at California.
Look how California looks.
Look at these cities.
They spent this much on homeless people and there are even more of them that are homeless.
And look at San Francisco, look what's happening, people moving out of the city, etc.
I think they've done a really good job of marketing the perceived failures of Democrats
in these states.
How do you as a Democrat change that perception while also, while not gaslighting the people who live there that
do feel like their cities have have I'm gonna say become ruined, but have definitely like
decreased the standard of living.
Yes.
I think first of all, you have to acknowledge why people are skeptical.
And I do think that's I mean, look, anybody who's been in a relationship knows that like
if somebody's upset or pissed, like you don't start and say like,
you should feel better than you do actually.
Here's why you're wrong to be upset, right?
Like we can't be caught doing that.
We are rightly proud of it.
Is it easier doing that with a dude?
No, it's the same.
Really?
Yeah.
No.
Ah, fuck.
This whole time I was like, man,
at least you could be like, you're wrong, bro.
And they'd be like, yeah, it was.
I'm sorry, my side's got a lot to offer, but it's that part.
There's no loopholes in relationships.
Okay, please continue.
Where was I?
So part of it's kind of that approach.
Part of it is to demonstrate the things that are going well or that can be done well.
So we're talking about crime, right, in cities.
And you would think if you watch like the Republicans
that like every city is a like hell hole of crime.
Now, if we respond and we're like, what crime?
Then like, obviously when you got like people
getting pushed into the subway
and you've got car jackings up,
it's gonna sound like we're just making shit up.
If on the other hand, we point to the fact that like Boston
is at something like a 70 year low
in the murder rate there, or we point to the achievements in Denver under their mayor there
about tackling some of the hardest problems in the world like homelessness and housing. And I,
having lived that as a mayor in a largely low income community, like that is one of the hardest
things that people working in government can ever try to solve.
There are people who are doing it well, and most of those people, in my experience, are
Democrats.
Now, they may not be like Washington Democrats or like federal congressional part of our
party, but because I think the folks who are saying government got this wrong, which might
be true any number of times, what they're really saying is the policies of this person
in government got it wrong, but they don't have an answer. Their answer is burn it all down. If we haven't solved
poverty, their answer is we're going to slash Medicaid, which is what the Republican budget
moving through Congress right now will do, is slash Medicaid. Medicaid may not be perfect. In
fact, I know for a fact, like many issues come up in the way it's administered, the way people have
access to it, but also know for a fact that if your answer to that is just to cut
out a bunch of poor people or VA, like any veteran can tell you the horror stories of
all the times things didn't go right in dealing with the VA.
But if you think the answer is to just cut it or privatize it, that's not an answer. We can do better than that.
And I think my party's job is to make clear what that looks like and how we would do it
better.
How would you do it?
Well, I would follow the lead of some of these mayors we're talking about who are solving
some of these problems in a more localized area, city governments that make systems work
better in ways that complicated federal systems like Social Security
or like VA could.
How would you get the messaging out?
How would you help people realize good things are actually happening?
We had Mayor Adams on.
We brought up the subway system and the perception that it's incredibly dangerous right now.
And he was like, it's the safest it's been in X amount of years.
He gave examples for crimes being know, crimes being down.
Now, there's other ways like fudge these crime numbers.
If you're not, what is the word where you actually punish people for the crime if you're
not trying, if you're not prosecuting crimes, I guess you could say that these crimes didn't
happen.
So then all of a sudden it looks like crimes are down.
So I think there are ways of fudging numbers.
Yeah.
I mean, usually those numbers are based on arrests more than prosecutions.
But God, yeah, I hear he was giving me crime statistics, not arrest statistics.
Okay, but sure.
But but still he came and he gave me this data or he gave us this data.
And then we're kind of shocked.
We were like, oh, I thought the subway was dangerous again.
Well, there's that perception reality thing.
I mean, back again to aviation.
Right.
So a lot of folks are nervous flyers, don't know if it's safe to fly. Meanwhile,
like I said, there was this horrible crash in January, but America went 15 years without a fatal
commercial airline crash. Meanwhile, the number of people who are going to die today in car crashes
is basically the same as the number of people you can fit into a 737. And yet most of us,
every single day, 40,000 people a year. Yeah. Yeah. Same as gun violence,
roughly. And yet most people feel safer when they get in a car. Yeah. Especially if they're
the ones driving. You're on the ground. You have some level of control. Yeah. But the
reality is your life is in way more, way more danger. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Absolutely. So
then it's kind of a psychology question. like, how do you find people where they
are, you want to blow off those fears, but you do want to reach
people with real data and real numbers, and information that is
real. And the thing that really scares me about the moment we're
in is it's harder and harder for everybody to have access to the
same facts. It's one thing, like I grew up in a world where you
watch TV, you got your news from TV, which is like antique from what I can tell,
talking to students now, but you would watch a TV show
and maybe that TV show, that network
didn't do it perfectly.
But generally what they would try to do
is they would cover an issue, whatever it was,
abortion, taxes, some bill moving through Congress
and they would have the Republican saying Republican things
and the Democrats saying Democratic things
and you would think about it.
And watching that, like often hearing the other side would just make you feel what you
believed even stronger because you'd be thinking of your own counter arguments.
And other times something the other side said would actually get through to you.
But the point is you would think about it and you'd have to contend with what other
people had to say.
And while there were different opinions going around based on different values, they tended
to be in an argument that was over the same facts.
Now we don't even have the same facts.
And that is a massive, massive problem.
Trusting statistics, like for me personally, I have an issue with like data in that regard.
Because like what's it saying?
Like you can torture the numbers, they'll tell you anything you want.
You know, like it's difficult because every side has different data interpretations to
support their idea.
And now they're just making up stuff.
And like a lack of public trust, I think is probably the one of the largest issues I think
in American politics is that you can't trust the data, you can't trust the politicians.
I think that's the general feeling.
And I think even like congressional stock trading is like a major issue with this.
I'm curious your opinion on like private holdings for publicly elected officials when it comes
to the stock market. And I think that is one of the main things that is eroding the public
trust in politicians.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's a real problem. And I think they should get rid of it. I mean,
this is this is not a problem for me because I didn't have a lot of wealth. But look, I get it.
If I was a millionaire, I'm sure I would think twice before taking a public service job if
that meant having to divest.
But we're talking about people who are sometimes responsible for multi-billion dollar decisions,
or in terms of the course of the national economy, trillion dollar level outcomes.
And if they think even for a second about, oh, what's this going to do to my stock
in Google or whatever, that's a problem.
And that coupled with, and this is less politically popular, but I also think a lot of public
service don't get paid enough.
And I would go to bat for them getting paid, maybe not the same as the public private sector.
Like I get that that's never going to be the same.
But I do think that they need to be compensated well enough that they don't have to swallow
quite as hard.
Yeah, you have to incentivize the best and brightest to do the most important jobs.
And again, ideally reward the ones who are robust.
But you can't trade stock to make up for the difference, I think.
But I think it's interesting what you said, like, if people feel like they can't trust
the data, they can't trust the politicians. Like I think those two things are linked because actually the data, it's actually very,
very rare for data to be put out that is objectively false.
They can happen.
Like, usually, like the data are like based on some real set that data is some account.
It can be manipulated.
But yeah, how it looks or how you make it sound.
I mean, they're doing this right now.
Again, the dose, they make it sound like there's like millions of dead people
getting social security.
Exactly.
That's just not true.
So how many are getting, are there dead people?
Because this seemed to me fact.
Well, first of all, like Biden can get it.
One thing to think about is like,
obviously the vast majority of people who die of old age
are getting social security the day they die.
So, for at least a minute or a week or a month or however long it takes, there's that process
of updating.
But part of it had to do with how the database was built.
And you just didn't necessarily remove everybody from the database.
It didn't mean they were getting money, but it meant they were in the database.
And so you could twist that into looking like this is what the president did in his speech.
It's true there's this database that all
these people from like, you know, a hundred years ago, it was not true that they were
getting checks. Okay. But he said the one part and your brain fills in the blanks. And
I think, Oh shit, there's like millions of people who are 150 years old getting, it was
not true. So, but, but the real thing is we don't trust the people who are supposed to be interpreting the data.
And that is like a societal problem.
It's not just politicians, right?
It's an erosion of trust in every institution where somebody is supposed to help us make
sense of this.
And I come out of the local, right, where we're a little more connected to reality because
if, like, if the roads are in shitty condition and I'm the mayor and I can produce
some statistics saying that the roads are great, people can call me out and say, no,
they're not.
I drive on these roads all the time and they're not.
And they're going to see you at the supermarket.
And they will find me and they will tell me what they think of the condition of our roads.
You get up to the national level and you're so removed from it that you start to get into
these alternate reality zones.
And then you add to that the fragmentation of where people get their information, because there isn't
the, you know, Walter, the famous example is Walter Cronkite, right? Like everybody
in the sixties like turns on Walter Cronkite. And it's not so much that he told people what
to think. It's that he laid out a certain set of facts, certain set of things that happened.
Everybody, they could argue over what it means, but they would generally agree on what just happened. And we don't even have that.
Yeah. We're in the echo chambers and the algorithms are just making those echo chambers more extreme.
So the algorithms are even worse. I mean, the other problem I would say is like,
we no longer have access to the editorial function, by which I mean like a professional
news organization. I used to get so mad at, ever from the South Bend Tribune
to the New York Times, there were times when I was so pissed
over a story or framing or whatever.
But I will say, if I actually found that they got something
actually factually wrong and showed it, they would correct it.
Like there was that ethos.
Ah, now there is no. Professional journalistic
organizations have to do that. But if we're in a world where somebody waits, like what some dude
on the internet says, the same as an organization where there are people who have to hold to
journalistic standards, if that's the same, that dude on the internet doesn't have to issue a
correction. He doesn't even have to reveal who he Right. I guess a lot of people looking at their feeds
and those two things seem equal. Also, yeah, go, go, go, go. The algorithm is going to
reward the more salacious version of that information. Yes. It rewards the lizard brain.
Yes. Because your lizard brain is talking. The thing we don't realize is every time we click on
something, look at something, let alone like something
or share something or I don't know, I'm still talking
on Twitter terms like an old man, but whatever the kids
are doing these days, you are actually making a statement
about your editorial preferences.
Yep.
You're not intentionally doing it.
You're not saying like, give me more.
But to me it's not just saying, give me more. But to me,
it's not just how they know us. It's there. We all have different levels.
It's like what we want and what we want to want. There's what we think is important.
This is why TikTok works better than Instagram.
How do you mean?
Because TikTok is what we actually want. And Instagram is what we want to want. We follow
all these people. We think we want information
about what's going on in the world.
But TikTok is like, motherfucker, I know what you want.
Just shut up, sit down and scroll.
And that's why we watch more TikTok.
And Instagram is trying to compete,
but the reality is we don't want to look
at all the people we follow.
But also because like both of those things are true.
Like both of those are us, right?
The me that clicks on the stupid bullshit, cause it's funny, is the same me as the
one who, if she just sat me down and said, okay, if I want to allocate like what topics
are covered in the hour I'm going to spend online today, would like try to like choose
the more high minded stuff, right?
They're both us.
They're both real.
Yeah, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
But the algorithm is empowering the lizard brain over the actual, like the citizen brain.
Yeah, it's less cognitive effort.
It's more cognitive effort to think about what you want to consume that day and put
some work into it.
Way less to just scroll.
Even though if it makes you better off in the same way that like reading a good book
might actually at the end of the time you read it, like make you better, like make you
feel better.
Guys, let's take a break real quick.
So we talk about the NBA playoffs.
Pete, it's not his bag.
You know what I mean?
Even though the men are in shorts.
Uh, out.
You're a fan finally.
Oh yeah, this is the time of year.
That's great, Nick's played two playoff games.
You watch both of them, I assume.
I mean, you know.
There you go.
So guys, missed 50% of the next playoff games.
Didn't go to a single regular season game.
Didn't watch game two.
I didn't watch game two. They lost, so clearly they Didn't watch game two. I didn't watch game two.
They lost so clearly they need my eyes to win.
I didn't watch game two either.
Exactly. They need our eyes.
They need New Yorkers eyes.
I don't know why that is.
It is the least important in a seven game series.
Yeah. When was game two?
Last night.
It was last night.
Right?
Jesus Christ.
I don't know. I wasn't about it.
It's like something about Detroit.
Like I don't even need to see Detroit.
Well it's 1-1.
So you might need to see Detroit. Yeah, I might 1-1. So you might need to see Detroit.
Yeah, I might need to. I might need to.
Game five, Tuesday, we're going.
Mmm.
You know, as long as Schultz can get on Celebrity Row.
Yo, we should go and then just heckle the fuck out of him.
Like we should get as close as we can to Celebrity Row
and just heckle the fuck out of Schultz.
Now we're talking. Y'all too cheap.
Last minute, you can get some tickets for cheap. So what do we got game three now that our eyes are going to be on it?
Now that our eyes are going to be on it.
We're going to watch game three.
So what do we got?
Nick?
Even though it's in Detroit?
Yeah.
Next game three.
What about Lakers T-Wolves?
I think the Lakers get game two that's
happening though before this comes out I think that's tonight. And I think game
three will go Lakers as well I think. Okay so Lakers taking care of that. I just
trust Luca but that's because I'm biased. Alright listen put your money where
Akash has put his money historically. Yeah. That's always worked out. Whatever team Akash is rooted for. If you guys want to give me back my
Bitcoin that'd be great.
For those of you who stole it from me, I'd appreciate that.
Stake is the leader in global betting in US social casinos,
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Now let's get back to the show.
You said one thing that's important for the Democrats is to, it's where they go.
And not just kind of staying in the echo chamber.
So you're coming on this podcast, which again, I commend you and thank you for,
but is that getting met with a lot of like,
I guess acceptance and like, oh yes, we should do that.
Or are you kind of the only Democrat doing this?
I think it sounds like your experience
has been not a lot of people in my party are willing to-
I'm begging these people.
Do this.
Yeah.
I think that's a mistake.
Yeah.
But yeah, I think, look, to be fair,
you know, if you're in politics, you know that anything you do, you can get you can get shredded
for. Even not something you do, but something that somebody sitting next to you does, and you
don't make the appropriate face or scold them for right. Right? Like, yeah. And there's even a,
like a contagion of cancel culture where like, if you're around somebody who does something,
right. And I want to parse like some of that's maybe legitimate and some of it is,
is problematic. Right. But all of that's there. And people who are running for office want to win.
Obviously they want to keep their jobs. And to me, it's worth some risk in order to reach everybody. And
again, that's partly the habits that I formed while I was an
unheard of, you know, 30 something year olds, Indiana
mayor running for president. So we did everything like we would
do CNN, if they would have me, but we would do I mean,
literally, like, Iowa College lesbian radio was like, I would
like do a show like anybody who would talk to me. I think that's better though, because
I think it better resembles what politics is supposed to be like politics obviously
has a bad name. People are pissed at politics and frustrated politics and hurt by politics.
But like, to me, politics is a process of making decisions about how we're going to have laws
and rules that all of us have to live by and how we're going to spend resources that all
of us are paying into.
And for that to make any sense, there has to be a process of encounter.
We have to be encountering people who don't think like us and don't view the world the
way we do, both in order to actually
legitimately become smarter and better and make better choices and have better positions
and just in order to persuade.
There's no persuasion now, or I think there's not enough persuasion.
And that's why we have these 50-50 elections, like this current election.
The president won, he says it was a landslide, but we used to have actual landslides in this
country, Reagan, that was a landslide, but like we used to have actual landslides in this country, Reagan, that was a landslide. And I think that my
party should aspire to be like a 60% party. And I think we could
do it because most of the issues that most people care about,
not all, but most issues, taxes, abortion, guns, educate, like
things that affect how your day to day life goes, healthcare for sure.
You think guns is one of them?
Yeah. I mean, maybe, look, obviously there's a big divide.
But we're talking about like, I think there's support for regulation,
there's support for background checks. But I don't know if I would like,
think about what it says. Sure, sure. But what I'm saying is like,
something like universal background checks, that's got like between 80 and 90% support.
Yeah, I think that certain Republicans are supporting.
And they're trying to reverse it.
And yet we don't have, yeah, like it's hard
to even hold on to what we've got, right?
So anyway, my point is like my party should be
by the numbers doing better than it does
because more people agree with us more of the time
on more policies than not.
And so yes, we have some work to do on policy too.
So what do you gotta change?
Like how do you just, sorry, how do you change that perception?
If you know that more people agree with the policies that you guys have, why aren't they
agreeing with you?
And what are you doing wrong?
I think the biggest problem.
Taking back on that?
Yeah.
So I think it's great going everywhere to speak to people.
One thing that I don't see happening from the Democratic Party is getting their message out and actually convincing people or letting
them know like, hey, we're doing stuff or these are the stuff we've gotten done. This
is something I don't like that Trump does, but it actually works with like permeating
the culture. Like he ran on, hey, I'm going to get all these criminal migrants out of
the country. And then he makes a video where you see all these guys
chained up coming off a plane going in.
That's messaging that you don't even need to understand.
You see it and it's like,
hey, he said he's gonna do something
and look, he's getting it done.
So it's like, I think he knows how to play
that social media game where it's like,
oh, I know how to speak to people.
And that's something Dems aren't doing at all.
So it's great that you go talk to other places,
but what other ways can you get your
messaging through to people?
The only one the only one that does it is is AOC and Bernie.
Yeah. And it's very specific and very targeted. And it works. And
it feels like everybody else is worried about, you know,
offending somebody or being yelled at by your constituents
or one of those groups that you're
supposed to be protecting.
Yeah.
So I think two things.
One, I think what they're getting right, which is also what Trump understands about politics
and attention, is that you can't be afraid of controversy.
And sometimes it takes controversy to get something recognized.
So part of why the country is talking about these deportations is there's a couple of
things that are traveling together.
Like one, like I think most people would agree with the idea that like violent criminals
shouldn't be here.
But then other things are happening.
Like they take some guy and just send him by mistake to a Salvadoran prison, right?
Which is obviously, first of all, a huge, huge problem,
like morally and policy-wise.
But in terms of the media games that he's playing,
even if it's bad luck to have screwed up in that way,
it helps him draw attention to what you're talking about.
In addition to like the social media pictures
of the being lined up in the chains.
I experienced this a little bit in our stuff
because when we did something,
when we like got a bridge or a road built, it was incredibly hard to get attention on that. Like we did it, like I was out there, go on TV, I'd wave the flag, we'd do an event, cut a ribbon.
But it turns out when something was uncontroversially good, it was way harder to get
anybody to notice. The projects we got the most coverage
on didn't get the most coverage because the project was really great, although I believe
in our projects. We did 70,000 projects around the country from like Little Airport thing
to like the Hudson River Tunnel. The projects that got the most coverage were the ones where
we caught a Republican congressman trying to take credit for the project after they voted against it.
Because it just created like a different, more interesting story. Right? So nobody would even
know that we were, or very few people would have ever heard that we were doing a rapid transit
project in Charleston, South Carolina, if the member of Congress there, Nancy Mace, hadn't
tried to take credit for it, and then got blown up on the internet because she tried to stop the funding from happening in the first place. So it's complicated to figure out
what lesson Democrats should learn from all this. But part of it, and part of what I think Bernie
and AOC are doing quite well, is they're not afraid of some controversy of naming bad guys,
of talking about kind of why we are where we are. And I think we need to...
So just addressing societal utility.
Like if you want attention for a project
that has to meet societal utility,
people have to need it, they have to want it,
and they have to feel like they're not allowed to have it.
And then you bring it to them,
and then they're really excited.
If people aren't tripping about a bridge,
or like worried about a second-hand new subway,
like I'm telling you, nobody's gonna care
when they see that subway.
And it's not gonna be anything
that you get patted in the back about.
But if there's something that people in New York City do really care about and they're
really concerned about, and you guys address it, you will be heroes.
It's the nature of what's...
I think so, but it is tougher when it just goes well.
No, I understand what you're saying.
I think that makes perfect sense.
We expect the roads to work, so when they work, we don't go great job, P, or whoever
is in control.
We expect the plane to land. We don't go. Matter of fact, if they applaud
for the captain, you're like, who are these cornballs? Like it's supposed to land, right?
Like that is like a reaction people have. But if there are things that we, and this
is, this is one of those situations where it's like, if there's things that we want,
the people want, and you are the one to bring it to us. You will be really applauded, especially
if we feel like we've been asking for it for years and nobody's listened to us at all.
I think if you do certain things for us, not you, somebody in your position, that we're not asking
for, right? And then go, but this is what you need. Now we're back at the finger wagging where we're
like, bro, I didn't even want that to be fixed. Why do you want credit for this thing
we're not even asking for?
So I think it's really about listening.
What do you think people actually in America,
what do you think people really need?
If there's five issues,
what are the things that they're concerned about?
All of them are some version of the same thing,
which is freedom and security.
And with that, I think democracy.
But really, I don't think a lot of people
like come up on the streets saying,
like, I want more democracy.
I think there's a way that's absolutely true.
But in terms of what people really want, I think people want to live a life of their
choosing.
They want things to work.
They want our country to be better than any other country in terms of the quality of our
roads and the strength of our economy and the kind of education they can get.
We want America to be the best place to live.
Roads.
We go all over the country.
Like we're actually weirdly good people,
comedians are good people to talk about
when it comes to like the different parts of this country
and how people are living
because we go every single weekend.
Every different weird obscure part of this country,
we're there. It's not just the big cities,
like we're everywhere.
And it's roads everywhere.
I ask people every time I go to a city because I want to know what's going on. I want to know what they're frustrated by. It's roads everywhere. I ask people every time I go to a city,
because I want to know what's going on,
I want to know what they're frustrated by.
It's roads every single time.
If, Pete, this day one you're like,
I'm fixing every fucking road in America,
and then you did, you'd be president.
Because it's something people are actually frustrated by
and they don't feel like the government is answering.
What are the other five things like that?
Okay, so that's one. Security are the other five things like that?
Okay, so that's one.
Security is the other one.
When people-
Well, before we get to security,
I think it was also like,
it seems there's a sense that you can afford
what you need in order to live.
Like, that's why prices are such a huge problem.
And it's why I think terrorists are the wrong medicine,
because they might make certain things,
or be designed to make certain things better,
but they don't make prices better, they make prices worse.
So affordability, housing, right? The ability to just believe that you get a job, or be designed to make certain things better, but they don't make prices better, they make prices worse.
Affordability, housing, right?
The ability to just believe that you get a job,
you get a promotion, you're gonna get a house,
or you're gonna get a better house.
All right, how do we do it?
Right?
So we gotta build more houses.
How?
Well, we've gotta strip away some of the barriers
to building houses.
Talk that, this is what I like, tell me.
Take back land.
What?
I don't know, it sounded fine.
I'm just saying, I want to see the Democrats
be a little more gangster.
Like Republicans would go, we're taking Greenland.
What is your build a wall?
What is your statement?
What is your outlandish thing that you might not do
but it kind of riles people up?
It gets the people going.
Like if you want to say, hey, we're going to seize this land
and we're going to build 200,000 affordable housing units
on it, that might make some people get excited.
It would get attention.
Yeah, it would solve for that controversy thing.
Attention is good.
Not exactly how I would solve the problem.
But yeah, point is like we need to.
I'm being facetious, but there is a truth.
There is some truth in it, which is like,
I don't know what the statement is for Democrats.
I don't know what your build a wall is.
And you need a version of that because those are the things that people attach themselves
to.
As Alex said, like, he's like, hey, we're deporting all these people who are here illegally.
And then you show the video and then people like, that's what I voted for.
And it's happening.
I feel good.
I thought the build back better that Biden tried to do was a good idea.
And then it failed fairly quickly.
And then that was just kind of the end of that.
I'm sorry.
I feel like the thing we're kind of skirting, like touching on a little, I'm curious what
you think, like it seems like from like a political philosophy point of view, it's easier
for conservatives when looking at like the conservative liberal paradigm.
Because for concert, like for liberals, they have to have a direction to go.
They have to say, where are we going to go?
And it seems like within the Democrat Party, there's a fracturing or like a bifurcating
where you have the anti Trump people that are like, we just hate Trump.
And then you have sort of the economic, you know, leftist liberal that says we need to
tax the rich.
And then you have sort of the social cultural war, you know, Democrat that's like, you know,
we need to support all the downtrodden people.
Different ideas for progress.
And it seems so, you know, spread and disorganized, whereas the conservatives just have to say,
let's go back.
And they can point at all the liberals and say, look how crazy they are.
Let's just go back.
Yeah.
It seems like it's way easier for the conservatives.
Oh, no question.
Yeah.
I mean, if the conservative project is just we're going to demolish, you know, government
is frustrating, irritating, doesn't always meet your expectations.
So we're just going to burn it down.
Or everything was better way back when.
So we're just going to take you back there.
Absolutely.
I mean, that's what Make America Great again is.
Exactly.
And the problem is like, but the reality is reality is there is no such thing as in the real world, there is no again.
The future is going to look different.
Look at the world we're going into.
We're going into a world where AI is transforming everything.
I think we're still at the outset of that.
We're going into a world where China is a very different kind of player than it was
not that long ago.
We're contending with some really heavy things that are going to require really original
thinking.
And part of, I think, where both parties have a problem is the kind of nostalgia.
So you've got the Republicans who are kind of nostalgic for the social order of the 50s,
like women are in their place and we don't have to worry too much about any kind of minority,
whether it's a racial minority or gender minority, asserting too much desire for freedom or equality.
Everything's just everybody's in their place.
Democrats have a nostalgia for this kind of New Deal and post-World War II order.
In terms of foreign policy, it's the post-World War II framework that we set up with the UN and NATO
that kind of made, you know,
was our response to everything that happened.
And then domestically, we set up this administrative state,
which solved a lot of problems,
but has now run the risk of collapsing
under its own weight, right?
So we've got to cure ourselves of our nostalgia
in my party and recognize that there's no going back.
I do think it's a bit unfair to say that about Republicans.
There is a faction of Republicans
I absolutely believe that about with a social order.
But again, you go to middle America,
and then it was very eye-opening for me.
I went to a city, I think it was Toledo in Ohio,
where I was like, oh, I expected a city,
and this place is decaying.
And any time I made a joke about it at a show,
they would laugh so cathartically, like find that someone gets it.
And I think when they hear make America great again,
I'm sure some people think about social order,
but a lot of them are probably thinking,
much like your town,
we used to have the Suda Baker or whatever here,
we used to have manufacturing here, bring that back.
The racial stuff, I don't care about that.
I just wanna make my city great again.
That was what America was to me.
But to your point, and to your point,
like what we had to do when I was mayor of South Bend
was to move on from that.
And it wasn't saying like we're done with manufacturing
and we're never gonna make things anymore.
It was saying we're not going,
there's no such thing as going back to the Studebaker days.
I'm just touchy because I think for liberals,
we often, well, I don't know,
liberals often will say that about conservatives,
oh, they like the social order.
And I feel that's a bit dismissive of their pain.
And not that, you are very good about,
I just think there's a messaging issue in the way
they're often talked about.
Sure, sure.
And we should come back to that.
I think the conservative,
if you look at the actual conservative governing plan,
though, not the talk, not the campaigning,
not the posturing, what they actually do.
I would say the biggest social policy commitment that they've made that they actually care about
to the point that they actually went through and kept it was to get rid of the right to choose.
Number one project, the Republican Party on the social side. That's one of the few promises
they actually kept. And then economically, the biggest promise they've actually kept is tax cuts
for the rich. Biggest thing that he did in his first term.
And right now, it's up for debate right now.
Literally, Congress is not getting as much attention because of all the other crazy things going on.
But it's more tax cuts for the rich and for corporations, right?
So to me, most of the stuff he said he was going to do, he didn't actually do.
He didn't do the big infrastructure bill he talked about.
We actually did it.
He didn't even build the wall.
That's the thing. Build the wall was like a galvanizing statement. It's not. We actually did it. He didn't even build the wall. That's the thing. Build the wall was like a
state of galvanizing statement. It's not like he actually did
it. Yeah, that's what I'm saying to you. But I want to do
something that you follow through on. Right? Galvanizing
statements, it's all bullshit. It's not good enough. Give me
something. What I'm saying is being hyperbolic. I can try to
break him. I'm being dead serious. I think it's on an
emotional level, even if it's not realistic. Okay, so this
brings us to the other thing that I think we've been skirting around a
little bit, right?
No, what I'm saying is tell people if you want to help them, say the thing that you
think they need help with out loud, directly, and say that you're going to do it, and then
endeavor to do it.
We already expect you guys not to do it.
So the least you could do is fucking lie to me.
You don't even lie to me. Like have the decency. It's like we're married. Okay. You're out there
cheating on me with Scandinavians. He's good. He's good. You're out there cheating me with
Scandinavians, right? You don't have to throw it in my face. Do you know what I mean?
Like at least just do the decency of telling me the thing that I want to hear and then
endeavor to do it.
Because right now I don't know what the, what is the platform?
What is the, the Republicans did an amazing job of making the Democratic platform feel
like this wasn't it at all.
This was completely wrong, but they made it feel like
we're going to let the school do whatever they want to your kids balls. Right. That's
no, that was their message for sure. And they talked about more about that than they talked
about the economy. College for they them is one of the greatest political ads I've ever
seen. No question. It was incredibly effective because it made it sound like that was all
we cared about. And you didn't have a message of something that you cared about that was loud enough to refute that.
Or again, controversial enough to get people as excited.
Because look, our message in a way is like-
What did you care about?
I want everyday life to be better.
That's what they want too.
You get up in the morning, yeah, but importantly,
all the controversies are over what that's like.
I want you to be able to get up in the morning,
and the first thing you do is you commute to work. And by the way, if you're on an EV, I want that to be
affordable for you. Or if you're on public transit, not to get back into the subway situation,
but I want you to have good public transit to get to where you're going. And then when
you get to that job, I want you to be paid well. And if you're about to have a kid, I
want you to know that you're going to have parental leave when you have that kid. And
if you don't want to have a kid, I want you to have the, the right to choose whatever kid, which means access to birth control and,
and abortion and those things that give you the freedom to decide on that.
And if you already have a kid, when you picked them up at school,
I want that school to be good.
Not having as funding slash while they'd set fire to the department of education.
And then when you get home,
I want you to be in a neighborhood that is safe and where you can breathe the
air because we didn't let them get rid of the clean air act.
And you don't have to think for one moment about whether the air you breathe or the water you drink is clean and clear, which actually takes a lot because it means the government has to
constrain those actors that would make you unfree by polluting the air and polluting the water.
And then when you go to bed, I want you to know that your family's going to be fine, even if it's
family like mine, despite there being some Supreme Court justice
who wants to obliterate your family
because it doesn't match his interpretation
of his religion.
Like, that's the life I want everybody to be able to live.
Yeah, I think-
And I think we can deliver that.
Cut that, that's-
Yeah, that's fine.
That's your problem over here.
Listen, listen, listen.
I'm fired up.
I liked hearing that.
I thought it was awesome, I thought it was beautiful. I know you want
that. Tell me that it's going to happen. And then how is it going to happen? That's the
difference between like, it's build the wall. And I keep harping on this, but I think it's
important for Democrats to understand the effectiveness of that statement. Build the
wall wasn't even about pow build a wall.
It was an idea that satisfied a concern that people felt.
So what are your ideas that are going to satisfy the concern?
What you just told me are all these things that I also want.
So now we're together, we both want the same things, but you didn't give me the solution
to the feeling that I have.
I too want a safe home.
You didn't say security guard outside of your door every night, whatever bullshit, you know
what I mean?
If it's more police on the street, whatever the thing is, punish petty crimes, whatever
the thing is.
So I think that there's a lot of Americans that are at the end of their hope, right?
And they feel really disillusioned and they feel this lack of trust that we've spoken
about today and simply wanting things that they want isn't enough.
I think that's when you said, like, current circumstances lead to a Trump victory.
It's not like Trump populism.
I think there was a rejection of the establishment for a lot of people.
And then hearing from Kamala that she wasn't really going to do anything differently, I
think that was a big mistake because I think people wanted a change.
So I think that's something that you guys should endeavor to do is tell us specifically
what you're going to do that satisfies those things we're feeling.
It seems you know exactly what we're feeling because that was beautiful.
I think we're all of us were like, yeah, you just hit it.
You knocked out the park.
But I need the statements that are going to satisfy those feelings because that's what
gets people to sway over.
And that's what they're fucking good at.
Yeah. The bumper sticker. They are. So what's a democratic bumper sticker?
I'm working on it. Fair enough. But that is the important thing. And I think people need
to know that we see them and we don't see them as the problem. Right? Because I do think
to the finger wagging point, so much of politics is about what people think you think of them, or how you make people feel about themselves.
Before people even start to decide what they think about you, they're thinking about how you make them feel about themselves.
And this is a struggle, especially because I belong to a party that has deep moral convictions.
And you could argue we take it too far, whatever. But like, we are propelled by a lot of deep moral convictions. And you could argue we take it too far, whatever.
But like we are propelled by a lot of deep moral convictions.
Whether we're talking about an economy where we think
that it's too easy for the wealthy and too hard
to work your way up.
Or whether we're talking about a society
where we're worried about racial justice
and marginalized groups, right?
But there is a way to engage people who don't start
with where you, you can't lead people to
where they already are anyway.
One thing I think about a lot is right around the time I came out, which is like a terrifying
thing to do as a like elected official in Indiana, right?
This was after you got back from Afghanistan.
Yeah, exactly.
What happened?
What did you eat out there. Honestly, what happened was, you know, you, when you get deployed, they tell you to write
a letter.
Um, and I still have it in a drawer somewhere.
Um, and it's the letter.
It's just as just in case on the outside.
Wow.
And, uh, it's everything from you that you want your loved ones to know from your internet passwords
to like how you feel your life went.
Right?
Everybody should do this, by the way.
You shouldn't have to wait to be sent to war to do this.
And I was a sitting mayor of my hometown because I was a reservist.
So I got deployed while I was in office and I just took a leave, stopped being mayor, started being lieutenant and went into my other job basically. So as a sitting
mayor of my hometown, I had a beautiful house, I had good friends, I had like a good life.
And that was part of what I wrote about in that letter. But in the back of my head, I'm thinking,
all right, but I'm also, I'm a grown ass man in a position of responsibility
and I don't actually know what it's like to be in love. And if I get back, I'm not going to let
that continue. Like whatever the implications, I'd rather deal with that than once again
contemplate the idea that I could go to my grave not knowing
what it's like to be in love.
So then, you know, it was awkward timing because it's actually the middle of a re-election.
But I took some time, like I took months to think through, okay, how do I do this?
How do I say this?
Like, what is that?
And then one day I did it.
I wrote a little op-ed in the local paper.
I said, I don't think this should be anybody's business, but I know it's a thing.
Here's something you should know about me. And it was fine. I mean, it wasn't fine. There were, you know, people, there was some ugliness around it. But like, you know, nothing ever happened that made me regret that I did it. But the story I was starting to tell was that sometime after that, when I started dating Chastain, maybe, I don't know, some months after that.
Did he jump on that immediately?
Was he like, oh hell yeah.
Did he slide into the DMs?
He was like, he's, he's, he's, you know what I mean?
Was that quick afterwards?
No, no, I found him.
Well, we were on, it was like, it was Hinge, you know, the dating app.
Yeah.
Wasn't Grindr.
Grindr's the Republicans.
I know everybody thinks that.
We do need to talk about why every time the RNC happens,
Grindr explodes.
I'm just saying, out him.
Seems like a lot of letters need to be written.
They don't serve.
So anyway, I met him, fall in love, start dating,
and I run into this woman I know, I think in the lobby of the county city building,
I'm walking into work.
I know she's a little more conservative.
And she comes up and she says, I ran into your friend and he's wonderful.
And it was one of those moments, right?
We were like, I think it was very important
that the thing to recognize is like for her,
she was signaling something pretty big for her.
Like, I don't know exactly, but I can guess
like how she thought about and talked about gay people
probably all her life.
But she knew me, she met him, he's wonderful.
Versus if I like treated her to a lecture
on the difference between a friend and a partner,
right?
Yeah.
You know, that would have pushed her right back into the arms of these people who don't
want anything like me.
So what I take from that is this broader process that needs to go on where we find people and
as passionate as we are and as right as I believe we are about the big things, even
though I'm open to the fact that we may not be right about everything. We're not telling people that they are bigoted or racist or whatever,
because they don't already start out in the same place that we are. There has to be that process
of kind of inviting people to look at things the way we look at things versus commanding them to.
And I think that is something that in the culture of my party has been especially challenging
in the last like 10 or 20 years.
But that we need to work through because again, politics is about persuasion.
It's about finding people where they are.
It's about how they feel about themselves.
I think there is a desire for belonging that is not just something liberals care about. I actually think the loss of belonging that happens
in a town like where I grew up, when you lose your auto job and the workforce development agency comes
along and says, good news, I found a job that you can get qualified for based on your education,
and it pays just as much, and you're gonna be a nursing assistant.
Yeah.
Maybe that's a perfectly good job, obviously,
but if the last 20 years of your life have been about,
not just the way you make your money,
but the way you see where you fit in the world,
is about what you know how to do in a machine shop.
And some well-intentioned person with a clipboard
is telling you, guess what,
now you get to be a nursing assistant. Like that is not finding people where they are. That's not because
something has happened to their sense of belonging. And, um, you know, we really care about belonging
maybe to a fault, but like we try to make sure that there is room for everybody at the
table in, in society and in different processes and in our politics. But if we really take that seriously, like if we really live up to that, that means recognizing
that some crises around belonging are a big part of why some people, many of whom voted
for the other guy this last time, are really prepared to just burn the house down and think
that's no worse than any of the other things that could happen.
So including them in those groups of people that you are looking out for.
Yeah, and meaning it.
You can't be persuasive about them unless you actually mean it.
I think that there's a really beautiful story about giving that woman grace and choosing
maybe to not correct her and understanding.
Now you had the benefit of having a relationship with that person and understanding maybe how difficult
it was for her to even come there.
And you both had this amazing experience
where you connected with people as individuals
before you knew things about each other
that might create some separation,
which is kind of a really awesome thing
about the human spirit.
It's like, once I kind of know who you are
as a dude or a chick, these are the things in your life, all of a sudden I thing about the human spirit. It's like once I kind of know who you are as a dude or a chick, like these are the things
in your life, all of a sudden I have a little bit more empathy for or understanding, or
at least want to understand because I like who you are.
But what a great experiment.
How do we get to that point?
And how do Republicans also do that?
This is something I've been, every time I go on like a really conservative podcast,
the trans discussion comes up.
What I've tried to explain, at least from my perspective, is both sides are trying to
protect kids.
They just think the protection is different.
I imagine the most benevolent part of the left is going, hey, these kids might be suffering
in the wrong body, and their parents might not create a space for them at home where
they can be their true selves.
And then parents on the right go, hey, I don't want to be in second place for the decisions made about my kid to the school.
Like, I don't even know the principal. Why are they like, and I have empathy for that, too.
And if how do we get to a point where we're not constantly trying to dunk on one another,
and we're actually trying to, like you said, meet people where they are?
Yeah.
How do we do that as a country in general?
The key word there is the empathy, right?
Like understanding.
So I think you put it really well, like having empathy for parents or students who are in
that position, which is terrifying, belonging to one of the most tiny and kind of harassed
minorities there is in the country, but also empathy for people who sincerely want to make
sure that sports are safe and fair and want to make sure that they have the most important
say in what's happening in deciding what's best for their children.
Like, these are like very human things that if you strip away all the layers of the politics of it, come from a place of very understandable concern and like humanity.
There is humanity in both positions. And I think that's lost in the dialogue sometimes.
Yes, which brings us in some ways back to the algorithm. So I think a big part of the
answer to your question is offline. There have to be spaces that are offline. Or at least that are not like shaped
by algorithms where these conversations happen. Because to your point, if all I know about
you is that you're, you know, some random account on Twitter or shitposting, like something
I really care about, then I'm going to assume you're an asshole. But if I know you, and
then we discover like we view these things in different ways, we're
away from the keyboards, right?
And it's a completely different conversation.
And I really worry, and sometimes this is coded as like a conservative worry, but I
think liberals should be just as worried about it, about things like neighborhoods
and faith communities and other sources of belonging and meaning that overlap the different political
commitments that we have.
Because it's in those spaces.
I mean, again, I think back to the military.
Like if I was getting in a vehicle to go outside the wire, like the other people getting in
a vehicle with me definitely did not care if I was a Republican or a Democrat or like
what country my dad immigrated from or if I was going home
to a girlfriend. Yeah
I'm really excited for the next hour. We're gonna talk about Malta
Like all they wanted to know obviously was that they could trust me to do my job same thing
You know vice versa because we're trusting each other with our lives every time we went outside the wire
Yeah, and to be clear. I was not into like a combat or maneuver,
you know, my job is just to like drive them safely to where they needed to go. But that,
that could be scary. That doesn't have risk. And I'm not the everybody should be in the military,
but like everybody should be in environments where you know people as people first. We start this way,
we grew up, families are like this.
Sports a lot of times.
For team sports, it's like this.
I agree with you a million percent.
You know how somebody handles themselves
in a tough situation and then you find out
how each of you comes in something.
That's just such a more honest and human
and ultimately respectful and decent process of encounter.
It's amazing how understanding we can be
when we have that type of relationship built first. Yeah. All right guys, let's take a break for a second.
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Like when you came out, did you speak to any of your military brethren and how did they
feel about it?
Yeah.
And some of them, like I got to tell you, like when I got to my unit, and by then,
I wasn't out, but I knew that I was gay, obviously.
And the gay jokes are flying around, right?
All the way down to, oh man, that memo
that just came down from the commands,
is that the gayest thing you've ever seen?
Sergeant, what's the gayest thing you've ever seen?
This is even gayer than that, right?
He talks like that.
Yeah. Animals. I know, to me it sounded of retro, but that was definitely how people were talking.
You know, 2014. Children, lower intelligence. But like, those seem like,
you know, they were all like, fine. Like they either made it clear that they didn't care,
or they found some excuse like unrelated to anything to like check on how I was doing.
didn't care. Yeah. Or they found some excuse like unrelated to anything to like check on how I was doing. Yeah. But that's endearing too because you know that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
And then a couple of people turned out, including somebody who I like turned to more than once
to volunteer for outside the wire drives that he didn't have to do with me. But I needed
somebody else who was qualified on a long gun. Turns out he was in the same boat. I never knew.
So you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've,
you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've, you! No, no, no. Okay, so, wow, so he was- Yeah, so, like, but to be like, we knew each other, we trusted each other, we understood
each other.
So, then we, like, went and suddenly agreed about politics.
Like, some of the people I've served with were, like, super conservative and still are, obviously.
But, like, yeah, we kind of, you know, that wasn't, like, central because we knew each
other, like, at a human level.
And you built that trust up with them.
Yeah, because we did something hard together, right?
Yeah.
That's so interesting because I feel like you're in a unique position to see both sides.
You know what I mean?
Because I feel like there's a perception from many people on the left, like, oh, these conservatives
are racist and homophobic and da-da-da, where I think many of them, at least my family and
all my friends in Florida that identify as conservative, they don't really care about
their friend being gay or living in communities with multi-ethnic
backgrounds.
It's not pressing for them.
And sometimes they will say things that are problematic.
They'll be like, yeah, I don't care if my friends are gay, but don't make my kids gay.
Which obviously is a problematic idea.
But the core of what they're saying, I think the feeling that comes through, you're able
to sort of understand in a way that I think a lot of people on the left don't.
Because they hear that and they go, well, you shouldn't say that.
But you can kind of be in a position to say, well, no, I understand what he's trying to
say.
He's just not saying it properly.
It's almost like you treat everybody like a grandparent at first.
Yeah, excuse me.
You know how your granddad could say something really fucked up, but he comes from a good
place and then eventually after meeting your friend who's
Asian and you convinced him that he's not Vietnamese and you're like
But there's love there and and empathy yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay
So can I just ask you are you familiar with white boy fun? No this term, okay
So this is when straight guys pretend to be gay with each other straight white guys straight white guys
Black guys are just getting on it and they're like they're doing really good. They're like really coming around
Al's usually happens. Yeah
But okay, so so if you did you never see any that in the military where guys will like do little gay jokes with
each other and that kind of stuff like
Vaguely, I mean that's like half of middle school humor like yeah, also just like in your 40s, whatever
Okay, okay, so like during this and during this and it's not like
To me, it's not like shrouded in like any like hatred for gays
It's more about just
like how can I do something that potentially makes my troll my friend or makes him feel
uncomfortable in this moment right? Are you ever in those scenarios and at this time you
know you're gay but you're not out and then they're doing this game with you with like
I'm gonna make Pete feel so uncomfortable and you're like jokes on you. Not really. No, but I know like that.
Yeah, that happens to a lot of people really in this situation where like there's this
is something just like one of the few minorities that like it's not obvious to everybody whether
you're part of that minority, right? Yeah. Unless you decide to tell people. Yeah. And
so, yeah, I've definitely know that like that kind of thing can happen,
but I can't off the top of my head think of an encounter like that.
Think of those things. Okay. All right. You finally come out.
Yeah. Okay. And I'm glad we waited to the end of the
episode to talk about this because I have so many questions about it, given your situations
in life, but I didn't want to feel reductive, like this was your whole identity.
I actually kind of wanted to get to know you before I asked about two things, which is
ironic we're having this conversation right now.
But like, okay, so you come out, like, scariest thing you've been at war, you should be like,
is it more terrifying than doing a drive where an IUD could go off?
And like, what is the fear level?
Yeah, I mean, I had my blood pumping just as much for sure. Even when it's not totally
rational, telling my parents was not easy. And I had it way easier than most people.
My parents were like very loving and very kind of socially liberal. Like it was not
actually a problem.
Did they know or were they surprised?
They didn't, if they knew they didn't say
anything. I think they noticed a certain point that I wasn't bringing girlfriends around.
Are you like gold star or platinum? Like what do you know about this? Oh right, yeah. Justin
tried to explain this to me once. I feel like you're still learning how to be gay. I'm not really the best representative of my people.
No, I'm not.
Gold, okay, so you've...
What's platinum?
Platinum is you come out C-section, so you never even touch a vagina.
No, I'm neither gold nor platinum.
Alright, fair enough.
Okay, so in that process...
That's really a thing.
Like I go all the way back to... These are what my gays tell me. My gays tell me these things.
So, in this process, you're dating girls, you're like, I don't really know...
At what point are you like, okay, I'm definitely gay, and is there a part of you where like,
I have these aspirations to do these other things in my life. And this isn't my entire identity. Are you going in that moment? Do I stuff
this down? Have you accepted it? Or have you not accepted it?
Like from mayor in the closet?
Yeah, my entire 20s were like this. Like, because by then,
like, I wanted, I really, really wanted to not be gay. Right?
Because I mean, separate apart from wanting to have a life in
public service, like in Indiana, like I don't think most kids, I don't think most gay kids growing up in
Indiana in the nineties, like if you really gave them a choice, right?
Yeah. Absolutely.
And so part of that was like, okay, like I dated this like string of amazing women and
like over time, like it was just very clear as amazing as they were that like the things
that are supposed to happen in terms of the way you feel about and fall in love with somebody,
like that's, you know, I'm not saying it's just process of elimination. Like there are
other ways you know who you're attracted to, but like you can pack that away.
Once you came out, you must have made them feel so good.
Right? They got over that rejection.
Yeah, they all did.
You're the only guy who was like, it was me and told the truth.
But I knew actually before I became like years before the Afghanistan deployment coming out
and all that, my first election, I won the primary.
And the way things were shaping up, I knew that I would probably win the general
election, I was probably gonna be mayor. And that was like, a
huge leap in responsibility. Obviously, I had been like a
consultant and, you know, I was a military officer. So I, I knew
that like, I should not be in a position of that kind of responsibility
unless I've resolved this in some way. And if I'm not ready to come out to the world,
I got to come out to somebody because that's the best way I can come out to myself. If I've just
told even one person, then it's kind of real and I'm no longer kind of like in that fog mentally.
And so I like took a deep breath and just a good buddy of mine from over the years,
one of my best friends over beers and I'm just like, look, I tell you something.
And one of the first things he said, he kind of patted me on his shoulder and said, you
know, you do it. I'm not into you like that.
He was straight. We felt like you didn't exactly make it easy on yourself. And what he meant
was that my, you know, my career, to the extent I had a career, there were two parts to it,
right? There was the majority of it, which was public office in Indiana.
And there was the other part,
which was service in the military, as a service.
And by the way, that was still Don't Ask, Don't Tell
back then too, right?
So I could literally be fired,
which is another reason I didn't come out too quickly.
And anyway, it was that process of like,
just coming to terms with that and just knowing
even if I wasn't ready to tell everybody, you know, like deal with everything that went
with it.
And in my case, I wasn't going to start dating either because I didn't want to like, I don't
want to be like hiding a boyfriend or like that just seemed really unhealthy.
And yeah, I was so invested in my work that for a while I wasn't missing.
I mean, I want to say I wasn't missing much.
I didn't feel that I was missing a lot because I had this, I used to joke that the city was
a jealous bride.
And then it was my whole, we talked about my deployment experience that put me over
the edge.
When did you first start to think, oh, okay, I might be gay.
And then what was the gap between that and being like, I can't hide this, I can't compartmentalize this,
this is what it is.
And what are you going through mentally
and emotionally in that time?
I mean, there's years and years and years of that, right?
Like, I mean, it's some level when you're a teenager,
like there's some data,
there's some pretty strong data points, right?
But the things you can tell yourself,
if you really want something to not be true,
the things you can tell yourself
to try to make it not be true are, are pretty
powerful, right? I mean, you, you know, you can tell yourself
like everybody, you know, at like, 14 or 15, every, every
dude, you know, seems like they want to nail anything that
moves, right? So like, you can convince yourself like, Oh,
it's just like, everybody's all over the place. And I'm just
like, you know, and then like, you? So like you can convince yourself like, oh, it's just like everybody's all over the place now. I'm just like, you know, and then like you start noticing like more of a
pattern, especially when you're dating women and it's like not. And there's a lot of extrapolating,
right? You're like watching like a straight love story and you're like trying to like relate to it.
And yeah, I think by the time I was like, you know, mid to late 20s, I was like, okay,
this is, I can't, first of all, I can't like waste women's time or mine.
Yeah.
Messing around like hoping that somehow I'm like,
Those are valuable years for them.
Because like that, there's a point where like that's not a fair thing to do to somebody.
100%. And also like wasting my time and you know. Because like that, there's a point where like that's not a fair thing to do to somebody.
100%.
And also like wasting my time and you know.
That's crazy.
You've dated more women than me.
Yes.
These guys have only been with one woman each.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you're a straighter kind of in a lot of ways.
And then, oh, sorry, fast forward just a little bit.
So now you're happy, you're out, you're in a relationship, and then you choose to adopt
twins.
Yeah.
Black twins, respect.
How has fatherhood been?
Crazy.
Like nothing I have ever attempted or done has come anywhere close, has been as rewarding
or as hard.
Like, I knew it would be more rewarding based on what everybody said.
I mean, you never really know, right?
Until it's you.
I didn't understand how hard it would be. I didn't understand how physically hard it would be,
like in those first weeks. And I say, obviously, you know, men relate to things differently. Like,
I didn't have to like, you know, neither one of us had to go into labor. But the, just the first few
weeks where like, they tell you that they tell you they need to feed every
three hours or so, right?
They don't mention that they that means they need to start to feed every three hours.
Oh, yeah, you got it.
And our daughter had this reflux thing where you couldn't really lay her down after feeding
her.
So it was really like at least an hour and a half upright.
And anything else you want to do, you have to do in between.
Like you start the clock,
you're feeding them and there's two of them.
And you got the bottles.
We had this like contrast, it's like pillow you could use to actually bottle feed two
twins at once, which is amazing.
Or is like fake breast?
No, there's just like, I don't even know if that's a real thing or not.
There's this like fake image that goes around online of me with one of these like contraptions,
which I didn't know it existed.
I don't know if it's a real thing or just someone being a dick, but, um,
Oh yeah. This is like a whole thing. There's like a right wing account. It's like this
like contraption, like fake breasts, like a mechanism with fake boobs. Maybe that is
the thing. I don't know, but like, I just use like bottles like you might expect.
And that was just like the first few weeks and months.
And then both of them had some medical challenges early on.
The one of them had extremely, extremely serious medical problem, which he recovered from.
That was the most terrifying thing in my life.
And then it's hard to believe because we were fighting, they were also kind of early
premature.
It's not unusual with twins, but especially in their case.
And we fought so hard just to get them on the chart.
Like you would count down to the millimeter, like how much food they're taking, you know,
how much they're taking.
And now like, there's like wolfing down, he'll like take one of those on crustables.
Because their kids are three and a half now yeah
arsenal take one of those uncrustables and just like just the entire thing
one bite and i think like how in this short of a time has that happened and
just every day there's this new challenge and you have to
just like relate to what is a big deal to them
um which is even harder than relating to somebody on
the opposite end of the spectrum, right?
Because like you have to, obviously part of your job is to like teach them what does and
doesn't matter and what to care about.
But we do the other day, just two days ago, our son came into the kitchen and he was playing
out on this little deck that we have.
Yeah, it's a wooden deck.
And he says, I need a bandaid, I got a boo boo.
I'm like, oh, show me.
And he lifts up his foot and it's clear that what he's actually got is a splinter.
And he has some idea of what a splinter is, but not really.
And then Chastain and I start.
Chastain was more on the ball than I was as usual and starts preparing a thing of warm
water to soak his foot in to try to help work it out. And that doesn't exactly like do anything right away and plus it starts hurting and by the time we got to the tweezers
it was like
It was like a civil war
Baby about it. Yeah, you're deep in there. Pull that stuff up.
It sounds like comical now, but like to him,
like he's three, he doesn't know.
It's terrifying for him. And like, I'm trying to hold him
cause he's also a moving target and Chas has got the
tweezers and then we're both starting to feel this guilt
about like, is one of his foundational memories going to be
plus like holding him while he's like shrieking in pain
and afraid. And then,
as the splinter comes out, and, and chest like, I got it, it's out. He's like, weeping shrieking
goes, thank you. And there's just these moments you just can't script, like you can't see them
coming. And, and every day, it's like some new challenge, our daughter, like you can't see them coming. And every day it's like some
new challenge. Our daughter loves asking me now about my work, which is actually a really
healthy way to be forced to explain what I do all day. So this started happening when
I was secretary. I put her down at bedtime. There's a whole bedtime ritual. This is coming
your way. How old is your-?
14 months.
Okay. So you're getting there where like the proceed, talk about like the administrative
procedures act was one thing when I was trying to build a bridge, but like just to like extract
myself from the room, it's like, did you tell the neighbors to be quiet? Yes. Yes, Penelope.
I told the neighbors to be quiet. And then Gus is like, are you going to scare away the
dinos? I was like, yes, if any dinos come here, I'm going to scare them away. And there's
this like whole like ritual checklist you got to go through.
Right?
But as part of it, she's like, tell me your work.
And I'm asking her, after she said it two or three times at bedtime, like, does me talking
about my job help you go to sleep?
And she says, yeah.
And the first time she was thinking.
Curiosity is such a good trait though.
Yeah, you want to nurture that and you want them to relate to what you do.
So the first time I was thinking, well, tomorrow I'm testifying in the appropriations committee
and then I got to make sure that we get this regulation out.
That probably doesn't make sense to her.
But then gradually I realized I could say, I'm going to make the airplane safer tomorrow.
Or there's a bridge that broke and I'm going to help
make the bridge get the bridge back together. And she relates, she's like, are you bringing
tape? No, actually this one, like this one's even too big for tape. It's like, oh, a hammer.
It's like, yeah, some hammers are definitely going to be involved. And having to explain
what you do to a three year old is actually a pretty good exercise in thinking about what
really is important. Talking to Americans.
It's hard.
Like now, so I teach a day a week, I teach at the University of Chicago.
And so I realized I could explain that to her.
She's like, tell me your work.
Well, I'm a teacher for grownups.
And she thought about it for a while and she said, but I thought you were our papa.
I was like, well, yeah, yeah, I'm definitely your papa.
That's my most important job,
and I'm also a teacher for grownups a little bit.
And then she says, it's hard to be both.
And I was like, yeah, worth life balance, that's the thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But-
She's like, contractors suck.
You're like, I know.
Yeah.
Oh man, our little guy Gus, like a lot of boys,
he's like all about heavy equipment and construction
stuff.
And so he's super excited.
There's this massive road project going on in Traverse City, Michigan, where we live,
which I mentioned was funded by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and signed off by
the Department of Transportation.
So that's why you did it.
Just saying.
So you say that, another example of caring about rules.
Like I sent that one back three times to be like triple checked
because I saw it on the list and I knew that I live close to it.
I was like, I need to make sure that the career staff certified
that this is a deserving project.
Otherwise it looks like I sent a project to my neighborhood.
Like that's the kind of stuff you worry about
or you should worry about in public office.
But there's all this heavy equipment.
There's excavators
and bulldozers. He's really monitoring them. If it's ever after hours, he's like, why aren't
the workers working? I'm wondering the same thing.
I want them working overtime. What's overtime? Bub's is Sunday, like they're not working.
And he's like, why aren't they working?
But it's the best thing, it's the hardest thing.
Have you thought about like when your son gets older, his experience in the world, probably
different from yours, like how would you have those convos with him?
Or even let's say your daughter, like learning to deal with her hair. It's gonna be a little
difficult like how have have you thought about these things? Yeah we think about
all the time. It's not like we have it all figured out. So we were in... But if anybody
knows how important identity is. Yeah of course. So we were in what's called a
surprise adoption scenario. So we literally we got I was at work I was
traveling I got we got a phone call. Chastin called me.
And the next day we were in a rural Midwestern hospital holding him in our arms and they were like one day old. Like it was like that. Like just from like normal life to and by the way,
it's twins, which was amazing. We were just on a list. You know, we said that we were willing
to adopt. We wanted to adopt. We said that we were willing to adopt, or we wanted to adopt.
We said that we wanted to adopt without regard for race.
By the way, anybody who says race is not a thing in this country should experience an
adoption process where there are literally different lists.
If you say that you want a white kid only versus if you say that doesn't matter.
Like literally a different list.
What is that?
What do you mean by that?
The list for white kid only is longer. And not only that, there was actually a discount
or you didn't have to pay a deposit on the fee. This is like how it works. I couldn't
believe it. So we didn't know anything about the racial identity of the kids until they
started to look mixed race, which
they are. And like contending with like the hair thing is already like a thing and like lots of
advice, especially from like black parents who like see stuff on Instagram or they're like,
let me tell you how to do it. And like to begin with, like the idea of being a girl dad and
dealing with girl hair was pretty intimidating. My hair is very simple and straightforward.
I'm a low-maintenance kind of guy.
Starting to learn about all the different products that are involved, him too.
We have a whole sequence with a conditioner and then essential oils, all this stuff.
You're already constantly asking yourself, how can I be a good dad?
Now it's like, how can I be a good dad for kids who have a different racial identity
than I do?
And how can I help them navigate that?
And what are the circumstances where there's nothing I can do to help them navigate that?
And I need to connect them up to mentors and people in their lives because the reality
is like, this is not a colorblind society and like their lives will
be affected in some way by their racial, all of ours are, but one thing about being white
is you don't have to think about the fact that when you're white, your racial identity
is not something that you're reminded of all the time in a way that they will be.
And we live in a not super diverse, although it's getting more diverse part of Michigan.
But our hope is that they will,
by the time they're old enough to even be wondering
and thinking about these things,
which I know is coming sooner than we think,
that they know that they are loved and that they are safe
and that they're growing up into a world
that has so much possibility for them. And that will be there for
them anyway we can. But it's pretty humbling, like as a parent, to know that you'll be navigating.
Are you, let's say, for example, in some hypothetical scenario where you run for
president, let's just say, obviously nobody has plans for that, but let's just say, potentially,
you wouldn't be announcing that here
But you can as he takes sip of water
There must be concern about
The potential scrutiny on
Not only you but like your family like all these people become public figures and unfairly so, you know
How do you manage that like What your kids can go through?
They're going to stay through unfair things.
How do you process all that?
It's tough because they didn't sign up for this.
I mean, it's hard enough on Chaston, who's an adult, but he didn't exactly sign up for
this either.
He's supportive.
But when we ran for president, obviously that was really hard on him and very costly for
him in all kinds of ways.
And that much more so for little kids.
And one of the worst things about politics is how little regard it shows for the people
who go into public service and their family.
Even just the fact that when somebody leaves an office or decides not to run, if they ever
say, I want to spend more time with my family,
that is immediately taken as code for like,
I got caught in some scandal.
Like I did something wrong, right?
First it's like, we should celebrate that.
Like if somebody wants to spend more time with your family,
like that's a really good way to spend your time.
Part of what I've really been leaning into
just these last few months, being out of office,
like working but not working at the pace,
the extreme pace that I did is that like,
I'm usually the one to drop them off at school every day and I'm just like in their lives
more and it's wonderful.
But yeah, the costs are enormous.
And one thing that makes you really think twice about running for any office and definitely,
you know, the highest doing national politics is that, you know, lots of people wind up paying into that.
And not all of them had a say.
What does that?
What do you mean paying into that?
Well, they're sacrifices for your kids are sacrosanct.
So all these people pay the price for some might say your ambition.
But if your ambition is to do something that would make the country
a better place for your children, I imagine there's a way that you can justify that sacrifice
that they would go through.
Yes.
I don't want to be answering the question for you, but I'm just curious how you balance
all those things.
No, yeah.
I talked to a lot of... I took a hard look at running for Senate just now because the
Senate seat in Michigan where I live came open.
I decided not to, and there were all kinds of reasons why. But part of what was on my mind was that
I really was looking to spend, certainly this year, really putting family first. And I talked
to a lot of people who were in the Senate or in Congress and they talked about the price
that their families paid, but also at a certain point, their kids were old enough to be really
proud of what they did that made a difference and set a good example of public
service and made their lives better.
But look, if you're like, if you hold yourself to a tough standard, you have to ask yourself
whether that's, whether you're really not confusing your personal ambition with your ambition
for the country.
Right?
Like when you run for president, you obviously reveal that you're an ambitious person.
Right?
Hopefully, you do it because you have ambitions for the country.
But there's something selfless about it and there's something selfish about it.
Right?
There's something selfless about going through the extreme pace and the hard work and all of the
bullshit and all the risk and the very real chance that you'll lose and all the other things that
happen. Right. But like also, unlike the other people in your family who are coming along for
the ride, like you get like your name is on the poster and you get to, to, you know, have all of
the, these experiences and, um, if it goes well, you get celebrated
in all kinds of ways, right?
And you're always asking,
or you should always be asking yourself,
okay, why exactly am I doing this?
And it's really hard to separate those things.
I mean, nobody can perfectly separate those things.
But I do know that there are things that are not worth,
things that are more important than winning,
and things that are more important than running,
which again is why I'm not running for Senate right now.
What drew you to public service in the first place?
You're a graduate from Harvard, you're a McKinsey,
you have the opportunity, obviously a brilliant guy,
to make millions of dollars and live your life in privacy.
But yet you sacrifice all of that for a more meager pay and more public scrutiny.
So I grew up in a family in a household that was,
it was not politically connected.
Like I don't remember meeting any elected officials
when I was growing up.
But it was very politically aware.
Like my parents were the kind of people,
especially my dad, who would be like always watching the news,
always talking about whatever was going on on the news.
And kind of I think built in me the idea that the most important thing out there was kind
of what's going on in how decisions are being made about our country and about the world.
And so I had that in me even when I was a teenager and I thought I was going to be airline
pilot.
That was my real like first ambition.
And by the time I got
to college, I was really, really interested in public service, but I didn't understand
how compelling and exciting local public service was going to be. And then we talked about
my hometown a little bit, like everything that South Bend had gone through. And I watched
that over the years and thought about making a difference. But even then I didn't know
it would mean running.
But by the time I was at McKinsey,
which is very comfortable is the wrong word,
because you worked very hard there,
but it's very nice job in a lot of ways.
It's good pay. I was making six figures out of grad school.
It was good money.
Flying to all these interesting places,
working on interesting stuff.
But within a year or two, I figured out that, like, I remember one time I was working on this kind
of interesting, complicated set of problems about grocery pricing, and I was running this database
and doing my job. And it was intellectually interesting. But the more I got into it,
I remember this moment where I got up to get a cup of coffee and I just had this thought hit me that was like, I don't care. And once I realized that, that like
at some deeper level, I cared about doing a good job, but I didn't like viscerally care that like
this company that we were consulting for would go on to do better than its competitors, right?
That was not where it propelled me.
And I realized that even if there was less money in it, I was going to be both happier
and more effective, more productive, working on something that I did care about, something
that was important, not because a client was paying me to care about it, but because it
just mattered in and of itself.
And then, I don't want to get into like the entire long story, but we talked earlier about
Kokomo, Indiana, Howard County.
So that's got thousands of Chrysler jobs.
And while I was having this struggle, advocacy over whether I really wanted to keep being
a consultant or not, I saw that the state treasurer of my home state of Indiana was, for very ideological reasons, trying
to block the Obama administration from saving Chrysler. So the auto company was about to
go under, all of them were. The administration intervened and they figured out a way to basically
bail out and save these auto
companies so they get back on their feet and keep employing thousands and thousands of people across
the country. And because I grew up in South Bend where an auto company had collapsed,
and because I had visited Kokomo where there was an auto company that hadn't collapsed,
but I knew what would happen if it did, I was really, really fired up about this guy,
the Indiana State Treasurer, going all the
way to the Supreme Court trying to sue to stop those companies from being saved.
And there's a whole crazy legal theory of how he got to be the one to do it.
But what he was really doing was politically, he obviously, state treasurers are not very
prominent, but he picked this big fight with Obama and it got him on TV and it was kind
of a political maneuver.
I see.
I thought like the state treasurer should be the most boring job in government, right?
You shouldn't be like out on crusades, especially ones that if you get your way, it would destroy
auto jobs in a place that counts on them.
So I started asking who's going to run against this guy.
And this is 2010.
It turned out like nobody in my party was going to run against him.
Probably because everybody correctly figured out that a midterm election in a state like Indiana for a downballot
like obscure race like running for state treasurer, like you're probably going to get crushed.
And I ran and I got crushed.
But I learned everything there was to learn about campaigns.
I went to all these chicken dinners in 90 counties in Indiana and shook hands and introduced
myself and
tried to explain why I thought that there needed to be a different approach in that
office.
And then as soon as that ended and I got beat and I was figuring out what to do next, was
it going to go back to the firm or get another job?
That was when the longest serving mayor in the history of my city said he wasn't going
to run again.
And all those conversations that I've been having over
beers like buddies from high school after we'd grown up,
and mostly moved out because we all got
the message that success meant moving out.
We're always saying like, what's going on back in South Bend?
Why can't they grow more?
Why can't we? Why don't young people believe in that place?
Started to feel like we could maybe do something about that.
So we had this crazy idea to have me run for mayor and just have a totally different
message than any of the other people, Democrats mostly, who were running.
And then we won.
So that was kind of my path.
I always cared about this stuff, but I never would have guessed that I would run for state
treasurer or that I would really find meaning in local government.
And obviously did not think when I was running for mayor
that I was going to turn around and seek the presidency.
If it weren't for all of the unique things that were going on in our country in 2019,
at any other moment somebody like me never would have run for president.
That's fascinating. When we had Vivek on,
and I'm naive, living in New York,
there was a moment where they asked him,
you can't be president because you don't believe,
or they said to him, you can't be president
because you don't believe in Jesus Christ.
Something to that effect.
Like, do you believe in Jesus Christ?
And they made it a moment.
Just keep going, I'm gonna use the bathroom real quick.
Sorry, keep going.
So I guess I'm curious,
and I hope this doesn't sound reductive,
but from your perspective,
do you feel like America is ready for a gay president? And do you feel like that will be a major contention point if you were to run?
Yeah, it was definitely, it was definitely a thing last time around. Although a lot of people were,
I think in my party, especially people like get ahead of themselves or they get really wrapped
up in this where there's only one way to actually find out and that's to like go to voters and see
what they're ready for.
I don't think a lot of people thought that my Indiana city was ready for a mayor who
was gay.
When I got reelected after coming out, I had a higher vote percentage than the first time
around.
I would like to think that's because I did a good job, but also it meant people didn't
care that much.
Yeah, they didn't care.
I was shocked when Obama won.
I didn't think the country was ready for a black president.
By the way, Indiana went for Obama. I think that's really interesting. That state had
not voted Democratic since LBJ. The idea that the person who would flip it for the Democrats
was not Bill Clinton, not John Kerry. It was Barack Hussein Obama, right? Was not something if you were sitting around,
I don't know, six months before he got nominated,
saying, all right, who's the like safest choice
who would even put Indiana on the electoral map?
You wouldn't have said Obama, right?
But I think the lesson from that is that
you can overthink these things.
In the end, like the only way to find out the answer
is to like get out there and try.
And I don't wanna compare like,
obviously this is like very different. But whenever there's some like
artificial barrier people make up for why somebody can't run or can't serve, I think
you just got to test it. Yeah. Yeah. Looking forward to it. Go ahead. Oh, you got, oh,
it's on a different subject. You're probably, oh, my, I have I have to. Bunch of. So China, you brought up an early interview.
I hate to pivot back to this,
but I do want to get some clarity from this.
And I think one good thing the tariffs have done,
the Chinese are, whether it's propaganda or not,
my Instagram now is nothing but Chinese electric vehicles.
I've been ranting to them for days now.
I'm like, oh, these guys are so far ahead of us.
They have people coming forward.
Andrew sent us an Instagram today of someone from China saying, hey, you know what happened?
These billionaires in America took all this money, kept it for themselves in China. They
built up the infrastructure. I don't know if any of that is true, but it does seem like
this is a very real threat. And it does seem like they're ahead in certain ways that we
might not be ready to catch up for. What can we do? As I'm asking you to think, because it's
obvious you understand one-year, five-year goals like needs very well.
10, 20, 30 years and when you said it's important for Americans to be
number one. 30 years from now, how are we number one? What's your ideas for that?
Yeah, I think it's gonna be really tough for America to stay number one unless we
do certain things right away. First of all, it's going to be really tough for America to stay number one, unless we do certain
things right away.
First of all, it's back to basics.
It's taking care of our own infrastructure, our own education system.
It's making it easier and more affordable to raise a family here.
Just like all those core things that you don't think of as international policy.
But if you do them right, then you get international privacy.
The same way that part of how we won the cold war and beat the Soviet Union.
It wasn't obviously like there was a military side of that, but like their military was
formidable too.
Right?
The real like inarguable massive advantage we had was that there were way more people
living in the Soviet Union who wished they were living American lives than anybody in
America wishing they could live a Soviet life.
Right?
On some level, I think that was everything. That was how America truly came to be number one. So first of all,
take care of the basics at home. But also we need to recognize that we're going into a
ferociously competitive world stage here, where we can't just keep trading off the glories of
having won World War II, which is pretty much how we were able to build the international system the way we like it over the 50 years that followed. And recognize that
every country is not like just on its own finding its way toward liberal democracy.
That comes and goes. I believe it's actually on the wane in our country and I'm trying to do
something about it. But it's eroding in places like Hungary.
A lot of places were more democratic 10 years ago than they are now.
So we've got to recognize that this is going to require a level of investment in technology
and a level of commitment to our values that both earns friends and establishes the kind
of economic power that you need in order to, alongside your military power,
in order to be number one.
I really worry that what we're in right now
is a mode that's gonna make it not so much America,
America first has to be America in first place,
to do it right.
If it's America first the way they're doing it,
I think it means America alone.
And we become just like another country out there,
scrapping for advantage. But to your point about China, like, one of the things
that the last administration did that I believe in is dealing with Chinese EV, unfair competition
from the Chinese EV market. We should be making those here. The other part of the story I
was telling you about, about Indiana, Howard County, where those Chrysler jobs were, and
St. Joe County, where I grew up, and were, and St. Joe County where I grew up.
And a lot of places in Michigan where I live now is the EV battery factories.
There is a three or four billion dollar GM battery factory going up on the western edge
of the county where I grew up that is bigger than any manufacturing investment that happened
there in my entire life.
China is making big bets in EV.
It's not because they're, I don't believe the Chinese Communist Party is terribly concerned
about being first in climate change.
They understand the geostrategic implications of owning the 21st century vehicle market,
the way we did the last century.
So is that an example of where it could be appropriate to use tariffs?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
But again, we got to know what we're doing.
And maybe this is touching on what Andrew was saying earlier
about build a wall.
Can you give me an idea of something you would wanna do?
And again, this might be exactly what you were saying.
What's something you would do to make me feel better
as a guy who's looking at them and being like,
oh, 600 mile batteries and fucking floating on air
or whatever.
What is an idea you would have?
It's like, just in the global scale,
how America can compete.
You mean like a tech idea?
Or just, yeah, this factory can go up that would create these jobs
just kind of anything that I can grasp it to feel some hope. I mean I think I think at the end of
the day we can do the clean tech stuff better. But better than them or better than both?
Clean tech what does that mean? Like anything like from electric vehicles to solar energy
installations all that stuff.
We can do it better, but we have to make a commitment as a country that we are going
to invest in that.
It doesn't just happen.
There's this fiction that all of the things we see around us in the marketplace just came
around without any policy choices.
There were huge policy choices that made the automobile possible in this country.
Subsidies on everything from fossil fuels to the interstate highway system.
We need to make similar choices around owning the clean tech market for the future.
Owning AI, I think we have a real problem with China could very well
legitimately outpace us on AI if we let them.
Getting AI right is not just for
the tiny proportion of people who understand how to
code large language models and stuff
that I can't even get my head around.
It's making sure that as a society,
like part of our education is like
people understand how to deal with AI.
The same way that like you can't say somebody's
educated and can graduate into
the workplace if they don't know how to use email. Or, you know, it's a competency more than like a technical
expertise. Which is why I was a little bit alarmed when I found out that our US education
secretary today thinks there's something called A1 and read a speech about how we need to do more
with like clearly not a lot of conceptual. Instead of AI?
Holy shit. Oh, wow.
I think she's just like reading a prompter.
Is this Linda McMahon?
Yeah, right?
I'm not making this up.
Oh no, Linda.
It's over.
Department of Education.
We need to make sure that it's an issue.
We gotta make education A1.
That's what she does.
We gotta make it A1.
I mean, so, you know, you're right to be worried.
Yeah.
Me personally, oh sorry.
I know you gotta get to be worried. Yeah. Me personally, oh, sorry. Yeah, no, go ahead. Me personally, I-
I know you've got to get out of here, Pete, so we'll-
Yeah, so, yeah, here's my last one.
I think the biggest issue facing America is the wage gap.
Salaries have been stagnant.
Yes, huge.
CEO pays have skyrocketed.
How can we convince corporations to pay higher salaries when their responsibility is to stockholders?
Well, it can't just be pretty please.
I mean, this is where if the corporation,
we have to either change the incentives on the front end
so that there are tax advantages
to taking better care of your people.
Or we have to be ready to do it through policy
where this country says you're going to make $100 billion
in wealth off of work that 100,000 people
working for you generated.
More of that needs to be going to them.
And by the way, these things are actually related.
I think there's a way to deal in American citizens on kind of like a dividend off of
the value that's being created from AI and from, I don't want to take it down a whole
rabbit hole, but if you imagine-
Like an EDI kind of thing?
What, how's that?
Like a universal basic income kind of thing? It could be. There's different ways to take it down a whole rabbit hole, but if you imagine... The NDI kind of thing? How's that? Like a universal basic income kind of thing?
It could be.
There's different ways to structure it.
But I think it's giving everybody a share in the overall value that's being created
by technologies, which again, rest on technologies that the taxpayer paid for in the first place
back in the 60s.
So why shouldn't we all get a share?
Yeah, we're investing it.
Instead of it all going to this tiny handful of super, super wealthy people who are consolidating
their own power, the same way the president's consolidating his political power, you got
these, I don't even just like normal billionaires, but like mega, mega billionaires consolidating
their power, right?
We have to have a tax policy that does that.
We have to have a system that requires people who amass that kind of wealth to be sharing
it with citizens.
Because again, I know there's this myth, I have a lot of respect for entrepreneurs who
create things and they should be hugely rewarded when they create things that are valuable.
But they created those things based partly on infrastructure that all of us paid for.
Right?
And by infrastructure, I don't just mean roads and bridges. I mean, national security. I mean, things like inventing the internet or mRNA vaccine technology or
whatever it is. But more broadly, and this is both on the substance and the politics,
I think you're naming something that's hugely important, which is the inequality in this
country. It doesn't get talked about enough. It has gotten worse pretty much our entire lives. And no republic has ever
survived this level of inequality for long and remained a republic. That kind of income
inequality leads to inequality in power, which leads to political instability, which leads
to some of the things I think we're experiencing right now as a country. And if we don't get
a handle on that,
and it can absolutely be dealt with in a way
that is consistent with a strong economy
and business doing well.
We know that because there were times in our history,
including the middle of the last century,
when tax policy was asking more of the wealthiest.
And also there was a lot of economic growth
and a lot of productivity growth.
So it can be done.
The other thing that nobody talks about in either party much is poverty. You may notice in political
rhetoric, like middle class, you're always supposed to say middle class. You always talk about the
middle. Can't go wrong talking about the middle class. But not all folks are talking about like
poor and low wealth people, which depending how you count is more than 100 million Americans.
And by the way, it's an experience that binds together a lot of people who are divided in
terms of first generation immigrants, white, black and brown people and so forth.
And one of the things that should be the starkest wake up call for my party is the idea of losing
the vote of four people.
Because if we're not winning the vote of poor people, like what are we even doing out here?
And we don't really talk about poverty or that kind of insecurity that people go through.
Yeah, we're like, what are you promoting or seemingly promoting or what are the Republicans
projecting to you that you're promoting, that
they are so against that they will reject whatever you endeavor to do to help them with
their poverty.
Yeah.
Meaning there might be another thing out there that is equally or potentially more important.
Right.
Which is why the way to not talk to low income people or union people, members or anybody
else is to say like, oh, well, you're voting against your own self-interest.
It's like, how are you going to tell me what I'm interested in?
Yeah. But also like, you can picture like,
a well-paid professional from,
from, I don't know,
somewhere near where we're sitting in New York City,
like going up to a union member who is living near where I live in Michigan. And if that person
from New York says like, you're voting against your self-interest, that guy can turn around
and say, so are you.
Yeah. Yes. 100%.
So it has to, it comes back to this respect.
But when that person, the coastal elite does it, we're doing it because we're benevolent.
I'm so heroic. I'm voting against my own interest for little old you. That's the idea.
Well, if it looks and feels like
that, we're not going to get anywhere. There's one thing, and then I know you got to go. So,
the guy who does all our partnerships here, one of my best friends, his name is Jamil, and he was
working in England for a while. And when he came back after working in England for a while, he
found out the American government was like, yeah, but even though you worked over there, you still
got to pay us tax. And he was like, what do you mean? I was like, yeah, but even though you worked over there, you still gotta pay us tax.
And he was like, what do you mean?
I was working, I wasn't working.
Yeah, but you're an American.
So even if you have a job abroad for a company abroad,
you have to pay their tax,
but you still gotta pay us taxes, you're American.
If him as an employee has to do that, Apple gotta do it.
Google's gotta do it.
Anybody else had to.
It just cannot be that unfair.
If there's that much transparency for the average,
he wasn't working for an American company over there. Actually, I'm not exactly sure what the company was,
if it was an American company. But the idea that he had to pay tax out there and he also had to pay American taxes,
then that company should have to do the exact same thing. And I don't know how you implement that.
I understand it's tricky. I understand these guys are paying tens of millions of dollars to these attorneys that
are just tax code nerds that are trying to find the loopholes.
I've spoken to some of these guys and they've literally, I've spoken to some hedge fund
dudes that were literally like, listen, we could try to find ways to make money in the
market.
It's easier to attack the tax code.
They've literally told me that.
That's where the money is.
The money is attacking the tax code, not the market.
And yeah, not to like repeat myself too many times, but this
could be about, it might be that this is about to get much worse.
Because there is a debate happening like right now, like
through this summer, in Congress, where I think there's a lot of
people who hope that no one's paying too close attention to
the tax changes and the tax cuts that they're about to put in. So
this is a great time to hold members of Congress accountable because I do think
you know even if you live in a very Republican area and you got a Republican
member of Congress like most people in that district don't love the idea of
skewing the tax code even more toward corporations and wealthy people like
there's a real moment here I think to do something about that. I mean, that's something that would, and I don't understand the
wording, but to what we were speaking before, like speaking to people's feelings, like
finding a way to effectively tax these corporations, which would reduce taxes on
working class people, finding a way to turn that into one sentence, but letting a working class person know that they're going to pay 20% less because we found a way for these
corporations to honor what their tax burden should be.
I mean, when Trump or when Doge or whatever was saying, maybe it was Lutnick was talking
about the tariffs and they're like, yeah, well, yes, the goods are going to be more
expensive and it's going to be more expensive for everyday people.
But with the money that the tariffs bring in,
we're actually going to remove the income tax
for people making under $150,000 a year.
Whether or not they do that,
that is fresh meat for somebody who's going,
I make under $100,000 a year and that is a huge burden on me,
and I can provide for my kids so much better.
They can go to that camp that they've been telling me about.
But what people don't understand is the reality is the tariffs are absolutely a shift to the
tax burden onto the lowest income.
100%.
So like they're talking a good game.
They're saying they're going to offset that burden with the money that comes in for the
tariffs regardless if they actually implement this or not,
I hope that you guys come up with strategies
that sound just as seductive
and then intend to execute them.
And what a competitive advantage you would have
if you're saying these guys are all talk,
they say the nice shit, but they don't really do it.
Well, we're not all talk.
We're gonna say nice shit and we're delivering on it.
And here's why.
How can you lose? You'll never lose. But me some nice shit sell me on something. You know, I mean like
We need anyway. Thank you so much for being here. This is awesome. It's really incredible. And yeah, I'm looking forward to I think we're all looking forward to
Thank you so much brother. I really appreciate what you end up end up doing, you know, and
Yeah. Yeah, I think that you're a really brave
and amazing figure in our political sphere.
So, cool to see what else you do.
I'll be out there.
We'll see you.
Thank you.
Thank you.