Candace - Candace x Hunter Biden: The Interview

Episode Date: May 21, 2026

Hunter Biden joins me to discuss his struggles with addiction, the laptop controversy, his Catholic faith, the current political climate in America, and much more. PreBorn!​​ ​​ To donate,... dial #250 and say they keyword “BABY" or by visiting https://preborn.com/candace Nimi Skincare​ ​ Save 10% on your order with promo code CANDACE10 at http://www.NimiSkincare.com Ethos​ Protect your family with life insurance from Ethos. Get up to $3 million in coverage in as little as 10 minutes at https://ethos.com/CANDACE. Application times may vary. Rates may vary. Native Path​ ​ Exclusive Discount! http://www.GetNativePath.com/Candace American Financing​ NMLS 182334, http://www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org. APR for rates in the 5s start at 6.327% for well qualified borrowers. Call 800-795-1210 for details about credit costs and terms. Visit http://www.AmericanFinancing.net/Owens. Average savings based on borrowers who save over $199.99. Candace Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ClipsCandaceOwens Candace Official Website: https://candaceowens.com Candace Merch: https://shop.candaceowens.com Candace on Apple Podcasts: https://t.co/Pp5VZiLXbq Candace on Spotify: https://t.co/16pMuADXuT Candace on Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/RealCandaceO Candace en Español: https://www.youtube.com/@CandaceOwensEnEspanol Candace Owens em Português: https://www.youtube.com/@CandaceOwensemPortugues Candace Owens en Français: https://www.youtube.com/@CandaceOwensEnFrançais Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hunter Biden, welcome to the Candice Owod show. That's wonderful to be here. People are just going to be like, how on earth did this happen? Right now. I got to give them a bit of a backstory. So I went to dinner with a fellow podcaster, and we were just talking about interviews
Starting point is 00:00:16 because we don't do too many interviews on the show. And he first asked me what was the best interview I ever did. And I said, without question, the USS Liberty Survivor, Phil Turney. And then he said, what would be your top interview that you'd want to do? And I said, oh, gosh, we're in such a different time I'm just not interested in politics.
Starting point is 00:00:32 Like, it would have to be something so different. And then I said, actually, Hunter Biden. And I said to him, I watched your sit down with Andrew Callahan. Yeah. And it was kind of the most refreshing interview that I had seen in politics in a very long time because we're so used to being gaslit about various things happening. Everyone's trying to hide stuff. And we read a lot about you.
Starting point is 00:00:57 I guess we didn't really hear anything from you. So this was kind of the first time, but I heard you in your own words, just totally owning your addiction issues. Also going after Jake Tapper and George Clooney. And when we were kind of expecting the typical Democrat, like, these are great guys. These guys are amazing. Jake Tapper should, you know, win a Pulitzer. I don't know. And I would just, it wasn't what I was expecting is what I would say. So, and then that person just sort of made this happen. Yeah. So I want to just sort of get into the Hunter Biden story. I will. say to the audience right now, I have already made the pledge right when I got on the phone with you that, like, obviously I'm not going to make you say anything bad about your father, because that would just be completely demonic to be like, say something terrible about your father. Everyone knows my opinions, my political perspectives. They're already out there. He's your dad. So that is separate from my new points. Because there's no way I possibly could. Yeah, of course. I totally get that.
Starting point is 00:01:52 But there's a lot to be said about you and a lot that I guess hasn't been said about your journey. and I guess I want to start with just one question for the culture. The cocaine that was found at the White House. Was it yours? No, not only was it no mind. Number one is thank you for having me here. And one of the reasons is to be able to answer these questions. You know, the one thing I am after six years of this,
Starting point is 00:02:21 I've been sober since June 1st of 2019, clean and sober, verifiably so by the way and verifiably so by the Bureau of a probation in which I was drug tested randomly for over the course of two years while I went through my trials and things like that. But beyond that
Starting point is 00:02:41 is that directly to your question, I wasn't even there. Not only there, but people have to understand is where that cocaine was found was, you know, the visitor's entrance underneath the that is where visitors come in and they come over from the old executive office building staff to go to the
Starting point is 00:03:02 go to the Oval or go to the chief of staff's office or to the offices in the West Wing. And it was found in a cubby in right outside of the situation room. And it's like no possibility, not even remotely, beyond the fact that I wasn't even there. I mean, I spent probably, you know, over the course of four years. maybe I'm 25 days at the White House, like 25 nights, 30, if I, you know, I'm being fair. And so it's just a, you know, it was an easy, easy, you know, I'm an easy target. And understandably so. Right.
Starting point is 00:03:45 I mean, I've been, I think, probably the most famous addict and famous person who's the grace of God in recovery. for seven years, but or close to seven years, June 1st. Yeah, I definitely thought you were on drugs while your father was in the White House. I don't know. But I think it might have just also been the timing of the laptop coming out
Starting point is 00:04:07 and then people just assuming that you were still on drugs. I don't know, that might have been why in our heads. We thought that. I think that it was that they purposely conflated you know, my, I wrote a book which came out in April of 2021, in which I did something that,
Starting point is 00:04:25 very few people, I think, ever in that are kind of like similarly situated to me do in which I was 100% frank about the fact that not only was I an addict, not only was I alcoholic, I don't really see the distinction between the two. They're both drugs, but I was a crack addict. Like I was a degenerate crack addict. I mean, I've heard you call me a crack ad many times. And the truth of the matter is, I was a crack addict. And I say that not to shock people because it's really shocking. Paco King carries such a stigma to it, begin with. But I say it because I think that there are so many people.
Starting point is 00:05:09 I don't think. I know. There are so many people. I think that there's, you know, at any given time, 30 million Americans that are either in active addiction or in recovery. there's not a single person that I know that hasn't been impacted by addiction at some level in some form
Starting point is 00:05:26 personally or with someone that is one degree of separation from them that they love. No one that I know. Least of all me. Yeah, and part of that, one of the reasons I'm here, the stories that you tell about that in terms of your family. And there is where the common ground is.
Starting point is 00:05:48 for me. I can 100% say this. Is that a friend of mine said, gave me this quote about two years ago and it's become my mantra. It's Mother Teresa. Well, it's attributed to Mother Teresa. Is if you want to change the world,
Starting point is 00:06:13 go home and love your family. That's, that is my, that's, that's my everything now. And part of that is not just the family that you have by blood and birth, but also the community that you're inextricably tied to. And that community for me is the recovery community and is people that are still sick and suffering from addiction. And so the biggest reason that I wanted to come talk to you beyond the fact, and this is not me blowing smoke, I think that regardless of whether I agree with you, that you're probably the most effective communicator I've ever heard.
Starting point is 00:06:56 Thank you. Behind a microphone. And it's really drummed me crazy. It's really, really, really big you met. But is that I wanted to talk to you about those things. And anything else you want to talk about. Yeah. I'm most interested.
Starting point is 00:07:15 in the addiction story. And I was saying to you before we got, before we started rolling, that this was sort of something that I noticed when I would cover various topics, whether it was pornography, drugs on my show, drinking, how many men would write and say they were suffering with various things. And yet they don't often speak about, like, how they're quietly suffering, whether it's with addiction to pornography, addiction to drugs. And I don't think there are enough conversations about it. And so when I watched that interview of you just, just laying it out there, something that most people try to hide or they're shameful of. I was like, there actually just needs to be more dialogue about it. I grew up with tons of addicts in my family. I have people in my family who are still addicted. And there is, I think there is a natural anger that people have when they, for some reason, believe, and I think this was part of the anger that even some, that I had it toward you before I heard you speak about your addiction, is that you sort of think when somebody has money and political connections, that that somehow removes them. from going through these sorts of barriers in life.
Starting point is 00:08:18 So when I grew up, it's like, okay, like you have uncles, whatever, that are addicted to crack. You have cousins that are doing crack, whatever it is, or experimenting with meth and drugs and those things. And then you see someone that has a life of privilege, and for some reason in your mind, you wrongly go, okay, that can't happen. And it did happen. And I actually, I'd like to hear, like, how you got addicted. Like, what was actually the story, your path toward addiction?
Starting point is 00:08:41 Yeah. So, thank you for, uh, let me talk about. talk about that or ask me about it. And I really mean it. It's one of the things that traps people. I can only speak about myself, but I think that people that are in, that are addicts or that are in recovery,
Starting point is 00:09:01 also you find out really fast is that you're not as terminally unique as you think you are. Is that, and one of the things that is really important about addicts talking to each other and talking about it, is that realization because one of the things that traps you in your addiction is shame. And, you know, you like me are Catholic, and we have learned that guilt is an appropriate
Starting point is 00:09:30 emotion. Guilt is an appropriate response to something when you've done something wrong. And you're supposed to atone for it, and you're supposed to seek forgiveness, whether the forgiveness comes from an individual or not. that's the lesson is that it is in only through seeking that forgiveness can you release yourself from that guilt that's appropriate shame is not shame is just absolutely corrosive shame is you telling yourself that you're not worthy that you're never going to be worthy that you're that the things that you've done you can never be redeemed from and i've done
Starting point is 00:10:09 horrible things of my addiction in terms of what I did in terms of my relationships and decisions that I made and more than anything is just removing myself from being present for the people that love me and and what happened to me um and what happened to me um and I really mean this is that the exposure not piecemeal but the total exposure, my entire digital footprint stolen from me, a 20-year digital footprint, every text message, every picture, every, all of the things that you would be ashamed of became front page news for four years, five years, beginning in 2019. And it forced me into a choice. and the choice was, do I get out of bed and live or do I die?
Starting point is 00:11:12 And it became that much of a economy. And I chose to live. And it wasn't easy. And maintaining sobriety in that kind of like a pressure cooker is often the thing that triggers you, but something broken me in a good way. which was that I no longer have any fear. I, like, you know, sitting down with you is, to me,
Starting point is 00:11:43 an all an opportunity for you to see me as a human being and not, you know, Hunter Biden laptop. Yeah. And the pictures that, you know, Congressman Green, like, put up in Congress, or the New York Post. You know, I think I was on the cover of the New York Post in one year more than any, anybody in the history of the paper.
Starting point is 00:12:07 And none of it was good. None of it was good. But what it's given me is the opportunity to own it all, is to own all of my story without shame or fear, realizing that I have a community of people out there that I want to be of service to. I really mean that. And so, and part of it is by me being,
Starting point is 00:12:39 it'll be honest about it, we were just talking before we started this, is the hardest thing for any addict to do is not only get honest with the people that they love, but to get honest with themselves. And until they can, until they can really see themselves for who they are, all of it, and decide to love themselves,
Starting point is 00:12:59 then, you know, the cycle is just gonna continue. It's just, at least in my experience, that's the truth. I think one of the things... Did I even answer your question? Yeah, well, I want to talk about the first time that you got introduced to it because that's interesting. Oh, I know. I went into all the good stuff. Yeah, actually do start with that. Like, how did you actually get introduced?
Starting point is 00:13:18 First off, describe for people who don't know the difference between cocaine and crack, because crack is a lot more addictive. Yeah. And so just what is the difference doing? I know, I got a lot of heat for... No, it was fantastic. It was fantastic. I was like, well, he's actually very educated on this.
Starting point is 00:13:33 Well, it's important to me to make the distinction that there's this idea that there's this kind of a secret kind of special enhancement to powder cocaine that makes it into crack. And, you know, you have to have, you know, some technical degree in order to be able to do that. And let's start all the way at the beginning. I think that I'm genetically predisposed to be an alcoholic. believe that there is a genetic piece of it. I do believe that my brain works differently as an addict in terms of the way in which my synapses fire once they're introduced to the dopamine hit and the serotonin increase that occurs because of an introduction of a substance. I believe that that I became acclimated and physiologically depended upon that when I started to drink in earnest.
Starting point is 00:14:32 when I was in college, in which you can control. And, you know, I made it through Georgetown, and I went to Jesuit Volunteer Corps for a year. And it's kind of like domestic peace. Well, you know the JBC. I was JBC for the year after college. And then I went to law school. You know, I was married, had my oldest daughter
Starting point is 00:14:57 when I was a first year law student. And made it through all of that. and made it through my first year's employment, drinking probably more than everybody than most people do, but completely functional. One day I woke up when I was 33 years old to my brother calling me and say, this has got to stop. But you've got to stop.
Starting point is 00:15:22 And what he meant was that, you know, like a whole weekend was missing, kind of, and, and, um, And I said, okay. And he drove me to the airport and he put me on a plane in New York. And I flew to a place that was started by Eric Clapton called Crossroads in Antigua. And I went to rehab and I came out. Directly when I came out, my brother picked me up from the airport, drove me to an AA meeting, walked in with me, DuPont Circle,
Starting point is 00:16:00 in D.C. I met my sponsor, that first meeting that I ever went to. And I stayed clean and silver for about seven years. And then I relapsed. And it was such a mundane, stupid story. I was on a plane by myself. Everything was okay.
Starting point is 00:16:23 Things were looking up. It was, you know, normal life pressures, but it was all good. And that's the real insidious thing about addiction and alcoholism. It never goes away necessarily. There's always the answer that is being presented to you by the thing that you trust the most, which is your brain. And what it says is, if you don't want to feel this way, whatever the way is, or if you want
Starting point is 00:16:53 to feel this way even more, I have the answer for you. And I was on a plane by myself. and I had a drink. And that drink in 2010, seven years almost of sobriety, started a cycle of relapse and recovery and relapse in recovery in which it was really hard for me to be honest
Starting point is 00:17:17 with the people that love me because I just wanted to hide it. I just wanted it to go away and I thought, okay, I'll get through this cycle and I'll sleep it off this weekend and that's it. done. And that would last a week and then it would last three months and then I went back to rehab and then I came back and I started I mean talk about you talk about this all the time which I love that you do.
Starting point is 00:17:41 It was big pharma, you know what I mean? I had shingles and so somebody prescribed me like 52 oxy coat like I mean ridiculous and I started that and then I started drinking again and the prescription ran out and then this cycle just started to happen. And but when my brother died, uh, it all, so far. Bo and I were, and like I don't report that our relationship was unique or that his loss was greater than, my loss of him was greater than anybody else's loss of their brother
Starting point is 00:18:20 or someone that they deeply loved. But when my mom and sister and my Bo and I were in that car accident in 1972, and we survived. It was the two of us every day. We're a year and a day apart. We talked every day. I mean, except when he was in Iraq,
Starting point is 00:18:38 I literally probably talked to my brother every day. And when Beau died, my marriage fell apart after 20 years, 22 years. By the way, for reasons that, marriage just fall apart, you know, but I take a lot of responsibility for. And it just started a really, really dark cycle.
Starting point is 00:19:09 In the past, when I would have these relapses, there was always someone in such proximity to me that they would, like, you know, I couldn't escape. I couldn't escape. In this instance, Boe was gone. I, right after Boe, died, I ended up separated from my wife, like within the month. And my dad, for the first time of my life, who was my rock, was stuck in his own grief, like deep, deep grief. And I just went down
Starting point is 00:19:50 in a hole. And I checked myself into rehab that year and came out. And came out. and stayed sober for a while and then relapsed and then went into an outpatient program in DC where I went like, you know, four hours every day for, you know, from eight to two or six hours every day, stay sober, and then I relapsed. And I came back and they said, well, you have to, I admitted to them that I relapsed and in that in this instance I also used cocaine. And they said, well, you'd have to take a drug test. And I said, I'm not going to take a drug test. I'm not going to put something on, you know,
Starting point is 00:20:31 it's because it's not protected by HIPAA in a rehab scenario, which is crazy, right? Yeah. Anyway, long story short, they said, you can't come back in unless you take the drug test. And I said, I'm not taking the drug test. I'm going through a divorce. It's not protected by HIPAA.
Starting point is 00:20:50 It will become public. I don't want to do this. to my family. Like, I'm telling you, I use cocaine and I drank. Is that not good enough? I'm back. And they said, no, for whatever reason, and I'm not blaming them. This is not their fault.
Starting point is 00:21:03 I walked out and I knew Lincoln Park was a kind of open-air drug market. I saw a woman that was kind of famous in the area since I had been in college, literally, for 20 years that I would see in the streets around, you know, D.C. in that area where I work for. a long time. And I said, I went up to her and I said, can I get some crack? Wow. And I think it was basically, I said, can you help me commit suicide? I mean, I don't think, I know that now, and looking back, it was the coward's way. And I really mean that. I was a coward. I didn't go and just do it. I said, let me do it this way and really, really, really drag everybody down with me along
Starting point is 00:21:50 the way. Let me figure out the way not only to kill myself, but to maybe kill my dad, you know, really hurt my family, particularly my three daughters who like adore me and I adore, like just the fact. And I, and I smoke crack. And the difference between crack cocaine and powder cocaine is this. And I really truly do not want to give a roadmap. for people to be able to do this because I swear to God it'll kill you but it's sodium bicarbonate which is baking soda water heat that's it that's all that is the entire difference of it which allows it to be ingested through a smoking and the combination of those things makes it so that it affects your physiology much faster than it would be if you just use powder cocaine
Starting point is 00:22:49 through your nose or in any other form other than intervenously. And it also allows you to ingest more faster than you could possibly ever ingest by sniffing cocaine up your nose. The combination of that, the combination of combustion, ritual, and the ritual meaning the way in which you have to, you know, I mean, I can still fill my hands doing it,
Starting point is 00:23:14 is, you know, becomes this ritualistic thing with the combination of combustion, which is, and you learn, I mean, if you really study things about addiction, is these kind of key components of oral fixation and things like that. It just becomes the most ungodly addiction that you can possibly imagine to the point where I was smoking crack. You know, I mean, literally, you know, I was either looking for or smoking or recovering, not even recovering, you don't recover, you just go find more. for close to a two-year period of time.
Starting point is 00:23:52 Wow. And it took me to places. You know, I wrote all about it. And I got made fun about it. And, you know, people think that, you know, when I wrote my book, like, you know, clawing through the carpet to find crack cocaine and, you know, parmesan cheese and, you know.
Starting point is 00:24:11 And I know it's a real laugh line, but anybody that's ever been an addict like that, they don't laugh about it. It's devastating. think that you were that person. You can see yourself doing it. Just devastating. And so what happens
Starting point is 00:24:26 in addiction so often is this, is people not only, they can't admit that. They can't even admit it to themselves. They just block it out. They go, they get 30 days clean. They come out. They go back into the same exact situation that they were in before.
Starting point is 00:24:43 And they think, I'm just not going to do it again. I'm just going to stay, like, I'm going to make it. I'm going to make it. And what will come up is that wake up in the morning and they'll remember that time in the motel with the person, the prostitute that brought you the drugs, and that just stole your wallet and all your drugs and everything. And you were calling through carpet to see if there was anything there. and you smoke whatever white that you found on the ground.
Starting point is 00:25:17 Like, it's the shame. It's thinking of yourself like that, regardless of who you are, regardless of where you came from, whether you're the president of the United States or it doesn't matter. And they don't admit that to themselves. They don't admit it to anyone around them. Don't ever say it. And you know what happens?
Starting point is 00:25:38 You never lose it. And it sits like right here, like the back of your head. and it pops up and you just feel so disgusted with yourself that your brain immediately tells you, regardless of how far away for you are from a drink or drug, like, I know the way not to feel this way. I know exactly how to feel this way. You're going to die if you keep feeling this way. You need to take a drink. And that's always how it starts.
Starting point is 00:26:03 I mean, alcohol is the most dangerous drug in the world just by virtue of the amount of destruction and devastation that comes personally into the people around people that are alcoholics. And I don't find any difference between being an addict and an alcoholic. But that's where it starts. And that's where it started for me. That was my story until I met Melissa and back clean and sober. And I've been so almost seven years now. All right, you guys, some moments change everything.
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Starting point is 00:28:37 And I think that's probably why people separate it as well too, because like I said, there's this idea of what a politician's family is supposed to be. And you obviously are, because I genuinely understand what those sorts of addictions do, I don't think people realize you're not, you're just not even yourself. It's like a demon,
Starting point is 00:28:58 the best way to say it, and maybe I'm taking a Catholic take on this, but it's like a full demonic possession. when you're in the throes of these drugs. And I mean, this was actually a great benefit of A&E doing intervention because people could really see these moments where people will choose the drug over their family. They will choose the drug over their kids.
Starting point is 00:29:17 They will choose, you know, they'll choose the drug over literally anything. And for people who, and I would, I actually tend to agree with you that I've wondered myself if there's something genetic because I'm not wired that way. Or maybe I just haven't found the drug that would do that to me, but like I would say that like I've just never been, never had something and was like, oh, I just need to have that again or want it again.
Starting point is 00:29:37 And I've seen friends that they have something once and they're like, want to do this every second. And I go, that's very interesting. Like, it's almost like you're made of something different. I'm certain of that. And the science is certain of that. And anyways, I mean, we all can, I think that we all can associate
Starting point is 00:29:58 with understand addiction at more or less devastating levels. So for instance, what's your phone? I mean, you have a, you basically have a peck of heroin. Right. We all do in their pocket. Constantly giving us that dopamine, which, by the way, we can get to talking about that
Starting point is 00:30:18 because I think that that we are not nearly as divided of people as we think that we are. I think that that bag of heroin in everybody's pocket is feeding them a lot of that division. But it is, So we can all kind of understand the compulsion to do things that clearly aren't benefiting us. Like staying up until 3 o'clock in the morning and going through your For You page on TikTok. Every mother, father can watch their teenager do that and go, God, this is awful.
Starting point is 00:30:58 And I'm going to take his phone away. and then they turn back to their phone and they start going through their phone. Like, and I'm, you know, I am not any better. So we can kind of all understand that compulsion. It's when the compulsion becomes just so the blast radius continues to grow. So the difference between being a, you know, addicted to, to your phone and being addicted to crack cocaine, I'm not saying are the same.
Starting point is 00:31:36 But at least we can kind of get a little bit of an understanding of the physiology of that, of the way in which the brain actually works. But- It's like the micro versus the macro, yeah. Yeah, exactly. And everybody has the micro. So you can see the micro impact of it.
Starting point is 00:31:54 And but I think one of the reasons that why people are so, like, shocked by my story. And by the way, and we're able to conflate. So if the New York Post every day for six years runs a picture on, you know, online, I mean, I think they literally at one point did like 1.5 stories of me a day for an entire 18-month period. Okay. And in each, it didn't matter what the subject was. It was the picture of me, naked.
Starting point is 00:32:35 With the prostitute. With whatever and with a crack pipe in my lips. So I don't get mad at people when they go, like, was that your cocaine? Like, well, number one, you know the White House. It's like, it just doesn't make any sense. I had seven secret agents with me at any given time everywhere I went. The idea that I was in the situation room and would decide. I had to drop off.
Starting point is 00:32:58 I mean, that, but beyond that silliness is the, is I don't blame people for not realizing that I have worked my ep and ass off. I mean, in this environment, the proudest thing that I've ever done is stay clean and sober. Through all of that. Every piece of it, both the trials, through the accusations, through the, you know, Alexander Smyrnoffs and Galuffs and, you know, Constantine Kulix and lead parnaces and Prudies and Steve Bannons and all of that. Is it purely because of the love of the people around me
Starting point is 00:33:46 and my willingness to own it all, I'm sitting in front of you. Yeah. And you're not taking that away from me. Right. And by the way, that's the beauty of it. Yeah. The realization at one point is that you can try, I have no fear, no fear.
Starting point is 00:34:07 And that doesn't, and that's why I'm here. More than anything is because I, like, I don't, I probably, you know, I'm certain that we disagree on a lot of stuff. But there used to be a time, Candace, where you and I could sit down together and disagree about tax policy. and disagree about, you know, the Catholic Church's view on abortion or disagree with, I mean, whatever the subject may be, and still be able to go have a meal together. Right. I talk about that often on my show. Like, back when I was left leaning in college, my best friend was Republican conservative,
Starting point is 00:34:48 like it wasn't so at each other's throats and hating each other and wanting to destroy one another. And, you know, you can kind of see the good and the bad and go, well, I'm, you know, this is why I have this perspective and perspectives could change and that was allowed to. You know, I think about what it was that just revisiting what made a lot of people, including myself, so angry about you, or I guess it wasn't really about you. It was the gaslighting. It was the letter that came from people saying it was Russian propaganda. That is what is driving us crazy about the Epstein files right now. It's what's actually leading it ironically to the collapse of the MAGA support is we don't want to be gaslit. And to be fair, it wasn't.
Starting point is 00:35:27 you that's why it was so refreshing when you were like yes i had a crack addition this is me i did this i was with hookers but you weren't speaking for you and they were there were literally a bunch of people that were coming out and saying this is not real and that is the most infuriating thing for because everyone's average everyone can connect with addiction everyone could have this conversation actually if you would come out and i probably in that environment obviously it maybe that would there would have a different result because we were at each other's throats but that is what made people so angry it was like no Nope. He never smoked cracked. It wasn't real. The laptop is Russian propaganda.
Starting point is 00:36:02 We're like, guys, what is this? Yeah, by the way, is that here's the problem. Is that Steve Bannon saved in Rudy Giuliani saved the quote unquote laptop, which by the way is bullshit. If we can agree on that gaslighting, I will agree on the gasoline of this. Is that it was never a quote unquote laptop. There was a hard drive. of stolen and hacked material, wherever it came from, whether it came from a Delaware repair shop, or whether it came, like Lev Parnas says,
Starting point is 00:36:39 from Dimitri Furtas, who was trying to sell a hard drive under Biden's in Ukraine, you know, that they were looking for before the laptop repair shop guy was ever the twinkle in the eye. Just go back and look at the record, okay? So here's the thing, is you're absolutely right. And this is like the freedom of being able to say this. It's like, yeah, they should have let me go out and talk.
Starting point is 00:37:04 Yeah. But it was two weeks before the campaign. And then the election was over. Steve Bannon goes on with his buddy Gao, you know, the Chinese billionaire that's now in prison and, you know, that is like a Chinese spy or whatever, you know, where he got arrested on his boat and all that crap. Is it, I mean, there is a. go listen to it go listen to the recorded conversation in which they say like the laptop like we got them we like you know so we put all we collected all the salacious pictures and we put them out there and then rudy went out and stood on the steps of the newcastle county courthouse with bernie carrick
Starting point is 00:37:45 and said this contains child child exploitation like pure um uh you know i mean pure bullshit just bullshit so on both sides You have this reaction, you know, which I don't think was necessarily a coordinated reaction in the sense that what do you do in two weeks. And so they come up with this and they say, and I don't get to go out and say, you know, no, I was. But you know what I did? Is it come April, I write a book and I tell everybody, I was addicted to crack. Here's my story. And here's what happened. And here is all of the rooms that no one would ever want.
Starting point is 00:38:26 to admit to being in that I was in. And it was like a blip on the radar because everybody was now fighting about whether there was kind of a suppressed story on Twitter and whether there was this gaslighting from, you know, and by the way, I am not here to defend any of those people. But then it's part of like the political machine where they're like we have two weeks to go to the election.
Starting point is 00:38:51 We're going to do this denial, you know, because we can't afford this right now, essentially. And so, and then we're going to table this, make it past these two weeks. And then by that time, first and foremost, your father won, right? So, you know, and so people are angry. They feel like the election's been stolen and that there was this entire collusion to cover a laptop, which if it was on the other side, they may have done too.
Starting point is 00:39:12 This is what DC is. It's politics. But that is where I think the anger came from. And it was just like, how dare you gas let us? And then people then start making you this focal point of life. And it never had anything to do with me. Right. It was kind of bigger than you at that point.
Starting point is 00:39:25 You know what the laptop proved? that you were crackhead. There you go. By the way, all this other bullshit, you know, bribery and all these other things, that they investigated up and down during the Trump administration with a Trump appointed U.S. attorney, with the Trump appointed U.S. attorney, the only U.S. attorney in the country to stay on and continue to prosecute me, who then became special counsel after I got a plea deal.
Starting point is 00:39:52 Because I paid my taxes late, and I paid them with penalties and interest, and I owned a gun for 11 days while they say I was addicted and check that box. That's it. Everybody has all the information. It's not like the Department of Justice has my digital footprint
Starting point is 00:40:10 and every text message, every email. And there's not a single one in which you find that would, in any way, supports the really serious accusations of enriching, my father, enriching himself somehow or none of it, none of it's there. So I own whatever you want to call it.
Starting point is 00:40:32 I own the laptop. Come, you know what? We can go through it together. If you're willing to like avert your eyes to the tragedy of addiction. I mean, just the absolute tragedy of it. Yeah. But man, oh man, we have not, there is no space for that in discourse anymore. There's no space for the nuance of, you know, well, that was addiction, that wasn't corruption. You know, I did not do any business through entire four years. I became a painter. You know why I became a painter? Because it literally saved my life. I painted my whole life. And Melissa instinctively knew that I literally needed to like occupy my hands in early recovery, like 12 hours a day. Like just, you know, like to be able to focus on the, not the crushing weight of the
Starting point is 00:41:30 consequences of years of addiction. And so I just sat and I painted and I painted and I painted. And I decided to have a show in the gallery and, you know, and offer my paintings for sale. And New York Post comes out and says, Hunter Biden selling his paintings for a half a million dollars. I've never sold a painting nor offered a painting for a half a million dollars in my friggin' life. And by the way, everybody knows this. because every painting that I sold, everybody that bought a painting had to pay about a quarter million dollars
Starting point is 00:41:58 to defend themselves before an impeachment hearing. Go read the transcripts of people under oath. But regardless, is this, the laptop absolutely proved nothing, but it became this cultural touchstone. It was like, it embodied
Starting point is 00:42:17 the Biden crime family. And if you wanted to be able to believe that, not want it to be able to be. able to believe that. If you believe that, because you're being told that by people that you trust that have told you that your election was stolen, that your democracy was thwarted, that the process was unfair, is that all you had to do, and I get this, is look at the pictures. It doesn't look like a good guy to me. Right. Because you've worn a good guy in the pictures. No. Yeah. Smoking,
Starting point is 00:42:50 crack in a motel room with the prostitute. Right. Like, you know what I mean? Like, they come out and like they're saying, oh, like this, like, I admit it all, not only admit it all, I own it all. I will, I will own everything the worst of it, all of it. And then being cute, like I mean, now in retrospect and things have changed. I mean, times have changed. I, like I said, I was one of the chief people that was really angry about it. And it did, that was the exact reason why when I reexamine it, it was the gaslighting. It's the same reason why I'm angry with Trump over the Epstein thing. It's like, I can't come back from media gaslighting. The Trump thing is worse because it came from his own.
Starting point is 00:43:24 mouth, the cast lighting, so it wasn't like people trying to cover it up. It was like Trump being like, what Epstein files? Are we still talking about the Epstein files? And so, but then things kind of changed, I think, with time also because I was very, definitely said I was close with Don Jr. Travel a lot with him through the Hunter Biden laptop scandal. We talked about it. This corruption, da, da, da, da, can't be they denied it. All these photos coming out. And then we get whatever this, you know, Trump. family is now. And it's like, man, I think it was a historian that wrote on X exactly how I feel, which is I wish I could go back to the days where I thought like Hunter Biden's art was the most
Starting point is 00:44:04 corrupt deal that was done in politics. And now we're going, okay, you know, we stood behind Trump. We fought. We shared the photos of Hunter Biden to the extent that we could. And now we have their family engaged in so many corrupt deals, the meme coins, the taking advantage of people. And you go, okay, well, what we actually have is D.C. is corrupt. politics is corrupt, and I think it is kind of a unifying point, not to excuse the gaslighting of people for two weeks, which made people super angry. But I do think it's just a different time where people are kind of going back and examining, and I feel actually terrible, realizing that you were finally clean, and then it's just this humiliation ritual over and over and over again
Starting point is 00:44:45 of people putting everything out there and not realizing also your kids are facing this consequence as well, which people do not think about a lot of times when they publish stories. Like I even was reticent and didn't cover the Chrissy Nome thing because the first thing that came to my mind did they have kids was their kids like I'm like these are kids that are about to go to college and so and why are they doing this because she's in politics right
Starting point is 00:45:07 and so this becomes they don't think about the children and yeah I mean I think I now now that I have kids too I think there's just like wow they don't sign up for what I do for podcasting kids don't sign up for that kind of stuff yeah you know number one now kids are way more resilient than you think so much tougher. And I know my girls have, like,
Starting point is 00:45:36 and they love me and deeply, and I can 100% accept that love now and return it with everything that I have to offer. But you're, you know, part of what you're describing is politics in memoriam. You know, part of it. But something's changed,
Starting point is 00:45:58 Candace. There is a meanness, a willingness to adopt very, very un-American tactics against our opponents
Starting point is 00:46:15 because it becomes a zero-sum game. It's not just that I disagree with you. it's you need to be punished. You need to be punished for what you believe. You know, there's this incredible show. I really want to meet them one day.
Starting point is 00:46:32 I don't know if you've listened to it. It's called The Necessary Conversation. Have you listened to that? Incredible. It's a brother and a sister who are progressives. One lives in L.A. and one lives in Austin. Something like that. And she runs a bakery.
Starting point is 00:46:49 This sister. and a mom and dad and they are ultra maga and I think they're like in you know Missouri somewhere and I mean like
Starting point is 00:47:00 don't take their caps off Trump literally can do no wrong he's playing 4D chess on the Epstein thing the you know I know he said no Warren Rand but you know
Starting point is 00:47:13 he must have a reason for it and you can't convince like literally that but they have this conversation and they have real issues with each other. Like the daughter gets really mad at the dad. Like, Dad, you were a jerk to us when we were kids. You made me, but then she has this conversation
Starting point is 00:47:31 with her mom who loves animals and taught her about empathy, and they would adopt all, you know, these animals. And they would, and you find out, like, her dad taught, you know, or coached all of their Little League games, and she was a softball player. And if a kid couldn't, like, afford the uniform, but dad would quietly go out and buy the uniform. And he's awful on this thing,
Starting point is 00:47:54 by the way. Like, he's, like, he's, in terms of the way that he speaks and he speaks to them and he's like tough and I don't get, I don't give a shit and, you know, drop a bomb on him kind of, you know, but it's so informative is that before, that's a normal family. That's a thing. Before, you and I could meet at a restaurant in Georgetown and your husband and my wife and we could have dinner together and like with Tucker. I knew Tucker. You know what I mean? And like you could have dinner together and think that what Tucker was saying was crazy. I don't agree with and I don't agree with, you know, half the stuff. But you know what it didn't mean? It didn't mean that I thought that he should be tried for treason and execute it. And that's what happened to me. And I mean that not
Starting point is 00:48:49 figuratively. I mean it literally. That's what people were saying. And that's what people of real importance were saying. Those were the words that were coming out of the mouse. And I'm paraphrasing of people like Steve Bannon and people like Rudy Giuliani, people of authority. And it changes everything. Is how can you even have a discussion for instance? Since, how could I go out and talk about, how could I respond? Was that cocaine mine? Like, what do you want? You want me to take a drug test?
Starting point is 00:49:23 Because I'm taking a drug test almost weekly for the Department of Corrections and probation. You know, I have a probation officer. You know, I'm on release until trial. You know, but what do you do? Is that the statement that you make to the New York Post? It's impossible. It becomes impossible. So what do you do?
Starting point is 00:49:44 you realize this. And I don't know if you feel this way in your own life, is that you know what the real problem is? It's not out there. It's not that person. If I could just get Steve Bannon to tell the truth. If I could just get Rudy Giuliani to stop lying about me. If I could just get Constantine Kulak to say that he wrote the written.
Starting point is 00:50:05 If I, like, it's not there. You realize in order to survive it's all inside. Every single piece of it is about, figuring out how to love yourself, not live in that shame, and in order for you to be able to be of service first, or you know, Melissa, like return the beautiful thing that she gave me, which was a chance,
Starting point is 00:50:35 to be of service to my dad, to return the unconditional love, which is not love without consequences, not love without accountability. it's just knowing that no matter what, even through the consequences and being held accountable, that that person still loves me. All right, you guys, when I think about the future,
Starting point is 00:50:55 I picture of a little moments that matter most, family dinners, bedtime stories, lazy Sundays at home, the people that we love are the center of everything that we're building. But there's one conversation that so many of us put off, and that's usually surrounding what would happen if we were not here. That's really what life insurance is about. It's about making sure your family is protected, supported and able to move forward no matter what life brings. And honestly, getting covered today is so
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Starting point is 00:52:55 I think that was also what came across in your interview with Andrew Callahan, where after I watched it, I think it sort of edited my opinion about that relationship between your dad because I think since the laptop scandal in my mind it was it was I guess a bit cartoonish where it was like well you can do whatever you want you go ahead smoke crack we know we're just powerful we'll cover it you know we'll do like that's the cop like whatever we've have so much power we've acquired so much power and then when I sort of saw you really defending your dad over this George Clooney thing I was like okay this is just a normal father son relationship like people can't apply that for some reason when you're talking about a president or or somebody that has access to power but he just loves his dad and this is the way any normal person would defend their dad. If they said something about your father, if they said something about your son, like, this is so normal that I think that's what was a bit of, like, um, arresting for me. I was like, this is very normal dynamic. He doesn't care if Jake Tapper's on his side. He doesn't care of Twery is on his side. That's his dad that you're talking about. And he's having a natural reaction that I would have if someone was talking about my dad, my grandparents, my sister, um,
Starting point is 00:54:00 my cousin, even when they do something wrong, by the way. Like, it's like, okay, no, but like, that's my family member who did something wrong. And the, and the, and so you have no right and I will breathe fire on someone. And that's kind of, and you're right. And now it's getting dirtier. The games people are playing are dirtier. And it is about wanting you to feel unsafe. And I think that is something that is so new when you have people posting your address, posting where you are, knowing that you have children. And yeah, I really do. And it is over perspective. Like for me, it was me changing my mind on Israel. And suddenly I'm getting the New York Post treatment. And I'm getting all of these people coming after.
Starting point is 00:54:36 after me and I'm going, this is my perspective. You're welcome to try to debate me on why I feel the way I feel about what's, because I have two eyes, but what's happening in Gaza, but to do these tactics where you're trying to destroy people is, that feels very, very new to me. Yeah, and that, let's be honest, not let's be honest, I hate that phrase, okay.
Starting point is 00:54:56 I got it from my perspective is this, I know where that started, and that started when Donald Trump from rally stages started the where's hunter or yell where's hunter call and response browse and then they printed t-shirts and then they made hats and then they made mugs where's hunter and then they showed up my door i didn't have any security i didn't have anybody i can't afford uh that in my life particularly at that time and they literally showed up in my door with with bullhorns and mega hats and uh on the the direct and the way that they got there is New York Post published on the front page,
Starting point is 00:55:39 on its cover, at an aerial view of my home with the address, and then in the things, and if you stand here at this, you know, on this part of the street, you can see in their floor ceiling windows and, you know, until they showed up. Wow. And Alyssa was, what, six months pregnant at the time, you know, she got in the car because she was as long as the time and sped off and they followed her and they ran her off the road. You know, she panicked.
Starting point is 00:56:11 And then, you know, she got and did it again and they surrounded her. And that's new, man. That is new. And like similar to you. Is it like before I sat down, I heard where you live, what you're the level of security
Starting point is 00:56:29 that you have, or didn't have and, you know, what your perimeter of your property is like, how the hell do I know that? And how is that even remotely safe? Because you have people who now, you're, you basically spoke your truth and they decided that you cannot exist. And so therefore, I don't know what's going to happen, but for some reason I think it's appropriate for me to say, tell you what, what Candace's address is, who lives there in the level of security she has. doing that was one of the most, it was so obvious what he was doing. My dad said to me, is I have to stop saying the F word. But it was, like, seriously, that to me was like, it's a declaration of war.
Starting point is 00:57:12 Like, they know I homeschool my kids. They know, and he's describing the security apparatus, and he's doing it in this rant trying to be impassioned about the fact that I don't support Israel or I don't support whatever his motivation was, there was zero reason that you would be describing the perimeter of my house outside of wanting someone to get harmed. And, like, I'm not like Tucker Carlson and I save people all the time. That's why I get so worried because. when Tucker gets accosted in public, he just has this like total happy warrior demeanor.
Starting point is 00:57:41 I will claw someone's eyes out for my kids. Like I am not the property to try. We will shoot you. Like I will shoot you and I will kill you and I will happily go to prison before you have one opportunity to even make me. I don't mind being going to think about whether you're going to hurt my kids. You sound exactly like that's. And that's just, that's me. That's just me. By the way. I've said it over and over on my podcast, I will I will smile in my mugshot, okay, because I did the right thing and I have no qualms about that. So when he did that, I was like, okay, this little beanie boy, okay, little beanie boy, I see exactly what you're doing. The whole world sees what you're doing.
Starting point is 00:58:10 And you are doing something because you want my children to get harmed. And then if something happens to them, you're going to go, well, I don't know how that happened as I was describing the perimeter of her home and talking about what her security is, which was inaccurate. But that's, like, what are we even talking about? That's exactly why they do it. Is that even if the chance is this small, the reason that they do it is exactly that. is to make you really afraid, not for yourself, for your kids, for your family,
Starting point is 00:58:42 for the people that work around you. It's like, and by the way, I'll tell you, is that I have the same approach that I think Tucker has to it, which is, and I don't know, which is basically like, I can handle it,
Starting point is 00:58:55 like, I can diffuse a situation, I can do it. Melissa, people kill you. Yeah, I'll kill you, and I'll ask questions later. And she's exactly the same. And I, you know what really worries me? Is that?
Starting point is 00:59:09 Is that? Is all of a sudden, we're all talking about violence. Like you're talking about violence. Violence is defense, but now you're talking about the violence. And then they kind of like go, oh, you're gaslighting us. This is bullshit. You don't, you're fine.
Starting point is 00:59:28 You're really rich and you this and that. You can take care of yourself. It's like bullshit. Did you see what just happened to my best friend? Yeah. Like, I mean, we just watched Charlie get, and he had a full security apparatus. Yeah. We still don't know what happened to Charlie Kirk.
Starting point is 00:59:42 There's zero interest. That's another thing that just completely, for me, was like done with Trump whatsoever. Like, I mean, there's just no way for someone who came from the inside and watched the work that Charlie did to get people elected. Don Jr. was like a brother to Charlie, literally like a brother to him. Yeah. And to see the Trump brother. to see Donald Trump himself, Cash Patel, who Charlie pushed for him to lead the FBI, had him on his podcast, J.D. Vance, like, you know, came out of nowhere. Charlie was, like, not sleeping to make that happen. And to see all of these people have zero interest in the obvious holes in the story, even if ultimately the holes get filled and there's a picture that makes sense, which I put that at a zero percent chance. But let's just, you know, the fact that they have zero interest and they're just accepting the narrative, like what this has done to me and I've said this,
Starting point is 01:00:35 I'm just done with politics. I'm just done with politics because I can't even begin to comprehend it. And again, that element of gaslighting that's happening here where they're pretending that the people who are noticing that none of this is making sense are the crazy ones. And everyone else who's like, no, turn the chapter a week later.
Starting point is 01:00:53 It's all solved. And this is how it went down and none of it makes sense but just accept this slop. It is the most infuriating thing. and it's just fully removed the scales of my eyes and I've stopped with this left versus right, Democrat versus Republican. I'm like, this is sheer evil versus good.
Starting point is 01:01:10 This is like sheer evil. But by the way, for real, exactly. Exactly. It is good versus evil. Yeah. It is the, they have torn the mask off of this. I said to you before, is that I pray to God that by the end of this,
Starting point is 01:01:30 that you think of me as a friend, because if anything ever happened to me, I want you. You and Melissa team up. You fit. Like, oh, my God. It's not happening with Charlie Kirk. And the criticism of you for asking the questions for someone who was like a brother to you, it's like, what the F are you talking about?
Starting point is 01:01:49 That's what are you talking about? And by the way, how dare you care. You're coming from someone who you've attacked and you've, politically, you've, you know, had all of your criticism, which I have no problem with, and we disagree on so many things. But I listen to you and I go, right on. Like, Epstein, like, you want to figure out why they don't want to let the release all the Epstein files?
Starting point is 01:02:14 All you got to do is literally look at a picture of Trump standing on his stage at his inauguration and look behind him. Yeah. I mean, it's like every single person. He's protecting his donors without question. I mean, it's crazy. Like, Palos and Pauli and this and that and the other thing and all of these things, it's like, okay.
Starting point is 01:02:32 And by the way, like, anyway, my point is, is it, yeah, it's like, when are people going to kind of wake up to the fact? And it's not left or right. This is a really, really horrible group of people that are pulling strings that impact us all. and they make us think that because you and I disagree on, you know, the graduated tax rate or some social issue is that we are sworn enemies. I mean, not just, you know, like sworn enemies, that I deserve violence. And I could see them, and it does seem like both sides have woken up without question. My audience is now split, and I still say what I believe.
Starting point is 01:03:22 I haven't changed my position on abortion. I'm Catholic. I have, you know, there's nothing that has changed. I think they're just hearing me for the first time. And I do think there was something about the Charlie Kirk assassination that everyone just sort of looked up, you know, we just sort of all looked up at the machine and was like, wait a second, what is this? Because they expected Trump to be right or died. They expected cash, I mean, wow, this is going to be solved in the clearest way possible because the entire political apparatus that has the power and the Department of Justice is in the hands of Charlie Kirk's friends. Like that was how I felt, right? This is it. Oh, whoever did this is never going to. get away with it because these are Charlie's friends and what did we get? They're the people that Charlie Kirk made. He Charlie Kirk made these people. That's exactly right. Let a youth revolution to get these people elected in power. He was ride or die to the level of disloyalty or fear. I don't know what it is. Disloyalty is. Disloyalty may be guided by fear but it's so disturbing. It's disturbing. And I cannot, I can not forgive Trump, the Trump family.
Starting point is 01:04:22 what they have done or what they have not done for Charlie Can I keep one of these? Yeah. Yeah. And I'm full on. I'm like, call me a conspiracy. I'm like you where I'm like,
Starting point is 01:04:32 what is the shame tactic of the day? You're calling me a conspiracy. There's great. I'm like, you'd be a fool to believe of stuff that they're telling us today. The stories are telling us. I mean, it's,
Starting point is 01:04:41 it is something that is just so disturbing. And I think that the Charlie assassination has just so crazy. Like, because he was so Republican, conservative, productive way. Look, I'm here and you're here.
Starting point is 01:04:58 And the, I really think that we're not unique. You know, I think very, very kind of emblematic is that, like, I'm, like, let's put the past,
Starting point is 01:05:11 you know, not behind us. Like, I'll explain anything you want. I'll talk about anything that you want to talk about that you still have questions about or that anybody is what,
Starting point is 01:05:19 but like, this isn't right. This, we're witnessing right now, is not right. The level of corruption, the obfuscation, the, I mean, whether it's Butler or Charlie or these things that it's just not right. And I mean, it's so glaringly not right. It's almost as if they're just saying, F you. They don't, they don't even trying.
Starting point is 01:05:46 I don't care. Like, we don't even get good siops anymore. And that's what I keep saying. I'm like, it's so disrespectful that we're not even getting good, good, siops anymore. Like we're supposed to believe he survived four, what do we have, four assassination attempts, the first president that's ever survived four assassination attempts. They quietly, they lie to us about things. They make a big deal and then they make it want to, you know, it's going to go away. They're going to keep pretending and telling us that this is a totally normal grieving widow,
Starting point is 01:06:09 okay, no one's buying that. Like, something's just not right here. Everyone can see that. This is not how you would react to your husband being shot. And this sort of just, I'm fine. And I, like, two weeks later, I fully accept a narrative. I have no interest. anything else, it's over, let's close it, I forgive him, let's move on. You're asking us to abandon our common sense and our humanity is what you're asking us to do. And that kind of seems like where we're at, like they're insisting on this. And I'm going, where is this going to go? Because we're not doing the thing they want us to do. Like they're just constantly giving us slop all the time. I mean, even the recent White House correspondence dinner, there was so much
Starting point is 01:06:47 theater to it after, so much theater. And now it's kind of, okay, Secret Service, maybe shot each other and we're just going to kind of quietly move on, but Trump needs a ballroom. Like that's a normal reaction. Hey, there's a shooting duck. Hey, well, we better get that ballroom. By the way, it's going to cost a billion dollars now. And by the way, it's not from donors. And by the way, we're going to do it. Like, it's just like, it's just the constant, like, talk about gaslighting. It's been, this. And we're not even, are we even a year into Trump's second term? We're a little over a year. A little over a year in a second term. And I don't think there's just been, I'm like, how are we going to deal with four years of just being gaslit every. five seconds and told that, but MAGA, literally MAGA is not MAGA anymore. And what was actually
Starting point is 01:07:28 never Trump, which was actually pro Hillary Clinton, if you think about it, that's now MAGA. It's literally people who have been against Trump the entire time who are lecturing us about this stuff, like the Mark Levins and the Ben Shapiro's and like, we're MAGA and the Laura Loomers. Like, you know, where are MAGA now? Okay, great, then I'm not MAGA. Like I am, I've never agreed with these people. I am opposed to these people's ideas. I am opposed to unleashing an actual lunatic who has had to be Baker acted and put on psych 5150 holds by her own parents who fear her. I'm opposed to that actually being unleashed upon the population.
Starting point is 01:08:07 Melissa always, she's at 5150. I had that person is going to get 5150. What are you talking about? What's 5150? You're telling us this is Magna now. Like this is what we do. And so it's been a, it's been a challenging time because you do have to have. like the humility to admit that I'm quite embarrassed about it.
Starting point is 01:08:27 The president of the United States of America has posted images of himself as a king, I think, half a dozen times now. Yeah. Like when are we, when are people going to wake up and go, okay, like, if that's what you want. And by the way, if that's what you want, then you know what? I know that there is a, that there is a, the vast majority of Americans, but some that are really going to really, really have a problem. Yeah. Really have a problem.
Starting point is 01:08:58 I am, I go. God forbid. And this whole thing is, is it, I, we all need allies now because they do have an enormous amount of power. You know, one of the things that I always think about is, is that it's so easy to silence people, but it would be particularly easy. easy for instance to go. Like if if if some like the whole cocaine in the white house thing, by the way, I look at the that your premise is it like I, you can believe whatever you want to believe. But I know my truth and that's all I can do. And you'd prefer to crack anyways. A hundred percent. Okay. And I would not. And by the way, I would not have I would not have
Starting point is 01:09:43 forgotten it in a cubby. Not if you're crawling on the floor. So go into the situation room, which I've never been in before. Okay, exactly. I mean, Jesus Christ. Anyway, but my point is, is that what if they, you know, what if I'm flying back to L.A. and, you know, or I go through security and they find drugs in my bag? Who would believe me that I'm clean and sober?
Starting point is 01:10:07 Who would possibly believe me? No one. No one. No one. and I could take drug test and I could prove it and I could, you know, I mean, literally, I, I pack my bag in front of a witness everywhere I go so that at least I would be able to say that. Here's the crazy part is the idea that I would think that there is a government and power capable of doing that. It says everything anyone needs to know about where we are. the idea that you feel unsafe in the United States of America
Starting point is 01:10:50 because you disagree with the current administration on a issue that 70% of Americans agree with you on. Like, you know, I think we all can agree is that we need to stop the wholesale murder of a population in Gaza. I, you know, whatever you think about my father's, um, uh, uh, um, policy as it relates, I, I always say to people, do you know one thing he didn't do? He didn't greenlight a, um, uh, to turn Gaza into a Trump golf course, um, you know, with the matri D being Jared Kushner with $4 billion in Saudi money.
Starting point is 01:11:34 It's despicable. It's just like they did the deal before. I mean, when he posted that, oh, I'll never forget that, posted the Trump, like, here's what Gaza could be and like, I could have my name in a building and I was like, But literally that's what they're doing. This is dead children. Like you're literally saying this is all going to be fine because we're going to get up a Trump resort or something. Positively despicable.
Starting point is 01:11:52 I mean, just positively despicable, tasteless, indefensible. And it's not a joke, though. It wasn't a joke. And that is the deal. And that's what they're doing. Literally doing. And by the way, they're doing it out in the open. I mean, it's not as if they're hiding it in any way.
Starting point is 01:12:07 I mean, they are making deals as they go through. You know, like I always say to people, it's like, You had such a problem with me. I didn't do any business. I didn't do any business. I didn't do a single business. You know, every single person that bought a painting from me during the time my dad was there in office. I had two shows and probably sold a total of 20 paintings and 13 of them to my best friend.
Starting point is 01:12:37 And that's it. That's it. And you had a problem, not you. Well, you too, but had a problem with me as being this emblematic emblem of corruption. These guys, okay, Don Jr. got the single largest loan guarantee from the Department of Defense ever handed out of over $600 million for an energy company, a fusion energy company, of which he has zero, zero experience it. They have gotten Jared Kushner, who's never run a private equity fund, has now a $4 billion dollar private equity fund with 80% of the money coming from the Middle East, of which he continues to raise as he is the ambassador at large on behalf of the Trump administration, not as a political
Starting point is 01:13:29 pointee, but simply as a son-in-law of the president to come to a peace deal of a war in Iran that they started that has cost the economy billions and billions of dollars for war. Nobody wanted that every president before them, before him, was pressured by the Israelis to get into in every single one, regardless what you think of them, from George, from Jimmy Carter through President Reagan, through both of the Bushes, through Clinton, through my dad said, you're out of your damn minds. And here's the reason why. This is what's going to happen. So who benefits right now? you know the benefits the people that are making trades of billions of dollars on market manipulation that occurred it's literally out and open but who's going to who's going to you know who's going to
Starting point is 01:14:25 you're not going to scream out of me like I'm so far off the Trump chain he's posting no no by the way and I'm not even saying it's embarrassing but it is embarrassing it is embarrassing because we got behind him as the answer to corruption we thought he was going to be this outsider you know he's going to go to D.C. He's going to drain the swamp and then he became the Lochness monster, you know? And so it's like, I don't know what it is about that swamp, but you get swimming in it, and it's like people do this. And yes, it has been for Israel, not to say that Trump wasn't pro-Israel. Most presidents actually are pro-Israel. When they go in there and they go anti-Israel, they kind of end up dead. But it's, or they
Starting point is 01:15:00 sort of get kicked out if you want to talk about Nixon and the scandal of Watergate, which I've revisited and did think that that had a lot more to do with his shifting viewpoints. But that wasn't the issue. Like, I was pro-Israel. generally speaking and not very educated about the topic, it's this level of corruption that you're talking about when you are willing to let real Americans be harmed, their day-to-day lives be harmed, they're suffering at the gas pump, their groceries are expensive, all at the, so that you could further enrich, how much more money does just Trump family need? I mean, just like, literally, how much more money do you need, like, that you're going to allow this to happen?
Starting point is 01:15:34 Don't you just want to have now the legacy of being a good president? I mean, this is... Yeah, I have to say to you about, like, the cryptocurrency thing, I think there's an incredible promise in cryptocurrency. I believe in the, you know, meme token. I want to, I'll do something one day to create a community and there's really good reasons to do it. There's really interesting ways. And I know, but disagree. I just happen to be kind of like a crypto guy. I mean, just because of my understanding, I think it is incredible freedom in a world in which we've been controlled by banks. So if you have the same problem that I have with big pharma banks and the Fed and these, like, like where does money come from kind of thing? Is it like, like,
Starting point is 01:16:11 Like, I truly believe in what Satoshi, you know, kind of the manifesto of Bitcoin. But that's just me, regardless. My point is, is that they had such an opportunity. It had such an opportunity. I'll give you this. I want you to look at the conspiracy. Go look up, Gal Luft and Alexander Smyranoff. They're the two principal individuals.
Starting point is 01:16:41 that made the only claim that people hung their hat in, in Congress and elsewhere, as it relates to my dad in corruption, bribery and stuff like that. One of them is a fugitive from justice wanted by Interpol and the United States government, Gail Luft, who is a former IDF officer, who is believed to be living in Israel as a fugitive,
Starting point is 01:17:09 which Israelis will not help us locate. and the other one is Alexander Smyranov, who is a known Israeli intelligence agent. Those are the two people, who was in a prison in the United States serving six years and they can't find him. Bureau of prison can't find him in his prison,
Starting point is 01:17:29 in the prison. He is on furlough, but no one knows where he's been furloughed to. The only passport that he has is an Israeli passport. There are forces. that I used to say, oh, this is bullshit. Have you ever read The Devil's Chessboard? Yes.
Starting point is 01:17:51 Alan Dulles, looking into the CIA, I read this book, Chaos, that then led me the Devil's Chess Board. It's actually on our list for books to read for the book club. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It'll knock you chaos.
Starting point is 01:18:03 CIA, the Manson stuff. That was the one that knocked me, and I was like, what the heck is our government? What is going on? And you read the devil's chessboard, and you realize that... Anyway. What the CIA is capable of, and you think it's all a conspiracy, and I think that's what they're fearful of is that people will have awaken to that.
Starting point is 01:18:19 And so when they're kind of trying to throw red meat now, what you see them doing, the left, the right, it's just not landing the same anymore because we just realize that there is a devil's chessboard. That's why I have in terms of the left. Like, you think I'm going to defend the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the C. elite of the, of the left. They, they, they, when, when, when, when, when they saw their chance. they did everything in their power to push, push him out. You know why? Because he was never part of that club. He was never part of the Epstein class.
Starting point is 01:18:54 He lived in Delaware. Everybody that you can think whatever he wanted about my dad is that literally my dad never bought a stock or a bond because he made a commitment in 1972 when he was 30 years old after Watergate never to own a stock or a bond. And he did. My dad was a poorest person ever to enter the presidency. And the poorest person, not poorest, I mean, he had money. He wrote and written a book and he'd done well, but he had the least amount of wealth
Starting point is 01:19:19 entering the presidency in modern years since 1900 than anybody. And when he was in the United States Senate, he was not only the poorest man in the Senate, not poor again, he made over $170,000 in average over the course of 45 years. But not just the Senate, but 535 members of Congress. He was never a part of that club. And that's what I wish, like, you knew. That's what I wish they knew. And I am not here in any way to defend, you know, the, you know, the D.C. elites of my own party.
Starting point is 01:19:59 I think that they're just as complicit in all this bullshit. No, without question, like the Nancy Pelosi's. What's your opinion on Kamala then? Did you like her? I like you didn't. No, you know. what I did, and I don't want to say anything. I don't, I didn't know the vice president that well.
Starting point is 01:20:19 Okay. You know, I mean, I, and she was always nice to me personally. And so that was my, you know, you know, but I didn't have, the other thing that people think that I was like living at the White House, I literally didn't leave my home because it was really hard to leave. I stayed, you know, in the hill that I lived on until the fires came. that's where I was. I was with Bo and Melissa
Starting point is 01:20:47 and trying to make it through and not trying to make it through, thriving, making it through would otherwise have seemed like a horrible, horrible life from any outsider's perspective. So I'm not judging the question, but I don't want to shit on the vice president
Starting point is 01:21:08 because I have no reason to necessarily. She did nothing personal to you, she was nice to you. Never did anything personal to me. Yeah. I think that she is, you know,
Starting point is 01:21:16 so I really don't know. Machine stuff. Yeah, exactly. You know, I don't, in terms of all of that stuff, I'm,
Starting point is 01:21:23 you know, I think, I'm tough enough to realize that, that, you know, that's part of, like, when you get to politics
Starting point is 01:21:30 at that level, I, people kind of, uh, I think, have this misperception of me is that for 50 years, I was a crack addict
Starting point is 01:21:39 and I was that picture. You know, I mean, I went to Yale law school, You know, I served in the Clinton administration. I was chairman of the board of the U.S. UN World's Food Program, which is the largest humanitarian organization in the world. I served on 16 boards before I ever joined the board of Burisma or anything.
Starting point is 01:21:56 I taught at Georgetown for, I was, you know, taught at the master's program with the school in first service for four years. I actually didn't know that. Yeah, yeah. That was something that surprised me to, not to be rude, but I thought you were dumb. Yeah. Because, I don't know, maybe because Megan McCain was on the view for too long or something, and I was like, here we go, just like rich political kids.
Starting point is 01:22:13 Like, I mean, she is just so dumb. And yet she's just always here, like they're just giving her stuff. And so I think there's also that perception where it's their rich kids don't work, aren't smart. And so I was kind of expecting you to be sort of a Megan McCain. And then when I watched it, I was like, oh, wait, he actually has brain cells, which is, by the way, remarkable that you didn't kill them all off when you were on crack. I told you before, I think they got pickled all the vodka. There's something like that.
Starting point is 01:22:38 So I was like, this is interesting. He's not a total idiot. So there are the stereotypes of rich kids who just keep getting handed all of these awards in life. I say to everybody is that if there's ever anybody in the history of America that benefits from low expectations, it's me. Is it? People are like, oh, my God. Like, you aren't. You're not dumb.
Starting point is 01:23:02 A complete moron. You haven't pulled out your crack pipe yet, which is really crazy. But that gives you an idea, by the way, of the level to which I was muted. because they didn't want it. And, you know, you have to subvert yourself to a machine to a certain degree. And like it wasn't up to me if I wanted to go out and like rail at the machine or rail at, you know, go on and and argue with Jake Tapper or, you know, whoever. Does it would harm your dad? Yeah, because then I'd become even more of the story.
Starting point is 01:23:35 But you give up your voice in that way. and it's incredibly emasculating. And particularly when the portrait that is being painted of you as a near-do-well that never did anything in their life, like, you want to talk about experience? But look at my goddamn resume. I have 10 times more experience in 10 times more things. And I know I am 10 times more well-read than either one of the Trump boys,
Starting point is 01:24:05 regardless of what you think about them. Now, you know what I can't do? is that I'm not a great shot, you know, and I don't know anything about real estate. And I don't know anything about making money, and that's why I'm about, you know, a few million dollars in debt. And I don't. And I need to change that one around in some way at the age of 56. But the portrait that was painted on me has given me this incredible gift that I can walk into your house, into your studio. And I guarantee that people afterwards are going to go, I still think he's an . But my God, he's not, you know what?
Starting point is 01:24:44 Can you believe it? He didn't go do lines in the baths. No, I was, that was my reaction when I watched Andrew Callahan. I was like, wow, he's actually thought through his addiction. He's talking about the ritual. Like, this guy's not an idiot. And you're right. I guess you do benefit from having exceedingly low expectations. But it was sort of like you said, the first time you spoke. And of course, you did sort of have to be quiet because otherwise you would have definitely hurt your father. And there's a machine that's kind of bigger than you that you have to submit yourself to. Rage was there. You could tell the, that I even went back.
Starting point is 01:25:11 My dad just said, honey, that was, that was really beautiful parts of it. Do you have to use the F word that much? It's like, coming from you. Yes. The thing about my dad, though, is he, at least from the different gender, he would, he never talked to us that way, ever, like, around, around my mom. or, you know, but anyway, so I'm trying to curb the F word for my mom and dad. All right, you guys, summertime expenses in 2006 are stacking up faster than ever,
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Starting point is 01:26:46 How old were you, by the way, when your mother died in the car accident? Just about three. I was a month away from three. But it was a month away from four. My sister, Caspi, was about 18 months. And my oldest daughter is named after, Naomi. and, um, and, uh, yeah. Do you have any memory of her?
Starting point is 01:27:09 Yeah, you know, I, it's a, uh, I don't know, uh, for certain whether the, the things that I have, which I believe are memories, are memory, um, because it would be very rare, uh, at that age. I, I, I have distinct memories of my, my mom carrying us around in, picnic past it. And I even have a distinct memory of the car, not the accident, but of the car. But I don't know if it's because I've been, you know, too steeped in stories. You know, the beautiful part, like everything, there's a, have you ever read any of the Gnostic Gospels? No. No. You really should because I know you're, I've listened to you to talk about your Catholicism and your faith.
Starting point is 01:28:09 And I'm like a toddler in the faith and there's so much. It's like so rich. So it's really cool. One of the things that I've always been a student of, because when I first went to Georgetown, the two closest people after I graduated Georgetown were two Jesuit priests. One was named Ted Deziac, another one was Bill Watson. And both Father Watson and Father Deziac led me into this idea of service. I started a thing called the Jesuit International Volunteers with Father Watson. I mean, excuse me, Father Deziac, and then I went to the JBC because of Father Watson, which is like domestic peace corps, you know, and I did that for a year. And then when I opened up my own law firm, all my clients were Jesuit universities because I was friends with presidents of the universities that were just like
Starting point is 01:29:04 five or six years older than me. You know, they were now becoming presidents of St. Chos and Granton and Loyola and all these Jesuit universities, Detroit Mercy. And, but anyway, the Gnosticospels.
Starting point is 01:29:19 The Gnosticospels were, um, uh, they were found, uh, in Nage Homony and they, they were written in the, the period between Christ's death in the first two centuries.
Starting point is 01:29:33 And there's the Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Philip. And Constantine, now I'm going to do, this boring. No, I'm very interested in this. Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity. Yep, the end. But what he did, and really what it was about, was not a true transformation of faith. It was a way to consolidate power.
Starting point is 01:29:53 So he made the Christian bishops, who were, you know, 200 years into the very, very early church, he made the Christian bishops, his lieutenants and enforcers as it related to the religion so that he can control the more radical elements of it. And so that is when they came to an adoption of just four gospel. And there's all of these other writings that became, that you could get excommunicated for promoting.
Starting point is 01:30:30 That is really beautiful, really beautiful portraits like the gospel of Mary Magdalene in Jesus' relationship with Mary Magdalene. But anyway, it's not a gospel, but it is one of the texts, I think it's called the Acts of John. There is a thing that Christ says, and he says, I'm paraphrasing, you must learn to suffer as I do.
Starting point is 01:30:56 in order to be able not to suffer. And that is the greatest lesson of everything, is not having gratitude for all the good things in my life, for having immense gratitude for all of my life. Like, I wouldn't be here. We couldn't have this honest conversation. I couldn't get to know you as a human being if every single thing didn't occur behind it.
Starting point is 01:31:24 I would not feel this gift of being alive on a daily basis the way that I do if I hadn't overcome committing suicide dozens of times in motel rooms in places that I could never afford to be found dead. And it's that piece of life that the only way I got it is when they, I just tore off all my clothes, tart and feathered me, and put me in the center of town and said, look at him.
Starting point is 01:32:08 And I, and I, and I survived. When you survive that, you kind of go, what am I going to do with my life? Well, the number one thing I want to do with my life is number one, take care of me. Yeah. I feel like I have to say, like I'm really sorry that I contributed to that.
Starting point is 01:32:25 Like I just feel really shitty. Like I feel guilty because like hearing you talk about, I mean, basically having the worst moments of your life. Like I always speak about on my show how a lot of these kids growing up aren't going to even know what it was like before social media where you could just make a mistake and like have that be over and you got to grow up. And now it's like they're digging and they're finding people's tweets from when they're 17. They're an idiot. They wrote the N word once and they like want to hang them when they're 40. And I just, I just saw you as a caricature. And it was definitely. like I said, like feeling gas lit by the political machine convinced that it was just the left that part took in this political machine and I just like really want to say like genuinely like I'm so sorry that I just didn't even consider he's a crackhead and like you know like that's actually a very relatable thing and he shouldn't be you know like to have that is just unbelievable to consider every worst thing you've ever done. I am like I told you before we started I'd cry very easily.
Starting point is 01:33:24 But I do, I just feel like it's not who I want to be. And I think I've come a long way from that in general. But I did partake in just the inhumanity of just look at this guy at the worst moment of his life. Like with prostitutes, he's on crack, he's on drugs. And we should make fun of him because it makes us feel good. Or it makes us feel like we're somehow beating the machine. And that it was, I think, a really warped viewpoint. And hearing you speak about it today, I'm just like, wow. It is so gross that I particularly. You have so much, and I mean this in a good way, so much power, because I think that your audience absolutely trust you. And the reason that they trust you is because you've shown an enormous amount of courage of speaking your mind, particularly as it related to someone that you love like a brother. and everything that has transpired since then, which is a immediate rejection of power and an immediate rejection of,
Starting point is 01:34:33 and knowing that you were just gonna get the shit beat out of you. And for you to say that to me, I truly mean it, just from a purely selfish point of view, it means the world. And, and that, and I didn't, I truly didn't come, I truly didn't come here for that. I came here because, you know what?
Starting point is 01:34:58 I has forgiveness every day without any expectation that I will be forgiven. But I know the people that I hurt. And, you know, and I still do. And I'm not remotely perfect. And I still screw up. And, you know. And, but, God, if, like, if we, you'd have this conversation and genuinely, authentically believe that,
Starting point is 01:35:28 like, I think just opens the door for, and a few other people without being, you know, with all humility. Like, maybe, you know, maybe a few other people. And there is a freedom in it, too. Like, there's a freedom that your worst moments have just, like, there's nothing else. What are you going to say? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:50 You got me butt naked up with the crack pipe. So I mean, there's, I survived it, and so you have it. And it allows you to kind of return to who you are because it's, you know, addiction is. Yeah. I wouldn't wish it. I always say, like, you know, people growing up and seeing when it's son to families and seeing a lot of stuff when I was younger, like really made me like, again, I'm like, wow, I can't even imagine. Imagine if you could talk about it.
Starting point is 01:36:14 Imagine if you could have openly talked about it. And the person that you were confronting or doing it is like we're able to say, like, this is, you know, like, we got to do something about this. Come on, everybody. Let's do something about it. I want to start an aftercare program for people for free because the biggest thing that happens is people go to detox and they go to recovery center or rehab and they get out after 30 days and they got nowhere to go. And so one of the things that I'm trying to do is start a free aftercare program. And there's a couple. There's one in Kentucky that is a really beautiful model.
Starting point is 01:36:45 But if I could do that, you know, I work with an organization called Boston Universal. I'm the development director there and they do tenants rights and homeless prevention. I know what we all can agree on. We can all agree on that people can't afford to pay the rent and they'll be able to figure out a way
Starting point is 01:37:08 to stay in their houses before it becomes a mother with three kids that are homeless. We know where that leads. But these kinds of things is what I want to use, what I'm doing. I want to do that.
Starting point is 01:37:22 I also want to make a living. I also want to do it. I also want to be able to pay my debt. I also want to be able to do the things that, you know, I have, you know, I also still want to make art, you know. I started finally, and like, you know what, I'm going to put all my art on my website, and people can come look at it if they want to buy it,
Starting point is 01:37:41 they can buy it. And like, because I don't really believe art becomes art until you share it with somebody. I mean, like, until there's an observer of it. I can sit in my studio, which is my garage. But I want to do all of those things, and I want to be able to do it, and I want to be able to talk to you. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:38:05 I want to be able to talk to the people. I want to talk to that family, the necessary conversation, and say to the mom, like, the stories your daughter tells you about the way that you adopted animals. It really moves me. the fact that you think I'm the spawn of the devil we maybe have a discussion about it you know yeah it's a caricature and I have and I have a caricature of me
Starting point is 01:38:32 that's been built up for a year so I should have been more empathetic to it honestly but when you're in it you kind of don't really know that you're in it I think well not only in it is that you're in it to win it and when everything is put in a political lens and light for death and you know if we lose this election
Starting point is 01:38:48 that you know this is over and these, you know, now I'll tell you this, is that we've never had somebody that is, you know, you know, both staying longer than they're supposed to, but regardless, is that I think that, that we all have a tendency to,
Starting point is 01:39:08 to look at the time that we live in and say that it's worse than ever, absolutely the worst. And the fact of the matter is, is if, like you, if you, you know your history, is that like this is a cycle there will always be really bad people
Starting point is 01:39:27 we will always be disappointed in the end with leadership we will always have corruption it doesn't mean that we need to accept it it doesn't mean that we don't need to fight against it it doesn't mean that sometimes really good people make the wrong choice but
Starting point is 01:39:45 what it does mean is that I have absolute hope I've really truly still believe in America even with all of the all of its faults I mean even after reading the devil chessboard like you know you read that and you go like
Starting point is 01:40:07 and that's not about Democrats and that's not about Republicans and if you go back and you go back to Reconstruction you go back to Andrew Johnson and you go back to like the you know, the fact that the United States of America has not had, it was not, it's not been truly the United States of America until, you know, 1964 at best.
Starting point is 01:40:27 And this whole thing, but I still really believe in the, the illusion. And the thing that makes me so mad is they have completely torn away that illusion. And people feel hopeless. They feel like there's no chance to change in it. Okay, they gave this guy,
Starting point is 01:40:45 the Marines to do it. And he was the one who was going to blow everything up and make it better for everybody. And they're kind of like, wait a second. What happened to Charlie? Wait a second. Why are we at war again? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:01 You know. I think this is actually the most important question, and I will make this my final question I want to ask you, but I'm really interested about your faith life. You're Catholic, you're raised Catholic, you're Catholic. You went to Catholic school and like is you're talking to me about the Gnostic Gospels.
Starting point is 01:41:19 Let's you and I go see the Pope together. I love to do that. Seriously. I think he's a little mad at America right now. No, but you and I go see him. I was tweeted the same day as the Pope, by the way, by Trump when he said bad things about me. For real, let's go to the Vatican. I would love to.
Starting point is 01:41:31 I would love to. I just the coolest place in the world. I love to. I just got back from Italy. I was there two weeks ago. Yeah. I did my confirmation. Well, oh, you did?
Starting point is 01:41:39 I did. I was, it was just the most beautiful. Oh, that's so cool. Unbelievable. Yeah. It was literally the same day that Trump posted the time most vile person of the year. So I felt like there was even in that there was something divine because it was like looking at fake power and then the real power of like having, you know, a cardinal getting confirmed being in Italy, the deep history. Like what outlasts that?
Starting point is 01:42:01 Like there was something so fickle about it. Like posting this photo of me when I was sick. Okay, great. Wait, hold on. Talk about humiliating people for sport. Somebody literally sent this to me right before I came into you. they knew that I was going to talk to you. And I promise you I did not plan to do this.
Starting point is 01:42:15 No, you're so fine. It was a prayer. If you are wise and understand God's ways, prove it by living an honorable life, do good works with the humility that comes from wisdom. But if you are bitterly jealous and there is selfish ambition in your heart, don't cover up the truth with boasting and lying.
Starting point is 01:42:34 For jealousy and selfishness are not God's kind of wisdom. Such things are earthly, unspiritual, and demonic. for wherever there is jealousy and selfish ambition, there you will find disorder and evil of every kind. The whole first piece of that when you were just talking is what's my faith. If you are wise and understand God's ways, prove it by living and honorable life.
Starting point is 01:43:04 And the thing that I recognized is that, quote from Mother Teresa, I don't go to Mass as much as I used to. I go to Mass every Sunday. I never would miss a mess. You know, I went to Georgetown, Catholic. But what I realized is that my real faith is in that belief, is that just do the next right thing.
Starting point is 01:43:28 That's the, whether it's the golden rule. And that doesn't mean you have to be weak in your empathy, but always be compassionate. I believe in the perennial philosophy. I believe that same exact, message from the Upunishads to the Gospels of Jesus Christ are all at base in terms of the red-letter words of each of them are saying the same thing, love your neighbor, like you would want to be loved. And it's the hardest thing in the world to do. So hard. But that's my
Starting point is 01:44:11 faith. And I think that there are certain people that arrive at certain times that are messengers of that. And for instance, I certainly don't agree with the Catholic Church on a lot of stuff. I certainly have a, but I tell you what, I really am so proud of Pope Francis and now Pope Leo in terms of just the notion of social justice. And I think that there can be a practical application of that in terms of our leadership. I really do. I think that faith that is used as a cudgel
Starting point is 01:44:58 is really, really dangerous. I think that I know a lot of people, that I personally love and very close to that are part of an evangelical church, particularly in the African-American community, but that are horrified by the complicity of a certain section of the evangelical church and what's happening in the world today. So to me, my faith is very personal, rooted in, in, it's rooted in, it's rooted in, in Catholicism.
Starting point is 01:45:40 And it's rooted in the Society of Jesus, the Jesuit Church in particular, which they used to always call the Black Pope until we finally got a Jesuit Pope. And with the eyes wide open too, that the church as an institution is incredibly flawed and had been. But it's given me an enormous sense
Starting point is 01:46:04 of community and belonging, just from a cultural perspective. Well, what I'm going to say is I really think you should go to confession. Yeah. You should do that. Oh, don't worry. I've been to confession. Yeah, you go to confession and get, you know, and just, you know, just.
Starting point is 01:46:24 100%. Yeah, don't worry. Go back to the root. Go back to the root. And, you know, it's so much there. And it's like you're not, you know, you're just not enough. Your brain's not enough. I mean, hearing you describe that I can do this,
Starting point is 01:46:38 there is just something about for me, like the submission that every mass and just remembering like... The beautiful thing. Yeah. I'm not enough. The beautiful thing is this. The beautiful thing is that I have been going to confession
Starting point is 01:46:55 for six years. Wow. Right here. That's me. You know, I, like that freedom, you know, what used to feel like, the only person that you could say this to? You know, and I'm not saying that there is not like my impure thoughts that I'm,
Starting point is 01:47:14 you know, that's between me and God. But I am saying is that that feeling of release that the confessional is there for is the feeling that when I was finally able to see beyond all of the noise that I received by just existing and getting up every day and looking, turning over, and seeing that my wife, who saved me, and Bowie, and my dad, as a dad, not his present, but just this, a dad. And my mom and my sister and my aunts and uncles and everybody else, and then the wider circle, my friend George, you know, my friend Franny. You know, I mean, my friend Bobby, like people that came into my life and they never left and despite it all.
Starting point is 01:48:13 And there was nothing in it for them, but just grief and ridicule. Pretty cool. It's everything. Yeah. Ladies and gentlemen, Hunter Biden never thought this conversation would happen. And it's just stranger things have happened. And I'm just, this has truly been one of the most powerful discussions that we've ever had. And I think it's because of your journey.
Starting point is 01:48:34 You know, you've lived through a lot. lost your mother, your sister in a tragic accident, you lost your brother to cancer, maybe for a while lost your dad to politics, political machine, lost yourself to crack cocaine, and somehow
Starting point is 01:48:50 I gained everything. Yeah, it's it all back. Yeah, I really did. I can't tell you how much it means to me that you wouldn't invite me here into your home to be able to have this discussion. And I
Starting point is 01:49:04 I really, really mean it. I'm really, really honored. And I'm grateful that you took it and that you've accepted my apology because I just feel really shitty about it. But, um, thanks. Guilt is good, like we said earlier. Thank you so much for joining us. Amazing.

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