Higher Learning with Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay - Decency and Dave Chappelle. Plus, Should Former Trump Allies Be Embraced?
Episode Date: April 17, 2026Van and Rachel discuss the mysterious circumstances around the death of an influencer before diving into Dave Chappelle’s interview with NPR and Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar’s comments on ...embracing Trump allies. Plus, an argument for Trump being the Antichrist. Then, Michael Tubbs, a candidate for lieutenant governor of California, joins the show. (0:00) Intro (06:38) The mysterious death of an influencer (13:49) Dave Chappelle's NPR interview (37:26) Representative Ilhan Omar on former Trump allies (1:05:42) Pete Hegseth’s ‘Pulp Fiction’ prayer (1:15:07) Tamera Mowry and Threads (1:18:18) Michael Tubbs joins the show Hosts: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay Guest: Michael Tubbs Producers: Donnie Beacham Jr. and Jade Whaley Social Producer: Bernard Moore Video Supervision: Chris Thomas and Jacob Cornett This just in, the Comcast Business Price Lock Guarantee is back. For a limited time you can lock in the same great rate on gig speed internet and advanced security for 5 years. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yo, yo, thought lawyers. What is up?
Higher Learning is on and Zy Van Lathan Jr.
And it's me, Rachel and Lindsay.
Boy, you have a pep in your step this morning.
I wonder why.
This is my birthday, guys.
It's his birthday, yay.
Happy birthday.
Happy birthday, Van.
Happy birthday.
It's very special.
I feel like you're really enjoying your birthday this.
You don't like, I feel like when we're like, oh, it's Van's birthday,
he's like, ah, let's just move on.
I like that you're taking it all in.
I'm fine with me.
I don't care about it anymore.
See, see, I'm sorry, I brought it up.
I triggered it.
No, no, no, no, I don't care.
You care.
We care.
The Thought Warriors care.
We are so happy to celebrate you today.
They care.
Another year.
I'm sorry, I literally just triggered.
You were actually in a positive mood and I just triggered this.
Well, because you know what happened?
I need my glasses.
You love to be cynical.
You love to be a contrarian.
I love to be cynical.
And then for a moment.
the other side came out because there's there's there's the other side and you you caught
yourself and you're trying to go back to it just be happy just celebrate your birthday it's your
birthday so we got a show it's your birthday we got Michael Tubbs on the show today
one two three happy birthday to you happy birthday to you happy birthday to you happy birthday
Happy birthday.
Happy birthday.
Even Donny joy.
Everybody.
Thank you guys.
Thank you for the birthday wishes.
In all seriousness, I love birthdays now.
Yay.
Because you, like, well, no, I love birthdays.
Not my particular birthday, but I love to celebrate life.
Celebrate life.
I see a lot of people celebrating life.
They celebrate life.
They do special things to celebrate life.
It's important to celebrate life.
There's so many terrible things happening everywhere.
Everyone that can hear my voice.
I am happy to be in community and energetic conversation.
with you every time we do this podcast.
So yeah, I appreciate that I'm still here.
So many of the people that I grew up with aren't.
So many of the men that I've loved over the course of my life,
my uncles, and so many of them aren't.
So I'm happy to be here and I hope you to be here for a lot longer
and do a lot more things.
So I appreciate my family here for shouting me out.
I appreciate to talk about it.
Thank you guys.
Calica's here.
Calica came and woke up this morning, came in.
I appreciate Calica.
So I appreciate Calica.
all of you guys and everything that's going on.
Are you a person who reflects on your birthday?
No.
Why do I try?
Not any way to show perform.
You said what?
Really?
Not any way to shape, perform.
No, not really.
I'm definitely one who just like sits back and I'm like thinking about the past year,
thinking about where I want to go in the next year.
Maybe you will tonight.
You know what?
I don't think, you know why that doesn't happen to me on my birthday?
Because you do it every day.
Well, I'm like I, I have.
a different sort of existential crisis, you know, basically every day, like you just said.
Per week, I think about can I accomplish the things that I want to accomplish?
Can I do it?
I got a cinematography class on Tuesday nights.
How's that going?
It's going great.
I'm terrible.
I'm so untalented at picture composition and taking pictures and doing all of that stuff right now.
I'm so bad at it.
It's so exciting.
It's exciting because most things in my life right now that I've been doing I'm pretty good at.
But this I'm terrible at right now.
I don't have the eye for it.
So, but just to understand that, like I just want to have, as, I want to max out on my ability.
I want to be the best version of myself possible.
That's why I've been listening to a podcast, noticing that in the past, I was not a good
podcaster.
It's a good talker, but not a good podcast.
That's why I'm trying to become better, trying to get better.
The January crash out.
The January crash out.
It's usually the crash out.
You know, we have to family meeting a crash out.
We always learn.
We get better from it.
It's true.
Well, good, then I'm glad.
Then take a day off where you don't have to think about these things.
Like you said.
No, no, no, no.
We're taking today off.
We're just going to just be.
Step into my world.
What's your world?
Just be.
Just be.
Just be.
Just be.
Just be.
You know, that's why I'm considering Coachella again this weekend.
Just be.
Come with me.
Come with me.
I can't.
No, I'm not going to Coachella.
I'm not going to.
I'm not going to.
Come on.
How do you do with the dust?
It wasn't.
It wasn't.
I went Saturday Sunday.
It wasn't like that.
It wasn't.
Friday was bad.
out there is killing me with the allergies and stuff.
So it's tough.
Everything's very tough.
But we got Michael Tubbs on the show today.
He's running for a lieutenant governor of California.
Yeah, I'm excited to have him back on the show.
We've joined us later.
We've talked to him.
We've talked to him.
We've talked to him.
Are they the first family of higher learning?
Maybe.
It could be.
The first husband and wife, yeah.
Who else?
Who else would it be?
Nobody.
Because if we got Sterling K. Brown, then it could be Ryan and Sterling.
Sterling turned me down for an interview.
I knew it.
I was like, please move the conversation forward.
You turn me down.
Not for higher learning.
Nope.
I tried to get him to come on a black television history podcast, a different podcast that I'm doing.
Is that happening yet?
It hasn't happened yet.
We've been working on for a long time.
So you can still get him?
No, it's not.
He already said no.
And then he proceeded to do a whole bunch of other interviews.
I didn't take it personally at all.
Are we sure?
I had Ryan on, we didn't talk about it.
Are we sure?
Stirlen K. Brown.
Thank you to court who connected me with Sterling.
Stirling K. Brown, he couldn't do it because he was
gearing up doing Press for Paradise.
Okay.
Yeah, Paradise is fantastic show.
I'm a bit Sterling K. Brown fan, even though he told me to fuck off.
He did it.
Still love you, Sterling K. Brown.
You're still the man to me.
I had your lady on.
We talked all about you and all that.
I didn't bring it up once.
Did I bring it up once, family?
But here we are.
It's my birthday.
I get to gripe.
You're right.
Honestly, you're right.
I love that energy.
You do whatever the fuck you want to do that.
You want to storm out.
You want to crash out?
Crash out.
I got other gripes.
You want to be, what else do?
You want to take up for your toxic friends?
Do it.
It's your birthday.
You can do it.
It's a shot.
You want to interrupt me today.
You do it.
It is your birthday.
No, I don't want to do that.
You are the birthday.
Oh, he doesn't know that.
He doesn't get that.
You see, you know, I'd be tapped in with Gen Z.
I get that.
What did she say?
You are the birthday.
I don't want to even know what it means.
I don't even want to know what it means.
I get you, Jay.
I don't want to know what he means.
what it means.
I tapped it.
It's the new thing that they're doing on TikTok.
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All right, let's start off with this terrible disgusting story that's out of Tanzania.
There's more information about the way or there's more information, there's more speculation,
there's more happening surrounding the death of influencer Ashley Jeney.
Donnie?
Yeah, we hit on this a little bit in the last show.
Ashley Jena traveled to Tanzania with her boyfriend, Joe McCann, who proposed on that trip.
Tanzanian authorities reported.
McCann told them that Janette had died by hanging herself in the room at the resort.
No official cause of death has been confirmed by law enforcement.
Investigators say that they are currently holding McCann's passport and so autopsy results are complete.
And they had previously told local media that he wasn't suspected of wrongdoing.
Yeah.
So when we left off before, it looked like authorities had cleared him.
now it seems as if they have held his passport
so they can do their investigation.
Yeah, which is exactly what they should be doing.
Right.
I watched an interview with the family
and they were talking to TMZ actually
and they were saying that, you know,
Donnie already said they hadn't heard from,
he called them 11 hours after it happened,
but then talked about her being stable
and in the hospital before it was actually told
what happened to her, then they have not heard from medical or from the police. This is the family.
They have not heard from him since. And the family hasn't. And, you know, the dad spoke about,
of course, she was questioned about, you know, whether or not she had mental health issues,
which the family said, no, this was a trip of a lifetime for her. There was nothing that they ever
saw. Both her parents said that, that would think, that would lead them to believe that she would
take her own life.
It's a devastating story.
Yeah, it's terrible.
It's, you know, I mean,
and we were talking about this off mic,
to me, this is being,
we know this is being talked about so many ways on the internet.
There's only one way to talk about this.
Somebody died.
Right.
A life was lost.
Somebody lost a friend, a daughter,
a cousin,
whatever,
whatever Ashley was to so many people.
that is the only way we should discuss these stories we shouldn't be it it's so disgusting like
I understand if you want to talk about a bigger issue about the safety of women traveling overseas
the safety of women particularly of color black women traveling to foreign places I understand
that but the people who are so quick to rush to social media or on a microphone to say something
provocative, to say something to go viral, to say something, you know, controversial in order to be
first, it just speaks to who we are as a society. A life was lost. And the only thing we should
be talking about is getting answers for the family because we know that just true justice would be
her coming back and that's not going to happen. That's the only way we should be talking about it.
Yeah. You know, we've talked about this in different regards in terms of like how you
how you talk about or deal with people, you know, after they've passed away or if you have
opinions about them or whatever.
I just don't, I don't understand it.
I don't understand, like, when we talk about recipes that are lost, one recipe that used to be
one of the most important ones was like, someone was gone from this earth forever, never
to return.
You took a moment to contextualize that person's life and consider the pain of their family.
consider the pain of the people that love them
and that was
you put that before what feelings you had
you just put that before them
I'm asking everybody obviously there are people
that do different levels of harm and all of that stuff
I'm not like lecturing anyone
you know you guys have your own energetic
circumstances to consider
and your own carmic consequences
to navigate that is on you do whatever
but in this situation
is this really
another reason to argue
Is this really another reason to have the same type of battles and endeavor into the same type of low vibrational bullshit conversations that we always have that I engage into, that I indulge into calling myself out.
It's another reason to do that right now.
If in fact someone was disrespectful on Twitter or whatever, is that punishable by death?
Right.
Is that the death penalty for that?
Like you, like, is that kind of the deal there?
Is that how that's working?
So I don't know.
To me, when I look at this, what I think of is not necessarily even a cautionary tale.
I think of this profound tragedy with someone who was accepting a wedding proposal one day and then the next day.
How about celebrating life?
It was her birthday.
Celebrating life and is dead.
What happened?
And this gentleman, and his name is.
is not, what's his name?
Give me his name.
Joe?
Because we talk a lot about her name, but we're not really...
Joe McCann.
What's his name?
Joe McCann.
Joe McCann.
So Joe McCann, there it is right there.
It's in the story.
Sorry about that, Jay.
So we,
Joe McCann has a profound task ahead of him
to prove to the world that he is not involved in the death of his fiancé,
which,
I mean, I'm not trying to indict him or send him to the ghoul of,
love, but like, this looks bad.
This looks weird.
This looks like something else happened.
And there's just this timeline issues.
There's issues of like how these two people were, like how close they were or what was going
on before.
They had to be put in separate rooms.
All of this stuff.
This looks like something fucked up.
Also, you know, clearly, I guess he was trying to leave the country because they're
saying that they're holding his passport.
If this is, if you didn't do it, why are you not so concerned and trying to find
answers like the family is about who did. This is somebody that you proposed to, you were celebrating,
you were planning to spend your life with. Why are you trying to get away so fast rather than trying
to get answers as well as to what happened to somebody so close to you that died? That as well
is very suspicious. Right. Well, why are you not communicating with her family? He had called me.
He called them, but he did not call them to tell her she died. Well, he called them to tell me she was in
hospital. You're right? 11 hours. He did not. They did not. They lived. He had called me. He
learn that from the hotel.
Wow.
Like I said, though, like, if we continue to cover the story, it will be conversations with either
her parents or with people around.
But, like, covering the discourse that surrounding this is, you know, we've done this before
around similar situations.
I feel like we've been measured on it.
But covering the discourse that's around this, it just feels at this point just, it's...
It's dark.
Yeah, it's just fucked up.
All right.
Donnie?
Des Chappelle interview.
on NPR.
Really interesting stuff, Donnie?
Yeah, let's switch gears.
He did an interview with NPR where he talked about a range of things, specifically, though,
he did accuse Republicans of weaponizing his transgender jokes to support anti-trans political
messaging, something he says was never the intention.
And I did resent that the Republican Party ran on transgender jokes.
You know, I felt like they were doing a weaponized version of what I was.
I didn't, I didn't, it's not what I was doing.
I give an example, as before I learned the phrase,
I respectfully declined and I was on Capitol Hill
and everybody ran up to take pictures with me
from every congressional office and I just take pictures
with whoever has.
I didn't ask how they voted, what their voting record is.
And everyone, at first it was like CBC people.
And then here comes Lauren Bobert.
And she said, can I get a picture?
And I'd already taken 40 pictures.
40 pictures. I didn't want to say no for everybody, but I didn't know the phrase I respectfully
declined. So I just took the picture. And then she posts the picture before I could even get
from there to the show and says something to the effect of just two people that knew that is
just too generous. She instantly like weaponized it or politicizing. So I got to the arena and I lit her
ass up for doing that. And she should never do that person like me. Now she knows what's up.
Yeah. You do whatever fuck you're doing. Excuse my language. You do whatever it is. You do.
but don't get me out of the splash zone.
He also talked about blowback from the Riyadh comedy festival.
I want to play that one too so we can talk about things in that totality, Donnie.
I didn't feel wrong being up there.
Yeah, I know we were talking about the Comedy Festival in 2025.
You did get a lot of fall.
You did get a lot of, I don't know, what, you'll pushback or criticism for going among other people.
Okay.
The intelligence, U.S. intelligence did make it clear that they believe that the Saudis killed
Jamal Khashoggi and the embassy in Turkey.
You knew that when you went, right?
Oh, absolutely.
Now, I should tell you.
You had no qualms?
I won't say that.
They asked me to go years before that.
And I said no, for that very reason.
Since that time, the United States government does business with the Saudis.
Netflix does business with the Saudis.
Everyone, they've Saudis financed tons of movies.
All these things, I know I see them financing boxing matches and all these things.
And none of these things were an issue.
until I went there.
Now, why is that?
As soon as a black man can make money off the plantation,
they try to tell you the money is dirty.
Well, okay, I'll go home and spend the money
with actual slave owners on it.
Where is this clean money you're talking about?
But you said you hesitated for years to go,
the years you didn't go,
so what made the difference for you?
Time.
Time and circumstance.
Time and the wheels of commerce kept turning.
You know, if you want to be that pure,
about money, then stop driving your car, stop eating, don't use your cell phone.
Everything is tethered to something that's just terrible.
He goes on to talk about the fact that this is part of how Dave Chappelle helps heal communities
or how he is in alignment with them is to go places that are either controversial or going
through a tough time and bring the community together.
I thought it was a really good interview.
It was fantastic.
She's such a good interviewer at the same time.
And the reason he did NPR also is because he was sitting in the space where he had bought the land and put a building up to save.
Well, he said he doesn't think he saved it.
He says the radio station probably would have been funded some other way.
But a radio station that meant so much to him and his community and it was their way to connect to the world.
Yeah, WISO and Yeltsby.
So that's why they were in that space and he was doing this interview with NPR.
I found it very interesting.
I particularly hearing his point of view to some of the criticism that he had received.
We've seen him talk about the backlash for his transgender jokes many a time.
And even within this interview, which I encourage everybody to look at, he even says, you know, she's like, are you exhausted by talking about it?
Are you sick of it or something like that?
She says, and he says, well, I don't want to be dismissive to people that feel a certain way about the jokes.
I don't want to be insensitive to them feeling, you know, hurt by what I said, but then he goes on to, you know, talk about it.
Here's a thing. I mean, he's not wrong that most things are connected to dirty money or to bad interest.
You know, he's not wrong in saying, oh, well, the government takes money, you know, from the Saudis and there are these sporting events and, you know, I'm doing, I'm a part of this as well.
He's not wrong in saying any of those things.
The thing, though, is you are making a personal choice.
You're making a choice that for whatever reason you decide to do it, and with choices, come consequences.
So just as you have the right to go and do what you want and make money in that way and use that platform how you want to, within that interview, he talks about how so many young comedians came to him and said, I can't believe, you know, you challenge the authority here.
And you can just talk so freely like that.
And he felt like it inspired them in certain ways.
That's your choice to do that.
But at the same time, people can choose to be upset about it for, you know, the fact of what the Saudis have done in regards to murdering a journalist, to the policies within their country, to the fact that you Dave Chappelle can come over there as an American and make these jokes and then leave.
We still are left with policies that don't allow us to move so freely.
Now, maybe it creates a movement and then they do something to, you know, I don't know, change the government in some way.
Who knows? But it was just interesting to hear him talk and maybe not bring that part in. Like,
I understand he was giving his point of view. But at the same time, people can react the way that they
want to. And in regards to the Republicans and what he was saying about them weaponizing his transgender
jokes, it's like, again, that's a consequence of the choice you made. You wait that joke. You have
the right to do that. And then people will take that the way that they want to. Of course, the Republicans
use that as a part of their political platform.
When do the Republicans ever play fair?
Why would they give consideration to the fact that you're doing this as somebody who's a liberal,
as somebody who's doing this as part of their art comedy?
Why would they ever give any deference to that?
They're going to use it for their own benefit.
That's what they do, which is why he told that Lauren Bobert story about how she politicized
a picture with them when his intentions were not that.
It's just what happens.
So in this interview, I felt like he was saying, these are my choices, this is why I'm doing it, and the other side of it is, and people have a right to criticize it and to be offended by it and to weaponize it.
Right.
So I watched the whole interview and I was struck just at my affection for Dave Chappelle.
Always am.
Because I can tell in the interview that whether I agree or disagree that Dave Chappelle, that Dave Chappelle,
is completely committed to every belief
that forms in his head
and then comes out of his mouth,
which is probably why he's such a commanding
and effective communicator.
You know, there's a couple of things there
that can only really be sort of,
they can only be distilled through kind of conversation.
Right.
And particularly if we talk about the Riyadh,
comedy festival, which his
note about, or his
feelings about there being a tremendous
amount of hypocrisy on people's
relationship with the Saudis is like
there's no way to, yeah, there's no way.
Right. But I will say one thing
about it is every single time
there was these
different business interests who
decided to work with the Saudis or whatever.
Every single time there was a conversation.
Live golf conversation.
Flag football,
fanatics, whatever was going on,
It's a huge conversation.
The WWE conversation.
Boxing.
Boxing.
Boxing actually less so.
That's interesting.
Boxing less here.
Like boxing less so just because this this understanding of boxing as such a dirty game.
Like boxing is a dirty game, right?
And boxing is also not a league.
So there are promoters that are putting this on.
So it's almost like with a boxing situation, whereas Netflix might be making this decision,
whereas the network that's putting in all
might be making this decision.
It almost seems like it's two individual fighters and promoters
that are making these decisions to go over here.
So I think people don't have a real expectation for boxing.
That's a good point.
I will say, though, they did it here,
and I did not realize who was putting it on.
Riazis, yeah.
And I went, because I don't follow boxing like that,
and I went because I was invited.
And when I get there, they're on stage.
like they're speaking and I was like
you're talking about turkey
Turkey Turkey Alshay like the guy
who yeah yeah yeah and I was like oh
it was like
I didn't even realize
what I was attending
you know what I mean so anyway
sorry
no no no no no no so I'm not in any way
excusing the boxing because I've watched it
and all that other stuff
because they're very much so a part of it
I think that's what was shocking
it was like they did a whole speech
and an introduction
before the fight even started
I think the live golf
I think the live golf thing
and look this is a part of a
a grander sort of money coming out of some of the Gulf nations over there.
Once again, I'm not in any way trying to, like, criticize anybody's culture or whatever,
but particularly with Saudi Arabia and some of these other places,
they realize that they're going to have to diversify their economies moving forward
because the way to continue to be a player in world culture is not just to have all the oil
because that is a finite resource.
It's going to last for a while, but it's a finite resource.
but diversifying your economy now
and being the playground of the Western world
or being a real cultural force
because you have all of this cash,
you have all these sovereign wealth funds and stuff like that.
You can invest tons of tons of money in
and buy a lot of influence
and buy a lot of different things that Americans love
and the Western world loves
and display that stuff.
They do soccer, all of that stuff.
There's sports washing a lot of stuff
and they're culture washing a lot of stuff
to become a part
of Western society
and to have access to that
that economy.
All that I have to say that like, yeah,
there's considerations to be made
when you're dealing with a government
that's as repressive as society government is.
There's considerations to be made.
We also, it feels
a particularly inconvenient time
to tell everybody else
how shitty they are, particularly
inconvenient time for us to do that, right?
And it was always an inconvenient time, right?
The interesting question as it relates
to Riyadh, though, was when she brought up a lot of people, you know, if you guys remember,
you two won't play Sun City back in the day when a lot of places wouldn't go play South Africa
wouldn't play because of apartheid. He says, I wouldn't play Sun City, but I would play Soweto.
How do you know the difference? Like when he played the Riad Comedy Festival, how do you know that
you're not playing Sun City and you're playing Soweto? Yeah. Like, how do you know the difference?
And that makes a lot of sense. His explanation,
makes a lot of sense, but I guess my question is, do you know for sure you didn't play Sun City?
Yeah.
You know?
If that's even a consideration, right?
Because that question is so brilliant because she goes, well, obviously there's so, there's some things that are so obviously wrong that you go, I want no parts of that.
Right.
And by the way, he has a right to say any place where black people are living in this repressive, brutal segregation is someplace that I can't step.
and everybody has a right to decide
which parts of these things are no goals
and which parts of these things
really mean something to them
and where the line is.
Now, if you're judging by the,
if you're going by the injustice anywhere
is an injustice everywhere thing,
then, you know, there's a lot of considerations to be made.
Like you're talking on the phone made by slave labor
and all of that stuff.
It's just really not any way to be pure in the world.
Right.
But if you say that there are considerations to be made,
then I think it's for people who believe in you.
It's a fair question to ask what those considerations are.
And so that is kind of what I mean.
So you would have played Soweto.
How do you know you didn't play Sun City?
How do you know it was Soweto?
Like what is that determination like for you if you even care to explain?
As far as the trans issue and how he talked about it,
you know, he believes he feels the way he feels and he believes it.
Like he believes that he's up there making jokes
and that he was making jokes about what he felt like
was a relevant cultural issue,
which is the trans debate.
But I think there's still something that,
that Dave, and to a degree Bill Burr,
who has come under a live fire
because of playing the Riyadh comedy festival,
there's something that I don't think they understand
about the way we viewed them.
I don't think anybody ever thought
either one of these guys was a perfect guy.
Sure.
But you know what we feel about them?
I don't know why it comes across
with these two guys,
particularly, we have a feeling that they are decent.
Not perfect, but decent.
And here's the interesting thing about being decent.
Decent actually allows you to be wrong.
Like, you can, like, it's like, if you are a decent person, just decent, not good.
You're not a fucking, you know, a nun or, you know, like dripping impurity and, you know,
just like light and all that.
But if you're decent, you can be wrong and you can be fucked up.
And your decency can be appealed to
to where you'll come back and be like,
all right, let's talk about this.
Let's have this conversation.
And for some reason, Bill, Dave, and some other guys,
when you would look at them,
you'd like, that is a decent human being.
That is somebody that has this ability
to talk colorfully and emotionally about issues
to where you go, you know what?
I'm not saying that that nigger up there
has never done anything wrong with that.
won't do anything wrong, but there seems to be something more.
And that is why audiences feel so drawn to them.
And this issue has just been such a particularly taking Bill Burr out of it.
This issue has just been such a gigantic blind spot for Chappelle in that regard for me.
Because legitimately, and I know everyone gets so fucking, because I'm barely decent, barely decent, just trying, right?
But all we're trying to do is protect people.
That's it.
It's not, oh, it almost, it starts to fuck with me.
It's not like a, nobody's trying to tell nobody that they can't have fun
or that nobody wants to laugh at jokes.
I make jokes.
All we try to do is protect people.
Like all we are literally trying to do,
we're just trying to have a conversation about whether or not it's okay to protect people.
Like my mind is so fatalistic that I think about like, you know,
some kids somewhere.
that doesn't, and then like they're suicidal or they got kicked out of their house or like something
so terrible happened.
Like, is it okay if we have a conversation about that kid's protection?
Or does that make you a lame?
Or does like this as earnest as could possibly be?
I'm not trying, I swear to God, I'm not trying to be holier than now.
I'm not in any way.
My shit is all fucked up.
What I'm saying is, does that conversation make you a lame?
Does that conversation about, yo, I don't want to be party to anything.
that takes the one life that somebody has to lead
and makes society a prison for them.
Like, is it okay to talk about that?
Well, it should be.
This is not coming from judgment.
This is not coming from me trying to look down on nobody.
This is coming from me saying,
yo, look at what happened.
They took the jokes and they thought you were with them.
Yeah.
So isn't that something that we can kind of talk about?
Or even if they didn't think it,
you said something close enough.
that they could use to further their own cause.
And I think that like when Dave is talking in this, he's saying, you know, he talks about the
headlines.
And he's like the headlines, it turned into a thing.
And, you know, the way the headlines read didn't really reflect.
You know, he's like reading it is different from being there.
He's right.
And yes, but I felt the same watching it than if I read it, to be honest with you.
But yeah, like to a point, I get it.
if you're sitting in a festival, yeah, I might hit different hearing that joke in person,
but to me, it has the same impact. And so to your point, yeah, we should be able to have these
conversations and we should be able to question it. And they should understand that that's a part of it.
I understand that you as a comedian, and he pretty much explains this, you can't think about
everything. You have may necessarily, not necessarily have those intentions in making the joke. You
feel like you can't do what you do if you think about every single thing in the way that you're
describing it. However, you have to realize, though, that people, we live in a society now. Maybe this
didn't exist to such a grand scale back in the day because we all weren't so connected. We all didn't
have access in so many ways where we had platforms and microphones or whatever it may be. There
wasn't this thirst to say something, to grab a hold of something and make content out of it immediately
to go viral or to be controversial. But that is.
the society we live in now. So your jokes are more impactful and can reach that kid that you're
talking about who feels imprisoned by the jokes or the person who takes those jokes and uses it to
weaponize it against them. That is the reality we live in. And the question becomes, do you change
your comedy? And she kind of said this, to fit the reality we're in, or do you hold true
to the comedy you were raised in? It's a question we're allowed to litigate. And it's not
judgmental, but it's just a part of the conversation because that's in anything, right? As
things change and you have to adapt to them, look at the entertainment industry just in general,
that's a conversation that we're allowed to have. How do you move forward in this world with comedy?
Yeah, I mean, look, this is the way I feel. I love stand-up comics. I love the medium. I love
the way they communicate.
I love all of it.
And I don't want stand-up comments
to be too much in their head.
Yeah.
Because I don't want to be too much in my head, right?
I don't want to.
We are holding Dave Chappelle
and a select few other comics
to a different standard.
But I will say this, though.
I will say this.
Part of the reason why
we're holding them to a different standard
is because that's a standard
that they set for themselves.
Like,
I was just thinking.
No, I'm thinking.
So with Bill Burr in particular, Bill Burr came out one time and said that he criticized
Beyonce or other people like that Mariah Carey, whomever it was, for performing for Gaddafi's
children or performing for Gaddafi, whatever the fuck it was.
He said that.
So he said that there was a place that I wouldn't go.
Love Bill Burr.
Think Bill Burr is amazing.
Love Bill Burr.
I think the way he's kind of dealt with the backlash to the Riyadh Comedy Festival is legitimately
destroying his reputation.
It's legitimately destroying his reputation.
It's just a reality.
Love Bill Bertho.
Wish that there was a little bit more introspection that could happen
regarding how people are responded to that,
particularly his audience and like what's happening over there and stuff like that.
With Chappelle, we saw Chappelle set limits.
Set limits about what he thought was not just harmful for him, but harmful period.
So I guess what people are really having a conversation with him about is about
what he thinks is harmful.
And by the way,
he has the right to be like,
I don't think that this meets that level.
I don't think that this,
for whatever reason,
what I'm doing in this regard,
I don't think that it meets the level of harm
or the threshold for harm
that some of the stuff that I walked away from
from Comedy Central on.
I don't think it's the same.
Or it doesn't hit me the same.
That's fine.
He can believe that.
He can think that.
But there has to be,
be able to be a conversation about it.
Because there's a whole political movement in this country
that has boiled down their freedom.
Their freedom is the right to degrade other people.
And that's a fact.
Their freedom, we're not talking about the freedom
to make off-color jokes.
When you're in a comedy show,
you're supposed to do two things as a consumer.
You're supposed to laugh and feel a little uncomfortable.
The comic is supposed to be able to say a joke
and hear it groans and be like,
that's too much for y'all.
That's how stand-up comedy,
the best end of the comedy works for me, right?
No problem with that.
But just know that an entire side of this country,
their freedom is the right to put you down or back in your place.
That's what they, and I in no way want to be a part.
I don't want to be party two.
I don't want to be the steroids or the PEDs for them.
Like, I don't want to be that.
Like my freedom isn't somebody else's domination.
My freedom isn't somebody else's dehumanization.
My freedom is to me to be shared with other people to make them more human.
And, you know, we probably spend way too much time on this.
But the one thing coming away from this interview, Dave Chappelle is brilliant.
Dave Chappelle does not think that he's doing harm.
But it still seems like in this particular issue, the Riyadh thing aside,
because there's just so many types of, they're wrapped up and everything.
But particularly on this issue, there's a blanche.
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Ilhan Omar.
This is interesting.
I don't know what you guys are going to think about this.
Donnie?
All hands on deck on this one?
Yeah.
Everyone.
Yeah, the representative from Minnesota,
she did an interview with POTSave America,
and she said that Democrats should be more open-minded
about working with Trump's allies.
Let's hear from the representative.
The thing that has been very fascinating,
especially about Marjorie and Candice,
is that they are not just coming out like the other ones
that you'd mentioned where they're saying,
this action is wrong, right?
They're saying, I am done with you.
I think that we should give them credit for that,
the fact that they've had this wake-up call
to finally seeing this con man,
this corrupt, chaotic man for what he is.
is the fact that they understand that he never really had any principles outside of
uplifting his ego. The fact that they have gotten off the sycophane train and are saying,
you know, we trusted the wrong person. We are sorry for that. And we need all of you to
wake up to the fact that you've also trusted the wrong person. I think it's an important
thing for us to put our arms around and say, yes.
Then now let's figure out how do we save our country from the disaster that this man is created.
Kids first.
You guys like Bernard, Jade.
So there's a, for people out there that I don't know, there's a group of far right huge podcasters that have just straight up broke with Trump.
Straight up broke with Trump.
Alex Jones, Marjor Taylor Green, Candice Owen, Tucker Carlson.
These are some of the most popular.
I would argue they are the most popular.
They are the most popular.
Megan Kelly,
they are the most popular conservative influencers,
conservative podcast voices,
and they have broke with the president.
Should that be something that is nurtured by the left?
Jake?
Bernard.
I think it's a nuanced answer for me, at least.
Because what was their reasoning for,
breaking that, breaking that off, being former allies and kind of moving over to a different
side, a different mindset, because a lot of things are rooted in much deeper, deeper things
than solely of what politics or what laws or whatever Trump's doing. So I think, for me,
at least, I think grace can be given, but to what,
and for what purpose I think matters more.
That's my answer.
Bernard.
Bernard doesn't fucking care.
That can be your answer, Bernard.
Maybe you don't give a fuck, Bernard.
To me, it's just a conspiracy theory.
Oh, no, no.
One of them.
Okay, back to us.
Give him a nod off the mic.
Not a conspiracy theory.
You're Bernard off the mic.
Bernard, chill.
Hey, fix the sentence on the camera, though.
That is such a jinzy answer, you know, by the way.
Way to represent.
Hell not.
Way to represent.
It's a no for me.
It's pretty, I feel like we talked about this in regard to somebody else.
We have talked about it.
We're going to continue to talk about it.
And especially coming from her, right?
Where I want to be clear, it's a no for me.
It's a fuck no for me.
I don't like this.
I'm very disappointed in her in particular by saying this.
Marjorie Taylor Green has called you a foreign agent, a terrorist sympathizer,
She put a resolution up to censure her.
She said that she should be deported.
She also said that she should retake her oath in Congress because she did not use a Bible.
And so she questioned her legitimacy based on her own, on her religious issues, or made it a religious issue, I should say.
And you want, and this is the problem.
This is why people become outraged by the Democratic response.
why do we always have to be the good guy?
Why do we always have to be nice?
Why do we always have to say, you know what?
Let's just give that person grace.
She literally said wrap our arms around them.
No, good for you.
First off, she uses Marjorie Taylor Green and Candice Owens,
who I believe, we've talked about Marjorie Taylor Green.
I don't know to what extent we've talked about Candace Owens.
But to me, the only reason that they are speaking out is because Trump did not support them in the way that they wanted to be supported.
I would say that for Candace.
It's not true of Candice.
When he was running the first time, he used Candace a lot.
He did not use her this last election.
Yeah, this is different for her.
For Marjora Taylor Green, that's definitely true.
For Candace Owens, it's not true.
Yes, we know she wanted higher office,
but I do believe that Candace Owens wanted to be used
in a certain way by the Trump administration
that they were using other people
who had smaller platforms than her,
who weren't as well-versed.
I mean, like, she's a great speaker.
You can't deny that as her.
and she was pushed to the side.
I believe that. That's my belief.
I'm not saying that she doesn't stand
in some of the things that she believes,
and I do, but I think that her motivation,
at least her initial motivation for turning on Trump,
is because he did not treat her the same.
That's just my belief.
Maybe it's a conspiracy theory, Bernard.
But the idea that just because they now,
we're supposed to forget the damage that was done.
We're supposed to forget that Marjorie Taylor Green
still brags about the fact that she voted was the congressperson who was most aligned with Trump
in voting on his policies. This is who this woman is. She's upset. She's vengeful in what she's doing.
I don't trust it. I don't believe it, which is why I'll give credit to what Bernard is saying
in regards to a conspiracy theory. We cannot move aside, move past this and just say,
let's give them grace and wrap their arms around them because they're just now saying the right thing.
is there a trust there?
Do you believe that they are committed to the things that they are saying?
Or are they just being reactive because it's popular?
It's going to get them more clicks and views.
They're just trying to have a back and forth and get engagement on their social media
or they're being vengeful because they're upset because the president didn't support him in the way that they did.
There is a lack of trust here with these people.
And I don't think that that requires us to coddle them and baby them.
Have we not done that too long?
It's why in two years Trump's been able to do what he's done because we always try to be the good guy.
why are we trying to always be nice?
It has not worked for us.
Look at where we are right now.
And I'm not saying that we should just like burn everything up
and not acknowledge the fact that they are saying things in line with what the Democrats have been saying.
But it does not call for us to coddle them.
I'm so disappointed in her saying this.
And she's been on the breakfast club and she didn't walk it back,
but she kind of comes back a little bit
in regards to the coddling
and in regards to,
aw.
Happy birthday.
Thank you, Bill.
Uh-huh.
She's on the breakfast club,
and she kind of tries,
she doesn't take it back,
but she kind of is like,
no, that's not what I'm saying,
but you did.
And that's the headline.
And I don't want it to seem like
we're Democrats,
or easily fooled, that a Republican can say one thing,
and then they're able to convince you that they've changed.
That's not the case.
And it's got to be more than just being upset with Trump about the war.
It's got to be more than that.
You got to show you the action has to show that you are actually changing the way that
you feel about Trump's policies and the Trump administration.
Not one statement.
I don't think we've ever disagreed more.
and I will say something at the beginning.
Rache is right.
Don't get on my ass about this, y'all.
I really don't have the...
It's his birthday.
I don't really have...
I don't have the patience for it, okay?
Rache is right.
Rache is right.
But let me tell you why we disagree,
why I disagree with you.
I think we're talking about two different things.
And I think maybe REP Omar is talking about some things.
I think we're talking about two different things.
Okay.
I think on the left, a lot of times,
When we talk about people that we fuck with,
we talk about comrades.
There's a difference between a comrade and an ally to me.
A comrade is somebody that I actually use a word that's not like an ally.
An associate.
I think the right knows how to have political associations.
The left knows how to have comrades.
And I think the reason why that's true is because there are two different battles
that are being fought.
The battle on the left to me
is a humanistic battle,
a battle about how you limit harm,
how you elevate people,
and how you protect people.
And the battle on the right is about power.
And so since the battle on the right is about power,
who you will power over how you exploit someone
or how you keep them under your thumb,
anyone that will help you do that,
you're good.
anyone that will help you consolidate power
that'll help you lock people out of that
you're good with them
because it doesn't matter whether or not
they really love you, whether or not they really trust you,
whether or not they're really part of your movement.
They are helping you to such a fundamentally important
end for you
like this generational
fucking
grab this generational fucking royalty almost.
I don't even know the right word.
this ability to wield power over people that is intractable and never changes.
Anybody that will help you do that?
Cool.
Come over here.
Don't matter.
With us or with people on the left, you have to trust people.
You feel like you have to be able to be comrades with them because the fight feels existential.
Right.
I personally feel like right now, that is why the left loses.
the left loses because the easiest way to lose is to not accept a win.
And I've just seen people like all over the place not be able to accept a win to be able to be like, hey, there's an opportunity here.
There's a win here.
What you're saying about some of these people also because I watch this stuff is actually, in my opinion, fundamentally incorrect.
Like there's been a metamorphosis.
as much for Candace, there's been a metamorphosis for all of these people. And it started
with, I'm not sure about this. This is difficult to defend. Ah, this is not. Then at the end, it's like,
I can't do it. For most of the people that you're talking about that exist in this cohort,
surely. I'm only talking about too. Okay, but for most of the people that you're talking about
that exists in this cohort, like there has been a metamorphosis of everything, it goes, we're talking
about not necessarily I don't agree on the war or not necessarily I don't agree on Gaza.
Not necessarily I don't agree.
We're talking about the criticism of this guy is a con man.
I was conned.
You were conned.
This entire movement was a con.
This guy is a con man.
Are there fundamental political disagreements that still exist with most of those people?
Yes, there are.
But there is an opportunity here.
And I realize people are not going to agree with me.
There is an opportunity here to actually parse apart just what those disagreements are in a really robust way and build something, not something new, but something that is potentially a little bit more people-based that is not oriented around the corporate Democrat versus Republican style of American governance.
Now, in this, there is racism.
There is sexism.
There is anti-trans stuff.
There is the worst of the worst.
And you hear it all of the time.
The question is, if there is some type of conversation,
the question is if there is some type of understanding
that a rejection of MAGA means that there could be something else,
tell you what I mean.
If you are rejecting MAGA because of Palestine,
If you are rejecting MAGA because of Iran, does this mean that you have a fundamental belief in the dignity of people, in the human rights of people?
Okay, if you have that fundamental belief, if you believe that, if that's the reason why you believe that, can we also talk about health care?
Can we also talk about affordability?
Can we also talk about like race relations and systemic issues and violence that exist here?
are you actually open to a conversation about how some of the issues that exist over there are mirrored in American domestic policy?
Is this an entryway into having a conversation that might develop and change your worldview?
Somebody's got to do that work.
And I'm just, I know it doesn't feel good.
It feels bad.
It feels terrible with all of these things being said.
Donald Trump says things all the time about people and then people come back and they accept President Trump.
The only difference is no one changes.
Nothing changes.
So like you don't, Donald Trump will curse you out and say that like your father worked for the KKK or did whatever.
He does all kinds of stuff.
But there's never a worldview change that brings you to him.
You just go along with the bullshit that he's talking about.
If you're telling me right now, right now that these people who were raised in the consumer.
conservative political muck, the descendants of the worst neocons, some of the worst ideas ever, can say that
American adventuring and warmaking overseas is bad, that ice overreaches are too far, that affordability
is what we should be talking about, that how does anything that we're doing around the world,
how does it help us, that President Trump is a comment, that the Epstein files, which are
in my estimation, an indictment of the power class of this country, how they've operated with impunity
and no type of oversight or recourse. If you can tell me that all of those things can create
a framework by which to explore an America that works better for the average American,
somebody's got to take the chance. Okay. So first off, I will
when I was talking about my response to what the congresswoman was saying, I accept what they say.
I don't believe that it's, we should coddle them. Okay. I'm not going to say like, oh, I don't care what you say.
Great. If you want to agree with what we've been saying, it's kind of like a duh. Great. Say that to your audience.
Totally accepted. I'm not going to criticize what you're saying. I'm glad you finally got there. We've talked about that with other people.
Here's be my question to you.
You said it.
Now, I don't listen to, you know,
Megan Kelly, Alex Jones, Tucker Carlson, all of that, right?
You listen to it all.
You listened to that. You said it.
Racism, sexism,
homophobic, xenophobic, okay?
My question to you would be,
what is it that is motivated,
these people that you're listening to to criticize the Trump administration.
And the reason I'm asking you that is because you're correct.
If those people are criticizing the very things, issues that you said, and if you could have
a conversation with them and get them to all come together in order to help the average person,
I would, I agree with you.
That would be wonderful.
But it's the things I just named.
And so I ask you, why is it that they're actually being critical?
Is it because it makes America look weak and it's a power thing?
Is it because you don't like the money that is being, that we're in debt and you don't like
that extra money is being spent on foreign affairs?
Is it because it's affecting your stocks and securities?
Is it because it's big business?
Is it, because if that's what I believe it to be.
don't believe that their intent is humanity, which is I know is what you're saying. I don't think
that they're fighting against the Trump administration because they want to better the average
person, because they want to better people and lower socioeconomic with those type of statuses.
I don't think that's it. I think at their intent, at their core, we're talking Tucker Carlson.
I don't think that he's still, that he doesn't believe in the great replacement theory anymore.
I don't think that some of these people aren't still homophobic, transphobic, xenophobic, racist,
I don't think that they're not these things.
If you want to talk about ICE, I think that they just don't like the way that it looks.
I don't think that they actually necessarily care about it.
I think they think it makes the right look bad or conservatives look bad or MAGA look bad or Trump,
the person they voted for look bad and it's going to hurt them in the primaries coming up.
I don't think their intent is good.
If it was, I would totally agree with you.
I don't trust, and this is what I goes back to,
which is why I don't believe in coddling.
I don't believe in giving grace.
I don't trust that these people have good intentions
in the way that they're disagreeing with the Trump administration.
And nothing has shown me anything different.
You know what this is really about in regards to me?
That's all very well said.
I don't think the left has good intentions.
I'm not here to argue for them.
But just, but just listen.
Like, I don't think that the left has good intentions.
Like, there's no way.
So there's no way to argue that in any way that the Democrats and the Republicans are to say.
When you do that, you're a fool to me.
And one of the reasons why you can't make that argument is because the power base of the Democratic Party is made up of a lot of black people.
Which means that even cosmetically, they can't be anti-black.
They can't.
They can't be anti-black.
I believe that the power base of the Republican Party is anti-black.
And I grew up nestled in the breast of it.
And I believe that there are anti-black ideas that orient those parties.
So there's their fundamental differences.
However, in the actual effect of things, I am past the point of caring about.
legitimately like what's in somebody's heart.
I care about what I can move them and leverage them to do
because these problems are getting worse.
They're getting worse.
And when we have the right leadership,
they only seem to get incrementally better,
better in very small ways.
I give people credit for what they try to do.
I really do.
I really do.
I give people credit for what they tried to do.
I give people credit for their intentions.
but what I need now is for two things, and these are very important.
Number one, an understanding of the MAGA Con job that's happened in the last 10 years of
American political life.
Just an understanding that all of that was a lie.
An understanding that all of the grotesqueries of what you believe can be manipulated
and then used to make you look like a fool.
So anyone who says all of those things were manipulated and,
made to make me look like a fool, I'm like, okay, let me tell you why your ideas are bad.
That's an entry point for me to have a conversation, right? That's an entry point for me to talk,
right? Number two, I need people broadly, broadly to understand that there isn't much that you can
get out of the political system that we are in right now. There's not much you can get out of it.
What you can get out of it is an understanding of how to change it.
That's the best thing that you can get out of it,
is an understanding of what needs to be done differently.
Because right now, things are so fucked up that as we talk right now,
MAGA is as unpopular as it's ever been.
But that is not resulting in a rise in popularity for the Democrats.
Correct.
It's not.
It's not like people call it a seesaw.
It's not like MAGA's going down in Democratic.
Democrats are going up, people are going, well, these guys clearly don't know what the
fuck they're doing.
And these other guys, we can see that they don't know what the fuck that they're doing.
As far as coddling is concerned, when she says no one can be coddled, that we can agree on.
I'm not going to roll out a red carpet for you because you stop being Satan, right?
I'm not going to do that.
But what I will say is like when she says put your arms around these people, I don't take
that to me necessarily coddling them.
I take that to me
that if people are willing to rebuke and reject
this specific political experiment
which we have said is fascism
which we have said is this different type of evil republics.
Do they say that? Huh?
Do those people that you mentioned, do they call it fascism?
No, they don't. They don't. They wouldn't use the word.
But the people to the left of me
call Joe Biden a fascist.
So like I'm not making any excuses.
for any of that, but I'm saying is if they are rejecting this version of American politics
and seem to be embracing something that is a little bit less incendiary than this,
then we need to have a conversation about whether or not we can reform things.
I'm all for the conversation.
And so I want people to understand that we've talked so deeply about the capture
that the right has over the voices and all of that.
Those same people with those millions and millions of people are listening
are now regularly rebuking the president.
That is a good thing.
Do they agree with you on everything?
No, they don't.
Do you have fundamental disagreements on things that, to me,
are material to your life?
Yes, yes.
But the first thing that has to have,
for there to be some type of return to an American ideal to where we could at least fight
in a more, in a more inspiring way, effective way.
Yeah, yeah.
Is this part of it?
Maga part, the Trump part.
They have to go.
And not only do they have to go, but it has to be a smear.
It literally has to be a smear.
When I say go, I don't just mean Trump.
I mean Trump.
I mean Vance.
I mean anyone who refused.
in any way to rebuke what they've taken part in.
Exactly.
So look, like, Kamala Harris last year went around with Liz Cheney.
Does anyone have any clue who the fuck did Cheney was?
That's fucking Darth Vader.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, like, to me, it's, I don't know,
I just don't see how what she's saying isn't right.
Well, we can agree to disagree on that.
I do love what you said, though, about MAGA is as unbroken.
popular as it's ever been and that has not increased support for the Democrats. And I think if
a Democratic politician was listening to this right now, like you should, that should like weigh on you.
Like that's very, it's a simple statement, but I feel like it's very profound because it's not a
victory that people are upset with MAGA. The victory would be if they actually are moving
away from it. And I'm so glad you said that it's not about just Trump. I've said this before.
When we've talked about Andrew Schultz and the way he talks now, I said, great, good for you.
But what I want to hear you do is also criticize the person who's probably going to run for vice president.
I mean, who's probably going to run for president in the next term. Is it just Trump? Or are you
upset with the entire administration? Everybody who's allowed this to happen. It's not just taking
the top off, it's getting the root of it. And that's what I fear with the people that you name. You're
upset with what's happening now and it's easy to be like, well, that was just Trump. He's a maniac.
You know, this next person will be more level-headed and logical about it. And the only last thing
I'll say is, you talked about intention. I agree a conversation should happen. And we should try to
figure out how we can accomplish on certain things. We said it before. I don't know if it was
butchware or what, but it's like we should just focus on a couple of things. And we should just focus on a couple of things.
that if you're over here and you're over here,
I know I'm not going to convince you,
but what is it that we can meet on in the middle?
But I don't think that intention, like you said,
you don't care about what people feel about the heart.
When I say intention, I'm talking about a mental state,
it's a mindset.
And my thing is, the people that maybe might be outspoken
about the Trump administration are outspoken,
but their intention, their mindset is still deeply rooted
in problematic things that hurt so many people
that aren't white like them.
So there's no way to disagree with that.
I'll say two things.
There's one thing that I disagree when we move on.
One thing I disagree with rep Omar about.
She said we should.
No.
Everybody has different jobs.
Nobody has to do this.
It's not your job to do this.
It's not your job at all.
But what I will say is, though,
is that questioning, interrogating this
and exploring people who have
rebuked MAGA in a real way, somebody's got to do it.
Like somebody has to do it, specifically on issues where lives hang in the balance.
Like where if you're saying, hey, we shouldn't be engaged in an active genocide in Gaza.
That legitimately is about people's lives.
I know you don't like somebody for what they said.
But that legitimately, that's legitimately about people's faces being burned off and hospitals being bombed.
schools being bombed.
That's not,
that's legitimately about somebody's life.
I'm not asking anyone to sacrifice
their life and how things are
in their country for somebody's life
on the other side of the world. I'm not saying that at all.
But what I'm saying about is we have to
take those types of rebukes and those
types of opportunities seriously.
But I'm not saying you have to do it. I'm not saying
that somebody listening right now. If you want to be like
fuck them forever, I'm cool.
But she a politician.
So she got to figure it out.
All right, we got to go.
Look.
we're going to hear to Michael Tubbs
but I got to say something before we do
so Pete Hed Seth
all right
Pete Hackseth
yeah Kek Seth
I don't know if he was drunk when he did this
he quoted a pulp fiction
fake Bible verse at a Pentagon service
you see this? I've never seen Pulp fiction but
okay
just come on
come on come on
I did not see this though to answer your question
but I just wanted to set a standard here
I just wanted expectations
So the prayer is C-SAR-4517
No, pause
I apologize again to the audience
because I can't do this every time
this one I will not accept
I knew you
I didn't want you to ask me
so I was like let me just
because you're going to be like remember that part
and I'm like no
so let me just get it out of the way
for my birthday I would like you to watch
Pulp Fiction
I'll watch it tonight
I will no no no no
because you and Colliga got a birthday coming up
I will arrange a screening of poem fiction.
I will rent out a movie theater.
Do it with what you're doing with Sean and the movie night thing.
Unwrapping the real situation.
Shout to Sean.
Shout out to the whole crew, right?
Sean Dickerson.
I would say coolest white boy in the world,
but I don't feel like I can say that anymore
because you never fucking know.
But Sean is the man.
But that's not acceptable.
Okay.
As a friend.
There are certain things that you have said to me
that aren't acceptable.
Absolutely.
So, but this one we have to change.
But you're familiar with...
I am familiar with...
And I will rain down with Greek, frat, furious,
I'm not.
Those women state the Lord.
No, but...
Who's going to go?
Sorry.
Jules?
Next week I will be able to do all of this.
So you don't know Jules?
You don't know Jules Winfield?
Look at the big brain on bread.
Is that Samuel Jackson's character?
Yeah.
I have some of that...
That was a good impression.
Some of that...
To wash down this tasty burger.
That's that whole...
I am Berger joint.
I'd like to see the movie.
You're telling me too much.
You never saw it.
I'm very excited.
You don't know who Tony Rockahara is.
Is that John Travolta?
The hands.
Close up.
Give a close up on the hands.
All right.
This is why I've never going to be on big picture or rewatchables.
This is full picture.
It's like, okay.
I know it's a great movie.
Oh, it's a great movie.
No, it's like a, you know.
Let me ask you
Like one of my dad's favorites
I think he really likes it
I bet he does
Let me ask a question
Does this place look like
Dead nigger storage to you?
I don't know what that is
It's tough
Okay let's go
Fucking run the thing
So the prayer is Cesar
2517
And it reads and pray with me please
Is that what he said
The path of the downed
Aviator
Is beset on all sides
By the iniquities of the selfish
And the tyranny of evil men
Blessed is he
who in the name of camaraderie and duty,
who in the name of
charity and duty,
for he is truly his brother's keeper
and the finder of lost children.
And I will strike down upon
thee with great vengeance and furious anger
those who attempt to capture
and destroy my brother.
And you will know my coli
is Sandy one
when I lay my vengeance
upon.
And you will know my name is the Lord
when I lay my lay my name.
My vengeance upon me.
Okay, so part of that, Tarantino wrote.
So a lot of that, the most compelling parts of it are not actually in the Bible.
Well, actually in the Bible is I will execute great vengeance upon them with furious rebukes,
and they shall know that I am the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon them.
The rest of that comes from Tarantino.
He read that shit when he was out the Bible and prayed over people with it.
What chap?
He didn't say Ezekiel.
He said Caesar or something else.
That's not a Bible.
Book in the book. I don't know.
For combat search and rescue.
He's quoting, this is a quote from that group.
Yeah.
The quote from combat search and rescue, right?
Okay.
So do they use this quote?
That they got from.
Pope fiction.
That they got from Pope fiction.
Okay.
What a joke.
I have a thought here.
I have a thought.
I'm serious about this.
Okay.
I, in reality, for real, 100% think that Donald Trump is
antichrist.
It's crossed my mind.
No, I'm for real.
Real quick.
Let me tell you what I mean by this.
So,
I believe in the predictive
power of human beings.
Okay.
I once saw a video
by a futurist,
and the futurist guy,
I think I've talked about this before,
the futurist guy said,
one day there's going to be
a device inside of your hand
where you're going to be able to do
all your banking.
You're going to be able to take all your pictures,
do all your stuff,
stuff and that device is going to be able to send money all across the things. It's like 1950
something, right? And he basically predicted that the iPhone would exist because human beings have
the ability not just to look at their current circumstances, but to look at the way the world is
moving and predict the occurrence of something. The question is whether or not the ability to do that
comes from a cultural intelligence or whether or not it's divine. So when the Bible actually predicts
that there will be an Antichrist.
There are two ways to look at it.
One way is to look at it is that God told man that this person was coming
and to go out and warn man about it.
But another way to look at it is that someone, a group of people,
could see there's more communication than we've ever had.
Like people are getting together.
We're traveling.
Nations are coming together.
Cultures are clashing.
And as that happens and connectivity builds,
that there will be an incentive for one person to come along and rewrite scripture to deify
themselves.
And in that deification, use it to go around the world, capture power, and bring great ruin to
people and mock what you already believe to be divine, right?
So that happens in the Bible.
That happens in the Bible when there's discussion of the Antichrist.
The only place that faith comes in to me is whether or not you believe that that is coming from God.
Because I certainly believe that men could sit around and go, watch out for someone like this.
Watch out for somebody coming like this.
There is no possible way to watch what Trump, Hexeth, and the rest of these people, they are mocking gods.
They're mocking Allah.
They're mocking the Christian God.
they are rewriting and retelling stories and things to put themselves in those positions.
And they're doing it to gain power and to make people rebuke the faith that they have,
rebuke the morals that they have to go towards their morals.
And that, I am sorry, is what that figure was supposed to do.
That figure was supposed to laugh at God.
that figure was supposed to mock God,
that figure was supposed to make men angry and mean
and subtract humanity from them,
that figure was supposed to be someone that came along
and was so incredibly destabilizing
that the world couldn't recover.
And when I look at Hexeth,
praying over people with something from fucking Pope fiction,
which I love as a movie,
but in no way, shape, or form,
in any way should anybody have their head bowed
as Jules's
fucking narrative
before he executes
two people
in a Hollywood apartment
is red
like that's nuts
and when you go back
and look at the shit
that I learned
in churches
and it was parted to
that is what they told
me to watch out for
yeah they did
I'm being for real
I'm not preaching to nobody
but that's the thing
more than any of the rest of this stuff
that they said hey
somebody's going to come along
and do that
and make a mock
of it and make it seem silly and make it less important, but more importantly, use it to go and shed blood and spread evil across everywhere.
I'm sorry, man.
I still got too much Christian boy in it, not for me to be like, y'all, y'all see what the fuck is happening?
He think he Jesus and his apostles think that they can take shit from the movies that they like and read it over people.
It was motherfuckers in that bitch borrowing their head for Jules Winfield.
Like, I was, what the shit is happening?
I was looking up the biblical signs of the Antichrist.
People have said this before about Trump.
I was looking up the signs and you can make an argument for every single one of them.
Every single one of them.
But I was particularly looking at the 666 of it all, which, you know, of course they say 666 doesn't necessarily mean the actual number.
It could mean something else.
But then I was like, oh, wait, his birthday's in June, that's a 6.
What's the date?
What's the year?
Only two 6es.
I thought we had them.
I thought we had them.
That's tough.
Before we go, I just want to say,
y'all leave Tamara Maori alone.
Oh, shit.
I just have to say this.
See?
This is, y'all know I love threads.
And for a couple of reasons.
One, I missed the beginning of Twitter.
I was never a part of that conversation to see it started.
I joined it eight years after it was in,
and by then it was done.
I met the start of threads.
I love the conversation.
I love talking to people I don't know.
I love seeing the think pieces that come out.
And one of the things I'd always say is it feels very positive.
It feels like the anti-Twitter.
They have turned Twitter.
I mean, they have turned threats into Twitter.
The way they have attacked, Tamara Maori gets on threats and she says, hey guys, I'm new here.
They unleashed the beast to use another anti-Biblicalized term.
They ripped her to shreds about her husband, his beliefs.
beliefs, things that she said, the fact that BET wished Tia a happy birthday and not Tamara,
things she said on the real, like all this stuff. And I, and they bullied her off. Now, I do
believe she is back on. And her husband got on there and said some stuff as well. But like,
you don't have to agree with Tamara or her husband to, and like, you could just walk away, right?
I don't agree with some of these
with, not some of them, I don't agree with anything
her husband says, and I'm not
going to go off and attack him.
I see what you're making bigger to read out.
I'm not going to read it, I'm just saying this nigga wild.
Tamara, it is a choice for Tamara.
We used to work for Fox.
He used to be an agent, I think he worked for Fox, but
it is Tamara's choice if she married
this man. But for her to get on there
and y'all throw everything in her
face, like,
I feel, I wrote, I go, hey girl,
that's what I wrote. She said, hey, welcome
I said, hey girl, that's what I wrote on her post.
People were like, is this your friend?
Why are you?
I said, oh, my God.
I just, I can't say, hey, back.
Like, we got to stop.
Like, people are, and then what happens is the pile on, right?
One person may have said, hey, what are your thoughts on this?
Or may have brought it up.
And then everybody piles on because they want to be cool.
They want to say something funny.
They're taking the low-hanging fruit.
Guys, you don't have to like her.
Just keep scrolling, right?
But to bully somebody off.
social media for stuff that their husband did or because, you know, she's very religious and,
you know, she doesn't really, she's not really outspoken on what she believes, but she's like
guilty by association. It's like, is, well, I know it's not right. I was about to pose a question,
but we got to go. Just my whole thing is, leave her alone. Leave her alone. She says, hey, you don't like
it. Keep on scrolling. Where's shit? Like, and some of y'all just put your arms around her.
But she didn't see these things. I'm going to let you have it because it's your birthday.
Fine, whatever. Way to bring a full circle. Way to bring it full circle.
I did ask for you to coddle her. I said keep scrolling.
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But that's fucking funny.
That's funny.
You know I agree.
Leave her alone.
She's a nice lady.
It's like stripper poles, ass in cities.
It's a lot.
But I do want to go to the show.
That voice you hear is Rachel Lynch.
She's talking to Michael Tubbs about the fact that she wants to go back to Coachella yet again.
We have Michael Tubbs joining us on higher learning.
former mayor of Stockton, California, running for lieutenant governor.
Thank you for joining us on highland.
This election season.
You're the first lieutenant governor candidate that we've had on.
I appreciate you.
Thank you.
Of course.
You know this is home for you, brother.
First of all, before I get into anything else, so many people know you politically.
They know what you've done for Stockton.
They know what you stand for.
Talked about it.
You were and continue to be a rising star in American politics.
Before we get into any of that and your plans as lieutenant governor,
what the fuck does a lieutenant governor do that?
That was going to be my worst.
Okay, before we get into any of that, like you're running for this.
Shout out to my man, Garland Gilchrist up there in Michigan.
He's a lieutenant governor for a long time.
Had conversations, meals with him.
What does a lieutenant governor do?
No, it's a question everyone asked, right?
Even when I told my family I was running.
My family was like, but okay, is that like vice governor?
Is that you're a lieutenant?
You're going to do army.
And in California, the lieutenant governor essentially sits on the UC, CSU and community
college boards. So when we think of sort of the higher education system, but also the land they
own and the way that they can build housing for students and workers, the lieutenant governor can
actually influence that. The lieutenant governor is also on the state lands commission, which is
one of three people that determines how we use our public lands, whether it's protecting our
coastal lives from offshore drilling or whether it's figuring out which of our state lands can be
used for renewable energy or, again, to build more housing. The lieutenant governor is one of three people
that decides if that commission allows that to happen. The lieutenant governor is also the acting
governor when the governor is gone or if the governor has to resign or for whatever reason if the governor
is not able to be governor, the lieutenant governor immediately has to step in and be governor.
And then lastly, the lieutenant governor is just a huge bully pulpit.
California is like 40 million people.
And the lieutenant governor, you run separately from the governor.
So you're out making your case to 40 million people, building your coalition, building your team
of support.
So you just have an incredible groundswell of folks that you're in relationship with to actually
put things on the ballot.
So for example, when Gavin Newsom was lieutenant governor, he put.
pushed for marijuana legalization as
Lieutenant Governor and put on the ballot, which is by
California became the first state to legalize
marijuana. So there's a room for
creativity and things like that as well on the job.
Okay, so it's kind of like vice president
to the president.
Is that like, because I guess the way you,
like a vice governor, I guess I would say. It's
like vice president. I think the only difference
is that you don't run with the governor though.
That's the only difference. So then I guess my question would be
you know, you talked about
what Gavin Newson did when he was lieutenant
governor. So do you have the opportunity
to make policy or influence policy and how closely do you work with the governor?
I know you said y'all do things separately, but how aligned do you have to be?
Well, ideally, I'll be sort of glove in hand with the next governor because there's so much
that has to be done in California.
But even if that's not the case, as lieutenant governor, you could partner with the
legislator to introduce legislation.
You can testify on bills.
You can put things on the ballot.
We mentioned stock and stuff.
I'm still obsessed with this idea of a guaranteed income.
or now a data dividend or how to be owned our data
and make sure that we're profitable as AI companies become more profitable.
Lieutenant-the-Governor could make that happen
through the ballot initiative process.
So there's a bunch of tools at the disposal,
and I think, to your point, Van,
why so many people don't know about the role
is that traditionally it just hasn't been used.
Traditionally, it's been like a parking spot for folks to wait,
but just given all the challenges in California,
there's no time for a parking spot.
We actually have to make it go,
and that's why I'm excited about running,
because I think there's, I know there's a lot that can be done
in that role that directly addresses affordability issues and the lack of housing and estate,
that immediately addresses sort of the lack of economic opportunity and support for entrepreneurs
or small business folks.
And the lieutenant governor actually has a platform and the tools to make things happen and show
people that it does matter who you elect.
How?
How can the lieutenant governor do that?
So as a region on the UC, CSU, and community college board, you're able to put things before
the board to do things like build more housing for students and workers.
The UCCS.S.U community college systems also spend billions of dollars.
And there's procurement policies that have to be followed.
So you can, like I didn't in Stockton, make sure that our communities are ready.
And we help them build capacities that can compete for the contracts to do the catering or the janitorial or provide the plates or all the things the university spends money on,
which is like literally billions of dollars circulating that some people are getting access to.
But a lot of folks, particularly folks who look like us, aren't.
Not because we don't have the businesses.
But we don't know or we don't have the capacity or we don't have the insurance.
So the lieutenant governor can help folks do that.
On the state lands commission, the lieutenant governor is one or three, again, to build more housing on state land where it makes sense.
And then lastly, given the fact that California is just so big with so many issues, the next governor is going to be focused on budget deficits and fighting Trump and all those things,
which means lieutenant governors will have to pick up some of that work because one person is not going to be able to solve all these challenges.
So when we think about the fact that California is tied with Louisiana for the high.
highest poverty rate in the United States.
I want to work on that.
I want to attack that.
And again, it's through leveraging the positions I hold,
but also just the relationships I have with influencers and folks to help get the word out,
with folks in different elected offices to help build a coalition that can introduce legislation
and put things on the ballot and just begin the process of making California move
and not talk as much.
But actually, let's start getting more stuff done.
You mentioned Lieutenant Governor, that role being a parking spot.
Are you referencing because people use it to,
park there so they can move on to governor.
And then I would follow up, I would love for you to answer that and then follow up with
why now, especially because the governor's race and we can get into it, seems to be quite
chaotic.
Well, historically, folks have thought of the lieutenant governor's race as a parking spot,
either to rate to run for governor or for some other office.
And that's historically what the office has been used for.
But I think that the best way to get promoted to a new office is to do good in the office.
It's to do good in the office you have.
You actually have to do something.
And people see what you can do.
And like, hey, we want you to do something else.
So I'm very motivated to do, like show like, hey, with this office, look at all that we have done.
So when I'm term out, there's an opportunity to do something else if the voters agree.
And then why lieutenant governor for me, I'm obsessed with higher education.
I'm the first one of my family to go to college.
When I was mayor of Stockton, I raised over $20 million.
Now every young person in Stockton can go to college for free.
And I've just seen what, even folks say college isn't for everyone.
I've seen what college has done for me.
So I want to give everyone at least the opportunity or a shot where they can actually choose.
It's not chosen for them.
So that, I think that much like the role of mayor of Stockman, there's so much that's been underutilized.
And it's not the fault of the position.
It's the person in the position.
And you guys talk about this a lot in your podcast and just in your day-to-day that there's such a deficit in trust where folks don't know that
government could actually do anything but harm, but bomb, but take, but plunder.
It's like we need to show people that, no, it does matter who's in office, because we can
then build more housing so students aren't sleeping in their cars, so faculty aren't sleeping
in their cars.
So that's why I went to run for the lieutenant governor felt like the right opportunity to
take what I did in Stockton and expanded statewide, and also just to learn Sacramento, to
learn the state, to learn what works and what doesn't work, so that there is an opportunity
your run for an office later, I come and prepare and ready on day one and don't have to spend
two years figuring out where the bathrooms are, or figuring out how to make things work.
So part of it is incubator to a higher office.
Yeah, well, because I can't be a lieutenant governor forever.
So at max, I have eight years.
I'm 35 years old, so I'll be 43.
And hopefully, after those eight years, there'll be an opportunity to do something else.
But I'm very clear that to do something else, I have to actually do something with this job,
particularly because folks are tired, folks are stressed, folks are leaving.
talk about people leaving the state.
But if you look at the data, the people leaving the state aren't just billionaires.
They're people making 80K, 70K, teachers, nurses, Uber drivers.
And they're going to red states where they can afford to buy a house.
They're going to Texas.
They're going to Florida.
They're going to Georgia.
And I think that if California doesn't deliver in the next eight years,
our state's going to look very different politically because folks are going to say,
well, look, we keep voting for the same thing and the same promises,
but nothing's changing but just the cost of living.
and I can't afford.
So I am clear-eyed and motivated to actually get stuff done
and know that it's going to take like I didn't in Stockton,
making people mad.
Everyone agrees in California about what the problems are,
the fact that the cost of living is too high,
people can't afford homes.
But no one seems to agree about what the solutions are.
What are the solutions?
Yeah, I'm a nerd.
So I like data guide my solutions.
And we know for housing,
It's multi-leveled, but the first one is supply.
We just don't have enough housing,
and we don't have enough housing in California
because, A, we allow NIMBEs and sort of local jurisdictions.
Tell people what a NIMBY.
Oh, NIMBY is not in my backyard.
So it's those people on next door and on Facebook,
anytime there's an apartment or anytime anything is done to build.
It's like, no, we can't do it.
So it's that, and it's interesting because every city has to produce a report
called a housing element where they say
this is how many houses we need
for our city. Yet
very few cities meet
the goal they say they need to make
on their housing element.
So I think we have to be more aggressive with cities
that aren't meeting their own goals
and say, well, look, if you're not meeting your housing goals,
you don't get funding for housing. You don't get
funding for homelessness. You don't get
incentives in all these state programs.
So number one, we just have to build more. Number two,
part of the issue is like permit and
regulatory. Like it just takes too long
pool of permit. There's all these
CEQA things you have to go through, et cetera.
And that's why this last session, I was
the expert witness on the two
most controversial bills on the housing.
One was to allow for transit
oriented development. So like if you are
near the metro lines or
near other public transit zones that
you're able just to build multi-level
multifamily housing. And then number
two was to change CEQA reform. So
CEQA is like this environmental law
that's well-intentioned, but it's been
used a lot to slow, delay.
and forced concessions and just elongate time.
So what we over the past both of them,
the sequel bill, what it did is that it allows for projects
that are already been gone through a secret process
through the general plan, not to go through the game.
So all that to say, there's a bunch of nitty-gritty things
around permitting.
A little abundance-based deregulation in it.
Yeah, yeah.
And that's why I've been endorsed by the abundance network
in the YIMB groups.
And also with tenant rights groups,
because I think there also has to be a conversation
with while we build housing,
which we know would take time.
We can't keep charging rent.
that's out of line with inflation.
So we do have to have common sense rent caps.
It's not like you can't make no money,
but it's like you can't keep pricing people out of homes
because then we all have to pay when they're homeless
or when they're evicted or where they're couch surfing.
So I think it's a supply issue.
It's a deregulatory issue.
And in the short term, we have to cap rates at a rate
that people can afford to pay.
And then lastly, I'm sorry, I'm nerding out here.
But lastly, we have to also look at other ways
of building housing.
modular housing, prefab housing, factory-built housing,
all those things have to be on the table because we're in a crisis.
But the biggest thing is we have to just have a real commitment to building.
And again, to build, you're going to have to get a conversation with the environmentalists,
with the Yimbys, with the Nimbys, with the building trades, with the carpenters.
And understand, we're not all going to agree on every single thing.
But we do all agree on the need to build housing.
But I argue it takes leadership to force the country.
question, to force an answer, to force a conflict necessary to build. And I think I'm well positioned
to do it because we have the support of Cal environmental voters, the environmentalists. We have
support of the abundance folks. We have support of the Yimbys. We have the support of the Working
Families Party and Ace Action and the Tendent Rights Group. So we have the support of all the people
around the table. It's going to be my job to say, like, look, y'all, we have to build. And we have
to build now. We have to build fast. And in doing so, we'll actually all be better positioned to fight
for the other things we need to fight for.
Everything you're saying sounds great.
And if you live in California,
I think why people get frustrated,
and I know you're aware of this,
it just feels like we've been talking about housing forever,
and everyone runs on housing in all the offices within the state,
and it just seems like nothing really happens.
So what's one fix that's actually realistic
and not just a talking point that people run on?
Well, let me, because I think the best way to prove it, because in California, everyone does talk, is just like receipts.
So when I was mayor of Stockton, I ended the golf course subsidy of a million dollars, pissed off all the golfers.
I didn't know Stockton had to use that money to create an affordable housing trust, create a lot of controversy.
When I was Mayor of Stockton, we were the first city in the state to partner with the governor to use surplus state land to build housing.
So now there's housing in downtown Stockton of 100 units of affordable housing.
and 150 units of affordable housing that did not exist only because I said, yes,
we actually want to build housing in downtown using state surplus land.
And then I say when I was mayor of Stockton, we took permitting time from six months to 30 days.
And we cut fees, particularly for an affordable housing project.
And say, you know what, all the public facility fees we charge?
As a city, we won't charge it for the next three years because we need to build more housing and help you build.
I brought the building trades and developers together to figure out sort of how do you come to an agreement to build.
and an agreement around labor standards
so we don't have to do this per project.
So I have like receipts,
and this is before everybody's talking about housing.
It's like 2018.
And to answer your question,
one quick fix besides the work within the legislature last year,
is to just build housing on the land the state owns
because so much of it is a push and pool
with local jurisdictions,
local city councils, local planning departments.
But for the land, the state of California owns,
the land that we control the permitting of,
the land we control on the lease on, whether it's university land, whether it's state lands, etc., we should be building housing on it.
So that's one policy fix that can be done today.
And we've already begun to start to do it, but part of this is just adding the urgency.
And to answer your question further, I think the biggest difference between me and some of the others is that it's personal.
Like, I've been homeless.
Like I've been in a shelter.
I've lived in a hotel, a motel six for two weeks as a kid.
So it's not theoretical.
It's not like something I read in the Ezra Klein piece.
It's like, no, like we actually have to build house.
And I remember when my mom was 26 and she was able to buy her first home making $40,000 a year.
The home was $150,000 in South Stockton, like a 3% interest rate.
And I remember we was drive by it every week as they were building it.
And just the pride and the stability and how our lives changed because we finally had a home
that we weren't moving anymore.
We're going to be settled here.
I had a place to do my homework.
I had a place to do my college applications
to apply to Stanford.
So those memories just give me the urgency
to say, look, like, take the heat,
take the conflict,
but let's actually do something
because it's not theoretical.
There's a lot of people,
our entire generation that's locked out of,
I'll be quiet after this,
but there's also a generational fairness piece.
Like I've been up and down the state
talking to people, and I love hearing from elders
who bought their first home for like $200,000 or $300,000
it's worth like a million now or $1.5 million
and how they're able to do it with one job.
How they'll do it as a postal worker or as a bus driver
or as my grandfather, a UFC butcher,
UFCW butcher at Safeway and a veteran.
And how that's just not possible for anyone under 40 in California.
Whether you go to Stanford or not,
you just don't have enough money to buy housing
and seeing how they've been able to use that equity
to invest in their grandchildren, to invest in their children,
how we're locking out a whole generation,
and a whole generation that looks different
than the generation that owns all the homes.
A whole generation that's brown and black and yellow,
and it just feels like, like, no, if it worked then,
it has to work now.
And I think that sort of mindset and mentality is why I'll be different.
One more question on housing.
Are you prepared to fight corporate power on this?
Are you prepared to go to war with private equity
and places like that that are consolidating?
Because they're market forces that are driving up housing prices as well.
Yeah, 100%.
I am all in favor and been on record.
I'm being on favor from banning private equity from buying up properties and just holding them.
Like, properties are not for profit.
I mean, that sounds dumb.
Housing isn't just solely for profit.
Housing's for human and for shelter and that we shouldn't have.
So in favor of all federal and state legislation that would tackle that issue as well.
Give me an example.
Give me an example of the way that, because a lot of the things that,
A lot of things that I hear, particularly in California, first of all, some of the NIMBY that we're talking about are people that simply want to maintain the value of their homes or they want their housing prices to keep going up.
They legitimately don't want to live next to poor people.
Okay.
But some other things we're talking about are the consolidation of homes for very specific purposes to lock people out of that, right?
California, for some people, is now not viewed as a place for working people's view.
for a place for celebrities and people who can afford to buy some of the most lavish,
expensive properties in the entire world.
To make it a place for working people, you have to fight a cultural battle,
but then you also have to fight a battle against corporate power that dominates California, right?
When you hear about businesses leaving, like, to your point, when people leave California,
you don't hear about, oh, this, we're losing the working people of California.
You hear, we're losing Tesla.
Oh, my God, we're losing, oh, my God, look what, like, in and out left.
That's what you hear.
And when that type of talk happens, that's a cultural priority set about what matters to people and what should matter to people.
How do we reorient that in a fight with corporate power to re-center working people and their ability to buy homes?
Yeah, well, absolutely.
I think that's why I'm so thankful to be endorsed by the Working Families Party.
And it's really, as I did it in the previous question, like centering the fact that no, when we're talking about people leaving California, it's not just,
billionaires, and the majority of people leaving aren't billionaires.
Per capita, it's working people who make this
state work that are leaving.
And they're leaving because they can't afford homes here, which is, I think,
to the previous question, why I'm confident
will get more done on housing, but a big part that is
fighting corporate power, not just in housing.
But when we think about the issues with ICE, a lot of that's driven by
corporate profit and private prisons.
When we think about just a corrosive impact of money
in politics in general, that in California,
because it is all Democrats and the power and the legislature and all the statewide offices,
the fight is really about this government work for working people,
does government work for a couple corporations, a couple companies,
and everyone else is going to be a serf.
So absolutely, that's the core, I think, of the battle in California.
And I think California needs leaders who, A, are clear about what that battle is,
but B, have the dexterity to know how to actually not just talk about it,
not just flame throw, but figure out how do you move the levers of power,
to get power back on the side of working people.
And I think a lot, as it pertains to housing, I think a big part of it is fighting and banning
the consolidation of private equity companies from hoarding up properties.
I think it's having vacancy taxes on properties that have been seen there for so long.
I think it's looking at what's been done in New York recently in terms of raising taxes on folks
who have multiple homes and they don't live in the state.
Like I didn't know.
They talked about that today.
Yeah, yeah, no, I'd be studying people to see who I could steal from.
And I was like, that's a good one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I think it's going to take stuff like that and then also being able to report back to the people
because everything's not going to be solved overnight.
So it was like give people some wins.
Like, look, we're in this big fight, but today this is the win we have and this is where we're going tomorrow.
So, no, that's going to be a big part of the campaign thus far in terms of some of the folks I'm running against.
And I think it'll be a big part after I win of the fight.
going forward.
I got to say, I mean, obviously, you know, you've been here before.
We're fans.
But I love the personal aspect you bring into the policies that you want to implement.
But I also love the education that you want to bring to it because you go to the polls,
you vote, you see a bunch of names, you don't really understand, you know, what you're doing
at times.
Most people aren't reading the pamphlet.
You know, like they vote straight ticket.
And I just love that you want to educate.
And like the first question we have, what do you do, that you want people to understand what can be done?
I just want to say, I just, I love that so much.
And you did so much in Stockton, and you made national headlines for what you did.
And at making history in that office with being the youngest mayor at the time.
I don't know if you still.
Still.
Still.
Okay.
But what's one thing that you did in Stockton, one idea or one policy that you think you could scale statewide as lieutenant governor?
Yeah, man, that's a hard question.
We did so much.
I am obsessed with the fact that poverty is the biggest example of wasted human potential we allow in our society.
In our state, I think it's the crux of a lot of the issues we talk about.
I think, I know it's not because people aren't working hard.
It's not because people are lazy.
it's not because people aren't talented.
So the policy will have to be a national policy,
but I do think in California we can continue to do more
around this idea of guaranteed income.
And I think the way to do it is through a data dividend,
the fact that we all produce this data
that makes companies very profitable,
that drives advertising revenue,
that drives a lot of this nation in the world economy.
And that we all should own a piece of that,
And that piece should come with some value.
I think in doing so, everyone then has a stake in the success of companies.
Everyone has a equity stake in a piece of ownership.
And California can lead on that.
There's been talks about, like, in Alaska, they have a permanent dividend based off a fund
that's driven by their oil and natural gas revenue.
In California, I think our oil is data.
I think our oil is tech.
So long answer, but some sort of data dividends, some sort of use of base income, some way for us to capture some of the value we create that makes these companies so profitable based off our data would be something California has to, I think, pilot and has to get right first.
Because in the next 10 years, this country is going to be grappling with what does the economy, what does work, what does the future look like with AI?
What are people doing to do to be able to, in a time now where folks can afford to live?
What are folks going to do when there's less entry-level jobs potentially?
What are folks going to do when the jobs they had for a while,
no longer exists or doesn't exist in the same way?
So California has to lead on that.
And I think as lieutenant governor, that would be top priority in addition to all the housing stuff we talked about.
So a couple of things there.
number one
how do you
Stockton being
the case study
and there have been other places
where UBI
has worked fantastic
it's obviously a good policy
how do you fight the
American cultural aversion to that
how do you fight the fact that
if you don't work then you don't eat
gas
cash or ass
like how do you fight
the belief
like the California
university system
essentially became
a for-profit institution
because people in the 60s
decided I don't want to pay for the education
of my neighbors. That doesn't make me better.
After they got theirs. After they got theirs.
I don't want to pay for the education of my neighbors.
Like, you know, how do you
fight the American
cultural stigma
around someone getting money for nothing?
Man,
I'm supposed to be punching
these answers, but these are long, good questions.
So,
they require
Thought,
they require,
I know,
they require
thoughtful answers.
Go for it,
yeah.
Well,
I believe
that part of the work
is that it's a big
narrative fight
and it has to be
like an actual
cultural
strategy in addition
to a political one.
And what that means
is when I started
to guarantee
the income program
in Stockton,
I foolishly thought
that of course
people have questions
hasn't been done yet.
But once we have data,
I ain't got to argue
no more.
Because like,
the data.
Now we've replicated that same.
There's a website called Guarantine IncomeWorks.com
where we have 30 studies of pilots across this country
of different size durations that show the same thing
that actually works, it helps people.
Yet there's still the same conversation.
I think part of it is educating people
that the issue isn't that people aren't working.
We actually have a whole term for it in our language.
We talk about the working poor all the time.
The working homeless.
But it's like, where are they working for if they can afford things?
So we have to put the bed that rest.
Number two, the largest group of people who don't work in our society that aren't poor or children
because we still have child labor laws, at least in some states.
And that's a good thing.
So I think it's getting people to reframe.
Number three, and going around the country at different communities who have done guaranteeing income,
part of it is that there's this belief that they get everything and no one's
sees me and I'm struggling and I don't qualify for anything but they get everything
whoever they is so it's getting people to see how this is a program for them because folks are
selfish it's like it's not about helping your neighbor it's about helping you and your family and
your kids and as we saw during the pandemic 90% of families got those child tax credit checks
people making zero dollars and people making up to 150,000 dollars and everyone was happy
no one gave their checks back no one burned their checks people were
like storming the capital.
Yeah, everyone was cool with a little check.
So I think it's showing, making arguments to people that are very selfish.
Like it's about you, your family, the cost you can't, and the fact that you can't afford
things.
And I also believe, given where projections are, the economy will go in the next 10
and 20 years with artificial intelligence, that more people are open to the idea, like,
hey, I might need a floor, I might need a cushion, I might need something, given
all the disruptions are going to happen.
But it's a constant fight.
But I think it's the same fight when we talk about health care.
I think it's the same fight when we talk about the right of women to choose.
It's the same fight when we talk about immigration and ICE.
It's the same fight when we talk about criminal justice reform.
Like in this country, we continue to have a battle about who the government should work for
and whether non-white men are fully human.
And I think the job of leadership is to have that fight every single day
in the push policies that help everyone.
including white man, just not exclusively, for white man, which I think is the rub that we have to fight.
You mentioned a little bit earlier that you have eight years in this office, and if things don't change in eight years, people are going to say, well, why am I voting for the same thing?
And nothing's changing.
Do you see, is that what you see happening right now with the governor's race in California as it feels very wide open, very chaotic?
I would love for you to comment on that.
And then also, like, what kind of governor do you think California needs and do you see that person in the race?
Yeah.
Well, I'll just the last question first.
Like, California has, like, an embarrassment of riches.
It's the four-flores economy in the world.
It has culture, agriculture, technology, sports, like everything in the world is in California.
We have the natural resources, the beaches.
We have, like, it's no excuse for us to be tied with Louisiana for the highest poverty rate.
No excuse for us to not be affordable.
I'm speaking on us.
Huh?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no shade to Louisiana.
But California, we position ourselves that we're so enlightened that we're all democratic and we're having the same outcomes as Louisiana.
At least Louisiana is not trying to say, helping everybody, you know what I'm saying?
I was wondering when it was going to hit him.
That's the second time you said it was a kickoff.
It's the truth.
Also, it makes no sense that other states, including states like Mississippi and Alabama are doing better than us in terms of getting through the gains in reading post-COVID.
And it's really a leadership issue.
So I think the next governor of California has to be laser focused on solving California problems.
And I tell people all the time that, yes, Donald Trump's a problem.
He's bad.
We should fight him and resist him.
But Donald Trump didn't cause California's issues.
So we can't just fight Donald Trump.
Our whole identity can't be we're anti-Trump.
Like, what are we for?
The next governor has to be for a California that works for working people,
a California that does what it says it's going to do.
So if we raise $24 billion on homelessness,
we should be able to track how that $24 billion on homelessness was spent.
I think the next governor has to be willing to take some risks,
to get in some fights, but not just fights against Donald Trump.
But the fights we have to have in California are with each other.
It's with our, we got to build this housing.
So we have to get this project over the line.
We have to get it done.
And then the next governor has to have the ability to see all of California.
I live in L.A. now.
But I'm from Stockton.
I'm from the Central Valley.
And folks in that part of the state, which is one of the few parts of the state that's actually still somewhat affordable,
the only parts of the states where population is growing, the youngest parts of the state,
needs a governor that knows that they're just as important as Oakland,
as San Francisco, as Los Angeles.
And I think there's a lot of options in the governor's race for sure.
I'm doing my research now because I know a lot of the candidates personally,
and my decision is going to be based off not just who has rhetoric,
but who has receipts?
Like, what did you do?
Like, in government or out of government,
what did you do on these issues you claim you want to do something about?
Number one, and number two, who are your enemies?
Because if everyone likes you, if nobody got, if there's not anyone that can't stand you and you're in politics, that means you ain't did nothing.
That means you ain't arguing with no one.
You ain't disagree with no one.
You ain't made waves.
And the only way we're going to be able to eat in California is we're going to have to break eggs.
So I'm looking at your receipts and who doesn't like you?
Like who is motivated to make sure you don't win?
And that will help me decide, okay, this person is actually going to be a great governing partner.
Who's funding you?
If I follow the money, where is it going to go?
Not enough people, honestly.
But a bunch of folks, you have, I think my, in terms of my large donors.
I want you to tell me, because I can just go to open.
Yeah, yeah, I'll tell you.
But like my large donor, my largest donors are folks like Steve Phillips,
progressive activists who funded Stacey Abrams.
Collarge Jefferson, Liz Simons, Quinn Wayne, Quinn Delaney,
Wayne Jordan, like progressive big donors.
My boy Evan Spiegel from Snapchat, who I met in college,
who's one of my good friends.
We have a bunch of people I met just on the train.
frails like good dim donors.
We have my best friend Cameron Henry
who gives $2.50 a month.
I guess the real question is, how discerning are you
about where your money's coming?
Oh, yeah, yeah. So I don't take APEC money.
I don't take oil, gas, tobacco money.
I don't take firearms money.
I got in the race.
What's the most controversial money that you do take?
I think I've taken money from people.
When I was mayor of Stockton,
I was like KIP schools operating stockton,
The knowledge is power school.
So some of those
Kip Charter School people
I've donated to my campaign.
But, yeah, when I got
into the race, the police unions
immediately gave my opponent
Max Hout chance.
Like the same day.
I was like, I just announced.
Hey, bro.
Tubbs in the race.
He'll go $5 million.
Something like that.
Here's 32,000.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, yeah.
So that's the most controversial
folks who've given me money
are probably the folks.
who support kids having options for good schools and communities,
maybe they don't have many, which I don't think is a bad thing.
Right.
I mean, school choice, we can go down a whole rabbit hole on that,
but you don't want to talk to a Marxist about that.
But like a complete, complete pivot right here.
When I came out to California, when I came out to Los Angeles,
it was to be in the industry that I'm currently in,
was also to do other things.
And I looked at and still look at Los Angeles
as being a mystical, magical, beautiful place
because this is the place where the movies are made.
This is the place where you can walk down
and see stars on the ground.
This is the place to where you can go into a coffee shop
on the west side or anywhere
and you can see somebody saying,
interior coffee shop, right?
Now, with all of the amazing, beautiful people I know
that really make this city what it is,
that make LA, particularly what it is,
that make California what it is,
and none of those people are in those coffee shops.
There are places in South Los Angeles,
and South Central Los Angeles, East Los Angeles,
all those places like that.
But a core tenet of this town to me
is the fact that magic and movies are made here,
and they're not as much as they used to be.
Is it important to you,
and should it be important,
to make sure that we can make magic in California,
in Los Angeles,
in the future because it's bleeding the town
and a lot of people are being affected.
No, 100%.
And that's Angelino.
I get this a lot when I'm doing house parties
or in interviews and just interacting with people
who are part of the industry,
whether they're on set or design or maintenance.
GRIPS, lighting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm not talking about people that, like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
I'm talking about workers, yeah.
I've learned so much about how the fact
that the environment in California
California, oftentimes doesn't make it pencil out, so folks are having to go to Australia or having to go to Louis.
No, my good friend was Mayor Shreveport, Adrian Perkins, who did some things with 50 Cent and like, so I get it to Louisiana and to other places in this country.
To the other L.A. The other L.A. The other L.A. to the other L.A. because they're able to afford to do that. So no, I think the lieutenant governor, particularly being, I'm the.
only person in my race and maybe if the governor's right most of the governor people are from
LA or Orange County I'll be potentially be the only person in the lieutenant governor or governor
seat from LA who sleeps in LA who has family in LA so a big part of that job will be champing
LA and LA issue so absolutely I've actually been working with the state's goes biz office now about
figuring out what's the incentive structure where the feet what can we do to make it a
give us a fighting chance that the magic can still be made in that
LA. So I'm looking forward to working with the mayor and with the governor to figure out what
are the tools we have at our disposal, where the things we can do to just make it possible for
magics to be made in LA because I think that's important. And I will also add to that. I was talking
with one of my other friends who's an actor. And he was telling me that he's so glad he came to
LA 20 years ago and not now because he was coming out. He said there's no way for a starving artist
to become an artist in LA
you're just going to stay starving.
Because you can't afford housing.
You can't afford to eat.
You can't afford anything.
He talked about how he was able to work that target
for 30 hours a week
and was able to get health care to do that.
And that allowed him to still go to go seats
and still do interviews.
And he talked about how he laments that
we're probably missing on the next generation
of cultural shapers, next generations,
of podcast hosts and thought leaders
because they just can't afford to come here
and be part of the magic
because now the magic is too expensive.
So I also think in addition to the Hollywood incentives and things
is making sure that those folks who do those jobs can also afford to live in L.A.
And live comfortably in L.A.
And at least have a roof over their head and enough money to get something to eat
and be able to afford their health care.
As voters, are we overestimating what the government can do or underestimating it?
Both.
And I say both because we overestimate, I think,
in the time.
Like there's no, the way our government is structured
with federalism
and the different levels of government, you have
city government and county government
and state government
and all of these boards and commissions, that
there's no magical ruler. There's
no Moses. There's no
Messiah or king
or queen that's going to come and clean up
all this mess. You didn't see the picture?
You're wrong about that. I clearly
saw a picture. He was a doctor, he said.
I clearly saw a picture.
Tell me what I saw.
I clearly saw a photograph of Jesus.
He was in Washington.
He said he was been a doctor.
That's what the president said.
Did you see what Iran posted bag?
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
Anyway.
I was okay.
There's social media teams I'm playing.
But what was the question?
The question was...
Are the...
Oversimating under, and you said both.
So I think overestimating in that it takes time.
It takes sort of a coordinated effort amongst different branches of government.
But I think underestimating because my team gets tired of me saying this,
but the inability to do everything is not an excuse to do nothing.
I think oftentimes we let our elected officials get away with not doing anything,
but just talking to us and making us feel good and going to the chicken dinners
and doing the wobble at the Juneteenth Bar and stuff like that.
It's okay.
You can't do everything, but what did you actually do?
And I do think part of it's what you said earlier is about education.
It's about knowing what's possible.
But I think it's also this nihilism.
I think just given, and I don't blame people, like just given the last decade nationally
and everywhere, folks are just like, doesn't matter.
Like my life has not gotten better.
My life has gotten harder.
But I think for me the saving grace is that we've seen how much bad can happen in a short
amount of time.
We're in hell of wars.
Inflation is up.
Gases are the crazy.
level, taking away health care, like, just, I didn't even know we could be this bad.
I'm, like, shocked at the speed of that.
So I think we're underestimating the fact that we can do that much bad, we can do that
much good as well.
But I think it takes us having more of a willingness, again, not just to fight Donald Trump,
which we have to do, but also fight our own leaders in terms of folks who say they are with us,
folks who say they care about us, folks who say they see our communities and say,
okay, but what are you actually doing?
Because this is why I'm good at politics and this is why I'm bad at politics,
but I'm very clear.
Everyone can't be your friend.
Everybody can be, you serve everyone, but everyone can't be part of the team.
There's some people, because politics is about resources.
It's about allocation.
It's about power.
There's some people that are going to be upset with how you choose to allocate resources,
with how you choose, who you choose, prioritize,
and how you use power.
So if you cool with everybody, you're cool with nobody
because you're not going to get anything done.
And you serve everyone.
You work in the best interests of people.
But in doing so, you have to have folks who are like,
this is not our guy or this is not our girl.
I think we have to demand that clarity for my leaders.
Who don't like you?
That's what I want to know.
I heard you talk a little bit about AI.
This is actually my last question.
I am actually less convinced that AI will cause
significant disruptions in the workforce moving
forward just because I'm not so sure that I'm completely convinced about the merit of the technology.
Separate argument.
What I do know, though, is that AI is economically destabilizing because of the resources that it takes up,
that it harvests from a state that it harvests from a people that it harvest from communities.
How, in a position of power in California, would you make sure that there are no overreaches in terms of data centers?
in terms of
state money, whatever,
going to these massive AI companies
so they can build out, do all kinds of stuff,
use a tremendous amounts of water, resources,
fuck the grid up, do all of that stuff
so that they can play a Ponzi scheme game
at the top of the economy for themselves.
You know, absolutely, I think starts with its first principles,
like polluters pay.
So just like an oil company,
just like any company has an adverse impact on the environment,
there should be reparations made.
There should be a payment for that
and like a regulatory environment
that allows for consequences.
Number two, I think we have to,
one of my good friends is Justin Pearson
in Memphis.
And I've been watching the work he's been doing
with the community around
the adverse impact of data centers
on the health of the black folks
who are not in Louisiana but in Tennessee.
Thank you.
At this point.
So I think in California we have to be just as vigilant.
And then number three, going back to what I said earlier, I think we all have to stand to benefit if there's going to be massive investments.
That shouldn't just be a couple people who get wealthy off the technology that profits off our collective water, our collective land, and our collective data.
And that we also have some ownership of that.
But then we also have to have common sense AI regulations, like particularly as it pertains to harms that we know can happen with kids, with folks with mental illnesses, et cetera.
So as Lieutenant Governor, one of the things I'm excited about doing is bringing together AI folks, labor folks, ethicists and moral philosophers, labor and working people to figure out, like, in California, how do we make sure that technology doesn't works for us and we don't work for technology?
How do you make sure that humans are centered in everything we do?
And how do we make sure that we aren't, that we're balanced in our approach, that we're not sold this sack of dream.
that never comes true, but we also don't leave on the table any of the good that can happen,
even in the ways that this technology can make life better.
But I don't think it's just going to happen to your point.
I think it's going to take actual tough conversations.
I think it's going to take actual rules.
And it's going to have to take also a commitment to revisiting because it's going to be iterative.
With anything new, we don't have the answer right now.
It's going to be a series of answers.
Yeah, we've got the question.
But I think those answers have to be guided by.
foundational values that, A, technology has to work for humans.
Like, we do not work for technology.
B, any harms to the environment and have to be mitigated.
And if they still happen, there has to be some sort of repayment
or some sort of way to make everyone whole.
And that three, there has to be some level of public ownership of it.
Like, it's a massive, it's almost like a utility, if you will.
And I think we missed a boat on social media and Google.
and stuff in that they were built off public investments in research, but the public didn't
get sort of the monetary benefits of Google being worth a trillion dollars or of all the
companies that came after it.
So I think we have to learn from that.
And again, it sounds like a broken record, but just making sure we all have a piece of ownership
in the technology as well.
And I think those three things are a start.
But then as things are moving and if disruption does happen, there's going to have to be another
conversation about, okay, we're not just going to a thousand dollars a month.
it's not going to be enough for people who are making $120,000 a year.
So what's the strategy?
What's the plan?
How do you make sure these folks are made whole?
So, yeah, it's going to be a messy, messy conversation, a needed conversation.
But I would also say it has to be done right here in California because the federal government
for the next two years is not going to be able to do anything serious.
That's going to help all of us.
So California actually has to be a leader, has to be out front, and has to really set the tone.
And the fact that all these companies are headquartered here makes me excited that we can do that.
Last question for me.
And I want to end on an inspirational note.
I'm saying that because of how I'm about to ask this question.
I do my best.
You run for mayor.
You make history.
You do implement so many things that benefit stocks and where you're from.
And then you run for re-election and you lose that race.
What did that loss teach you about voters that success didn't?
Yeah.
Well, first of all, thank you.
you for the question. And what I learn, particularly in losing, is that oftentimes it's easy
to talk about what you're willing to win for, and what you're willing to be successful for,
what you're willing to be praised for. But a separate question is, like, what are you willing to
lose for? And what I'm so thankful for that loss is that I'm very clear about what I'm willing to
lose for. I'm very clear that if it's
everyone says no,
but I believe it's a yes,
what that yes is. And for me,
I'm very clear that I'm willing
to lose for a
government that works for everyone.
I'm willing to lose
for this idea that a country and a state
with so much, no one should have nothing.
I'm willing to lose
for this idea that white supremacy just
has no place in a
civilized society.
I'm willing to lose for the idea that
We should not have poverty.
And I didn't have that clarity before because I always won.
So I never had to think about it.
And it's important because when you're in leadership, you have to sacrifice.
Yeah.
Which is different to being in politics.
And I think that's the difference too.
In losing, I learned that I'm more of a leader than a politician,
meaning that politics is a means to an end, but it's not the end of itself.
And also what I learned from losing is that all the things I started in Stockton since I've
lost have scaled more.
When I lost, we're the only city
doing guaranteed income. Now there's
over 100 pilots happening nationwide
that I've helped start. When I
lost, we were one of the first communities to do the
advanced peace violence reduction program.
And now you have mayors across the
state, countries, seeing
significant declines and homicides
and shootings, doing the same stuff
we did in Stockton, not locking
people up, but just really unlocking opportunity.
So I think the loss
gave me the ability
to recognize that
I could take the worst that
happens and come out stronger.
I think for the voters of California,
that's important because the next four to eight
years will require a fighter.
It's we require someone who's fearless.
But I'm not scared of losing.
I lost, and my life got better.
I got three kids,
beautiful house in LA. I've done
so many incredible things. I've met so many
incredible people. I've been able to work
on myself. So, yeah,
I think voters should be excited to have a leader who is literally fearless.
Like, my only fear is that nothing changes.
My only fear is that we lose course.
And I also learn about voters is that it's not enough to do a thing.
Like, you have to tell people what you did.
And you can't be too busy to communicate.
Because I'm just like, tired.
I'm like, it's COVID.
It's Black Lives Matter.
It's a lot of having to have my first child.
So I didn't have time to pause and say.
hey y'all this is all the stuff we do it and this is why it matters i was just like we're
just going to do it they'll figure it out it's like no no no you got to connect the dots for people
and then lastly i also learn that the status quo has a lot of friends so when you're doing something
to change it you should expect backlash and sound so basic but i didn't know because when i
ran for a city council at 21 i was the top vote geter i got 62% of the vote when i ran for mayor
the first black mayor in the city's history youngest in this country i won with 70
22% of the vote.
So I had never like, and talk like I talk now.
Like I did not get elected and changed.
So I was shocked, actually.
I'm like, but wait, y'all voted for it.
Like, this is me.
I've never, and I just learned that, no, when you shake up the status quo and when
you actually know how to use power to get things done and to do things that people
that was impossible, you have to anticipate that people are going to be mad and you have
to build the reinforcements.
And I didn't do that.
I didn't, I thought my work would speak for itself.
But in this world, you got to speak for you.
You got to have people speaking for you.
You got to be speaking all the time.
So I don't know if that was inspirational.
No, that was fantastic.
Be careful whispering your successes.
Yeah, no, you got to.
Because if you do, your failures will sound like screams.
So just, you know, that's, be, get out here and tell these people what the fuck happened.
You got to, that's what I'm doing.
That's what I'm thinking of you are.
We're obviously going to plan a trip and get you down to Baton Rouge because there's something inside of your soul.
You don't do all with this.
This is my favorite city.
He didn't say Ben Rouge.
He didn't say Ben Rouge.
I don't know.
And I love LSU.
No, you don't love nothing.
I was so mad when Floodiac didn't get, when the warrior, when the, the trailer.
You were getting at me.
A couple times.
They did.
And I don't know what the deal was.
The only thing I've ever done is sing your praises.
I did the stocking on my mind thing.
I did the whole thing.
It's like, yo, hey man, we got to make sure that we don't, we're not like the dumb
niggas in Louisiana.
Because if you guys heard about the.
water in Louisiana. We can't be tied with Louisiana. I'm like, what Michael on right now?
But let me tell you how much I love Louisiana. I want to hear it. I love charboid oysters.
Okay. Yeah. Okay. I love the culture. Yeah. And there's some of my people like Adrian Perkins
and for Ameri Streetport. Yeah. One of my best friends. My biggest mentor in life, Jan Barker Alexander.
She, um, from Baton Rouge. She went to Southern. She was my mentor at Southern.
Boy, that you just held up the three. That's like, I'm trying. I'm trying. Southern.
that yard next time
say she's from that yard
okay anyway Michael Tubbs you guys
obviously one of our bright shining voices
Michael Tubbs for CA.com is the website
you could do
do
way worse than spinning an afternoon
looking into this young man
looking into what he's done and making the decision
about whether or not you want to support him
but we will continue to support him here on the higher learning
thank you for joining us Mike thank you guys
all right
thank you caps off but do not stop learning on Van Lathan Jr.
Thank you to everyone for the birthday stuff.
Thank you to everybody.
Happy birthday, man.
We all love you here.
Very special.
I'm Rachel and Lindsay.
Bye, guys.
