Part Of The Problem - Bill Maher Meets Donald Trump
Episode Date: April 15, 2025Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave is joined by co-host Robbie "The Fire" Bernstein to discuss some further reflections on Dave's debat...e with Douglas Murray, Bill Maher meeting Donald Trump at the White House, and more.Support Our Sponsors:Prolon - https://prolonlife.com/potpProton Mail - proton.me/davesmithTax Network USA - 1-800-958-1000 or go to TNUSA.COM/SMITHPart Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!PORCH TOUR DATES HERE:https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/porch-tour-2025-4222673Find Run Your Mouth here:YouTube - http://youtube.com/@RunYourMouthiTunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/run-your-mouth-podcast/id1211469807Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4ka50RAKTxFTxbtyPP8AHmFollow the show on social media:X:http://x.com/ComicDaveSmithhttp://x.com/RobbieTheFireInstagram:http://instagram.com/theproblemdavesmithhttp://instagram.com/robbiethefire#libertarianSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up everybody. Welcome to a brand new episode of part of the problem. I am Dave Smith.
He is Robbie the fire Bernstein. Thank you everybody for joining us. How are you feeling
today? Rob? I'm doing well. I've been enjoying all the internet fanfare and I'm excited to
be back in Chicago. Zanies best in the country. Ooh, that's right. We're going back, back to Chicago Zanies, which really is,
it's just the best goddamn comedy club. I mean, obviously I'm,
I'm a little partial toward the mothership,
but there is something about that Chicago Zanies. It's just, man,
if those walls could talk,
they would tell stories of what would be illegal today of it's just an old
school comedy club. Yes. Thursday.
Or wait, is it?
It's Thursday.
We're there, right?
It's a Thursday.
We're at the downtown room.
The rest of the weekend, we're in the beautiful Rosemont room and Thursday night.
If I understand the schedule correctly, I believe it's one of the only live podcasts
we're doing all years, the late show.
And I'll be there as Douglas Murray saying
nothing for an entire hour. So, well, anyway, I guess, I mean, we could, we could open up
with that. That's right. Comicdavismith.com for those ticket links. Any other dates you
got coming up, Rob?
Yes. If you go to port store.com, I've released about 40 porches or something and there's
more coming still. So next one's in line is mobile Alabama, Pensacola, West Palm beach and St. Augustine. So we've got some Florida stuff coming still. So next one's in line is mobile, Alabama, Pensacola, West Palm
beach and St. Augustine. So we've got some Florida stuff coming up.
Nice, nice. Yes. So it has a, this is the last few days have been pretty wild. I mean,
I said this on our, our last episode, but you know, I was almost still kind of predicting
because it was so soon, it was 24 hours after the episode came out, our last episode. And so I was like,
I got to feel this is going to be the biggest thing I've ever been a part of.
And it is just, it hasn't slowed down at all.
It's just still happening and it's very interesting. Um,
it's, uh, it's been a new experience for me.
Um, and you know, of course everybody,
now everybody wants me to talk about it. I did a,
I just got off of a recording Pierce Morgan's show,
which is why we were a little bit late to start today, but it was, um,
that was interesting. I kind of want to talk about that a little bit. Uh,
but anyway, I appreciate all of the, uh,
the nice things that, that people are saying. I even appreciate some of the not nice things that people are saying. It's
just kind of an interesting spectacle.
I love the grip to people trying to pretend like you lost that thing. I just think it's
so hilarious. And it's such a tedious mission to have to show up back on the internet every
single day. It's like at the end of a fight when you clearly lost the fight and you still raise your hands, hoping to fool the judges.
And you know, people are trying to pull that horse shit and it's kind of fun to watch.
Well, I said, there's a couple of these like, like insane, like pro Zionist accounts on
Twitter. And I saw, cause like several of them, they kind of work in coordination or
they just all happen to be saying the exact same thing right at the exact same time. But they,
they're so they're,
they're thing on our last episode was you go all you need to know about who won
the debate is that Dave has to go back and make an episode talking about the
debate. But you're like, yeah, that's how you judge a debate winner.
Not who had better arguments or who just, you know, contradict themselves or relied on logical fallacies. You go,
who talked about it afterward? Okay.
Like that's quite a standard you've set there,
but it's also kind of like so much of the debate.
Whereas as I mentioned before, I was there to debate Israel and Ukraine.
Douglas Murray turned it into a debate that was like the old media guard versus
the podcasters, you know, but that's kind of the, it's like, well, yeah,
of course I'm going to do a podcast on the, of course I'm going to tweet about
this. That's what I do. And this was just the biggest thing that happened.
So why would I not be, this doesn't make any sense. Anyway, um,
I gave Pierce Morgan my first interview since the debate. Uh,
and um, I, I actually had breaking points scheduled,
but I had to reschedule that. So I'll be on that tomorrow,
but I'm very much looking forward to going on that.
So I just did Pierce Morgan. That should be out later today. And then I'll do,
uh, um, I'll do, uh, uh,
breaking points tomorrow. And then I think, uh, I might do the young Turks at some point this week too,
cause they've asked me to, to come on. But anyway,
so I go on on Piers Morgan today and I did another debate.
And this time I was debating, I'm sorry,
seven yelling women. No, not quite the opposite.
John Spencer, who is the opposite. Uh, John Spencer,
who is the chair of urban warfare studies at the war Institute.
Um, and so he took issue with a bunch of things I said,
and me and him had a, a little Twitter back and forth.
And so essentially what he took issue was,
was that I used,
so there was this one point in the debate where, uh,
Douglas said that Israel, um,
is unintentionally killing civilians,
but there are civilians dying, but that it's unintentional.
Israel's just trying to get the bad guys and unintentionally,
sometimes other people die. And I essentially was like, no, that's bullshit.
Israel is intentionally killing civilians. And I said,
I don't care how you dress it up. Like, and I, I use the examples.
You probably heard me say before, but I was like, look, if someone breaks into your property and kills a bunch of your family members
and then runs back to their property where you know, it's,
it's an apartment building with women and children and you blow the thing up,
you'd be charged with murder in the first degree.
It would not be involuntary manslaughter.
It wouldn't be unintentional murder.
It wouldn't even be murder in the second degree.
It would be first degree premeditated intentional murder.
Now this guy objected to that and he was like,
you have no idea about the laws that govern war or how intentionality is judged
during war and blah, blah. And I'm like, no, no, no, you're missing my point.
I'm just saying if you knowingly kid,
if you know what you're going to do is going to result in innocent people dying,
then you intentionally killed them. And that the, the,
the definition like philosophy doesn't change because a politician uttered the words war.
And it's taking place on a different line. Like morality and simple philosophical concepts
don't magically change because we decided to call it a different name. And then he just keeps the
entire debate, Rob. He keeps going, no, but you don't understand how war works. And I was like, no, no.
And then at one point I literally go to him. I go, dude,
man to man explain to me how the concept of
something being intentional can magically change because a politician
declared a word and it happens on
foreign soil. No appeals to the law.
No appeals to what war usually looks like just as a person explained that to me.
And he goes, well,
international law says that it's not intentional is long at blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah. Something about proportionality. Anyway, I just,
I I'm excited for you guys to go watch this.
I literally felt like I was debating in Aztec
high priest about child sacrifice.
And I was going, this is just murdering children. And he's like, dude,
you don't even understand the church. And I'm like, no, no, no, no, no,
I don't care about the church. I'm saying you're murdering children.
That's what this policy is. And he's going, dude, you probably haven't even gone to preschool. You know what
I mean? Like it was just like the most bizarre thing ever. But anyway, I'm interested for
you guys to go, to go see it.
Natalie, maybe you can a fact check me live on this. And I can do a better job of memorizing
my exact sources as opposed to just scanning headlines and then letting it all jumble together.
But speaking
to Israel's war strategy, because sometimes people like, well, what's the alternative?
And I've just said, well, you can't kill civilians. I apparently 75% of the Hamas tunnels remain.
And I believe that the Hamas militants are back up to their 40,000 or 35,000 numbers.
So if you were trying to conduct an operation to uproot Hamas and
your big storyline is that they got this tunnel infrastructure. I mean, after all of the bombings
and everything that you've done, this current route doesn't seem to be all that successful
in terms of getting rid of them.
If the metrics are by and large, that 75% of the infrastructure remains and their soldier capacity, I'm guessing
through new recruitment and you know, the blowback theory, it seems to be basically
in the exact same place.
Yep.
Yep.
Like the justification is bullshit.
And then the justification doesn't even hold because by your own metric, you're not even
achieving your according to Douglas Murray, I guess if a mosque just stopped booby trap in their own
buildings, everyone could still have their homes.
Yep. Yep. There you go. It's all, it's all just, we're trying to clear out these booby
traps, which by the way, we also sometimes use live, um, a great piece in, uh,
her ex today that, uh, just, um, basically said, and it wasn't, um,
it was like one of those, you know, like staff opinion pieces.
So it's like from the newspaper, not from one individual. Um, but,
but they were just, even they just went like, dude,
like ending the war and giving the Palestinians a state in
exchange for all the hostages. This is the only play here.
It's the only play that's left. And it's like, just say like, okay, fine.
We'll do the thing.
We'll do the thing that you guys have wanted forever if you just give us back
our hostages. That would be, um, it's not going to happen,
but it really would be amazing if it could. All right. Um,
let's let's move on, I guess, from the Douglas Murray debate.
I'm sure this will be, this is going to be a thing that's referenced forever.
Uh, and it's just, it's one of those things where every, I mean,
he will literally never not get replies on his,
he posts anything for the rest of his life.
He will never not get a reply.
That's like I'd love to comment on this, but I'm not a professional
reply or so I can't say it's just maybe we can all learn to talk like this.
And I go down so it sounds more interesting.
The lower you go, the more it sounds like you're saying something profound.
Well, did you, there's a last thing I'll say on it, but did you see, I did, I did post
it cause I couldn't help myself, but did you see that there's a, so evidently there was
this whole interview where he was taking apart, um, leftist, the lived experience argument
and it's just like, yo dude, it's in detail.
It's just him arguing against himself on me, like down to the point that he literally makes
the point, which is perfect. By the way, I wish I was as British and eloquent as Douglas
Murray was. I could have taken his thing apart way better. I mean, Jesus Christ, I'm no match
for Douglas Murray, but Douglas Murray sure is. He could take him out. He could take him
out right away, but he put it such a better way than me. Cause I just say it in my sloppy
I'm from Brooklyn and I say like, and um, every other word and I curse that I'm, you
know, I'm just like, whatever. I'm a shit talking comedian, but he's like this, you
know, eloquent, you know, a wordsmith, but he goes out. Cause I just said to him, I go,
you ever been in Nazi Germany? Yeah, but you still have some feelings about that right, but the way he put it was he goes
he goes
many people who were not victims of the Holocaust have written far more beautifully and
Truthfully than people who were victims of the Holocaust could ever have written and you're like, oh talk about making the same point
I made but saying that in an even better way. But anyway, it is pretty funny.
Some of the, uh,
the videos of him just totally contradicting his stated views.
And, um, you know, that is a, it's,
it's a major theme of a lot of the, the,
the conservative pro Israel crowd that it's like, Oh,
but everything you were just telling me about woke leftism you now embrace.
And I will say,
I think it's something that people are noticing and paying a lot of attention
to. Okay.
So the other big thing that's happened that I'm not involved in was evidently
that,
that Bill Maher went and met with president Trump, uh,
which I guess happened a little while ago,
but he just talked about it a couple of days ago on his show.
And so that's been, uh,
it seems like it was me and Douglas verse bill meeting the president that were
kind of dominating social media over the last few days. So I figured,
we've talked about one. Let's,
let's talk about the other a little bit. Um, which by the way, I know a lot of people were saying it was, we didn't talk about this on the
episode, right? I think this happened afterward, but that, uh,
Trump tweeted out Douglas Murray's book the next day. Um,
which you know, people say whatever theories or whatever people have on
that, I have no idea if the two were related at all.
I have no inside knowledge there.
Just saying Donald Trump endorsed his book.
He also endorsed the COVID Vax.
So just keep that in mind.
He's not the guy's not a hundred percent on his endorsements, but anyway.
All right, guys, let's take a moment and thank our sponsor for today's show,
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right now. All right, let's get back into the show. So Bill Maher, one of the fiercest
liberal, insane critics of Donald Trump over the last eight years goes to meet Donald Trump
and here he is talking about his experience. Let's play the video and me and you will,
we'll give our thoughts, Rob.
And now for what I know you've all been waiting for,
I'd like to give you my book report
on my visit to the White House.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, as you know, 12 days ago, I had dinner with President Trump, a dinner that was set
up by my friend Kid Rock, because we share a belief that there's got to be something
better than hurling insults from 3,000 miles away.
And let me first say that to all the people who treated this like it was some kind of
summit meeting, you're ridiculous.
Like I was going to sign a treaty or something.
I have no power.
I'm a fucking comedian and he's the most powerful leader in the world.
I'm not the leader of anything except maybe a contingent of centrist minded people who
think there's got to be a better way of running this country than hating each other every
minute.
So thank So.
OK, so meet up in person.
Maybe it'll be different.
Spoiler alert.
It was first good sign before I left for the Capitol.
I had my staff collect and print out this list of almost 60 different insulting epithets
that the president has said about me.
Things like stupid, dummy, low life dummy, sleazebag, sick, sad, stone cold crazy, really
a dumb guy, fired like a dog, his show is dead. I brought this to the White House because I wanted him to sign it, which he
did with good humor. And I know as I say that millions of liberal sphincters just tightened.
Okay, can you pause it here, Natalie? This is, I did just find this to be very interesting.
And to me, what this was revealing of, I'm curious to get your thoughts on it, Rob, but it was just revealing of how much liberals in general have just been out to lunch on
the Trump question for, from the very beginning. And that, listen,
I could have with 100% certainty predicted that this is exactly how their dinner
would go.
And yet Bill Maher even seems to be saying it with a bit of surprise, like,
like a shock to it. Like, Hey guys, turns out brace yourself,
Rob Trump is hilarious.
Like how would they not figured this most obvious fundamental part out
literally as,
as Bill Maher is reading the list before he gives the reveal that Trump was a
good sport and signed it,
the audience is cracking up laughing at Trump's insults. Somehow liberals,
I don't know if you've noticed this, this happens a lot.
I've seen this so many times over the last eight years.
We're like fat, not found like Kimmel or Stephen Colbert will
like be quoting the president
trying to mock him and his audience is already laughing at what Trump is saying,
but somehow they have to convince themselves that he's never trying to be funny
in any of these moments. And like, when you just read that list of insults,
it's like he's being funny. That's what he's doing.
He thinks these are funny insult and they are.
That's why the crowds laughing at them.
So of course he was down to sign the letter.
He thinks that's hilarious. Like I just think there's something,
there's something really remarkable about the fact that anybody at this point
would still be shocked to find out that Trump's hilarious. Yes.
He is the greatest comedian of our lifetimes. Like
what, how was that not registered yet for people? I don't know. What are your thoughts?
I only met Trump in person once and I was so charmed. I let him grab me by the pussy. So
I can, I can really speak to the man's charm in person.
But isn't it like just the most obvious thing? Like, yeah, he's going to be charming and funny
and like have a sense of humor about these things i just thought that was so obvious it seems to be like the shock of all
shocks to bill maher and his audience anyway thought that was strange all right let's keep playing
something nice about him what i'm going to do is report exactly what happened you decide what you
think about it and if that's not enough pure Trump hate for you, I don't give a fuck.
Yeah!
So...
So...
So, no, I didn't go, Mauga.
And to the president's credit, there was no pressure to.
After we left the Oval Office,
he showed me the little room off the office,
you know, the one where Clinton used to...
Okay.
The bloat job room. Okay.
Well, not anymore.
That's where they keep the merch now.
It is.
And he gave me a bunch of hats, It is.
And he gave me a bunch of hats, but he didn't ask me to take a picture in one, which I appreciated.
The guy I met is not the person who the night before the dinner shit tweeted a bunch of
nasty crap about how he thought this dinner was a bad idea and what a deranged asshole
I was. I read it and thought, oh, what a lovely way
to welcome someone to your house.
But when I got there, that guy wasn't living there.
Now, does Trump want respect?
Of course, who doesn't?
My friend said to me,
what are you gonna wear to the White House?
I said, I don't know,
but I'm not going to dress like Zelensky.
I'll tell you that.
But, okay.
Just for starters, he laughs.
I've never seen him laugh in public,
but he does, including in himself.
And it's not fake.
Believe me, as a comedian of 40 years, including in himself. And it's not fake.
Believe me, as a comedian of 40 years, I know a fake laugh when I hear it.
And I thank you for that.
Okay, example.
In the Oval Office, he was showing me the portraits of presidents,
and he pointed to Reagan and said, in all seriousness, you know, the best thing about him, his hair.
I said, well, there was also that whole bringing down communism thing, waiting for the button
next to the diet coke button to get pushed, and I go through the trap door. But, no, he laughed. He got it.
I said to him at one point,
Mr. President, you know the dog,
that's unusual in the White House.
He said, well, a lot of the presidents,
they had a dog for political reasons.
I said, no, people love dogs.
That's what that is.
Oh, yeah, Okay, that's true
He's positive here for a second
He goes even as he has it he goes I'm telling you it happened and you're just like all of this you're like This is exactly what I'd expect
Like what I just don't understand. Why was it? Why is this shocking to anybody? It was like,
Oh, he had a good sense of humor. He was charming. He rolled with the punches.
You know, he said the best thing about Reagan is his hair.
I said it's also that bringing down communism and go, all right, good point.
Like this is, this is exactly what I would expect an interaction.
I've never met Donald Trump.
This is exactly what I would expect an interaction with Donald Trump to be like.
And it's just interesting to me that Bill Maher already has to like start it
with. I swear to God, you're never going to believe this. I swear to God.
It's just like there is it, it kind of backs up this, um,
this, this view that I've had for quite a while, which is that
Donald Trump has an amazing ability to get people to project things onto him,
to get them to see something in him that isn't there.
And very few people are able to just look at him and see what's right in front
of you. Cause if you do that, I just think none of this would be surprising.
You're like, Oh, this is exactly how I bet he is.
This is what I always assumed and what I've heard from everybody who's ever met
the guy.
I don't know.
Any, any thoughts on this, Rob?
I think Bill Maher was hoping to come back and say he's as much of a lunatic as I've
always said.
And this guy knows nothing and I can't believe he's there.
And to Bill Maher's credit, he came back and said, the lunatic is just the television version.
We actually got a sophisticated man in the white house.
I just wish that was the public version, which is funny because that's kind of always been
their complaint, but that's also just not his cell.
You know what I mean?
It's like, it's, I don't know.
It's like any entertainer.
Some people like their shtick and some people hate it, but in Donald Trump's case, 51% of
voter, whatever you need to actually liked it.
And so the exact thing that you're complaining
about, which is television, television personality is what other people like. It's kind of like
all of entertainment.
Yeah. And there's something weird about particularly for someone like Bill Maher, who is so unlikable.
Well, yeah, there's that who's like very smarmy and pretentious. Um, although as I've learned recently, there's, it can get worse. Um,
but he like,
he'll be the first to acknowledge that like the country is in a bad place and
there's all, you know, like almost,
almost everybody and including bill maher would acknowledge that like, um,
woke ism is like a mental condition.
And that for years, literally this,
this insanity took over all of the holes of power in our country. Pretty hard to deny. When you see that we're going through,
it'd be $36 trillion in debt. And just like how,
how volatile the, the domestic culture is, how polarized everybody is.
And so it's like, you know, it just, Donald Trump was never exactly my style either.
Now, you know, I was, Ron Paul was my hero and I liked to learn a doctor.
That was the guy I looked up to, not Donald Trump, but like you could have a little bit
of humility and go like, well, maybe the old way wasn't working.
Maybe we needed something else. Like,
like maybe you needed to call him rocket man a bunch of times to get Kim Jong
Un to the table. I don't know. It seems like a risky game to me,
but maybe that's what needed to be played. And so yes, it is interesting that like,
okay, it's interesting that Bill Maher's beef is like, oh, or his,
his takeaway is like, oh,
privately he's a totally like reasonable, funny guy.
He's not the guy I thought he was at all. I agree with you.
I give Bill Maher credit for reporting the truth and coming back
and saying that, I mean,
he could have lied and spun this in a way that probably his audience would have
preferred. But I just, I would just say that it's like,
I feel like when you've been covering a guy for going on nine years now,
obsessively, like this is the thing you've been,
and then you meet him and he's totally different than what you had imagined.
You would think the next step would be like, Oh wow,
I really got it all wrong. You know, like that,
there would be at least some of that.
I guess we'll see over the coming weeks and months,
whether that's the case or not. Anyway, let's, uh, let's keep playing.
At one point we were walking through his amazing, it is an amazing tour of the whole house.
And I don't remember exactly what we were talking about, but it must have been something with the 2020 election
because I know he used the word lost and I distinctly remember saying,
wow, I never thought I'd hear you say that.
He didn't get mad.
He's much more self-aware than he lets on in public. saying, wow, I never thought I'd hear you say that. He didn't get mad.
He's much more self-aware than he lets on in public.
Look, I get it.
It doesn't matter who he is at a private dinner
with a comedian.
It matters who he is on the world stage.
I'm just taking it as a positive that this person exists,
because everything I've ever not liked about him
was, I swear to God, absent, at least on this night with this guy.
Bob, Kid Rock, told me the night before, he said, if you want to get a word in Edgewise, you're gonna have to cut him off.
He'll just go on. Not at all.
I've had so many conversations with prominent people who are much less connected, people who don't look you in the eye,
people who don't really listen because they just
want to get to their next thing, people whose response to things
you say just doesn't track like, what?
None of that was him.
And he mostly steered the conversation to,
what do you think about this?
I know.
Your mind is blown.
So is mine.
Just pause it one more time. It's mine's not.
How is your mind blown over this? It is amazing.
And I'll tell you, there's a,
there's a thing that people in general do,
but I do think that liberals tend to be more susceptible to this.
Like of all the groups of, of people, if you could slice and dice people into like left wingers and liberals
and you know, uh,
conservatives or right wingers or libertarians or whatever liberals
particularly are like the worst at this where they,
they put people who don't agree with them into the box of stupid.
Like you're stupid. If you don't agree with liberals,
that's kind of their starting point and you will find this liberals are,
are the only ones who are very likely to say things like, you know,
I met a Christian who actually knows all about science and think that that's
like surprising to them. Cause aren't these Christians supposed to like,
no, nothing, by the way, I'm,
I'm not just like pulling this out of my ass. Like I feel like this,
there's actual like social science on this. Jonathan height, uh,
did a whole like thing on this where like liberals are,
they're the most, it's been years since I read this, but it was something like,
they're the most judgemental of other people's positions and they're also the
worst at steel manning other people's positions.
So like if you ask a conservative to tell you what a liberal believes,
they can in general, they can with pretty good accuracy tell you what a liberal believes, they can, in general,
they can with pretty good accuracy, tell you what a liberal believes.
But if you ask a liberal what a conservative believes, they just get it all wrong.
You know what I mean?
Like they just can't.
They're also the most likely to be victims of the Dunning-Kruger effect.
So I think that all falls into the same bracket.
Yes, yes.
No, they're very related.
The, yes, the idea of, because it's a lack of humility, that all of it is a lack of understanding
where exactly you rank in the hierarchy of intelligence and therefore where everybody
else must be.
You know, like, uh, it's, it's very, Michael Malice talks a lot about this, but there is
something about there.
There's like the people who have like what he calls the mid wits,
the people who have like a one 15 IQ.
And so they're smart enough to get a diploma.
They're smart enough to read a book and then regurgitate the information that
they read out of that book. And then they feel like they're really,
really smart people. And it's like, slow down.
There's levels to this shit.
I think it's one of the things that's been the healthiest for me,
is that I've just always, you know,
in this world surrounded myself by and read people who are way,
way smarter than me. And it's good to remind yourself of that. You're like,
okay, I'm here. I'm not here. And there's nothing wrong with being here.
Like here's a fine place to be. But you also know that there's levels to this shit.
And part of that humility, right? Like it was a,
I know it was a, it was Socrates,
I believe who said the first rule of philosophy is know thyself. And I don't know,
was it Socrates or somebody else? But, uh, there's one quote where it's like, uh,
the first step in,
in knowledge is learning how little you know, like there,
you know what I mean? Like there's something about that of like knowing where,
and when you have that, when you have just a little bit of it,
I'm not saying any of us get a perfect score on this. We're all guilty of some degree of
lack of accurate self appraisal. But when you have a little bit of that humility in you,
it allows you to very, very quickly, like let's say, I mean, we've all known, um, it was Socrates. Thank you, Natalie. Uh, we've all,
um,
say going back to the beginning of Donald Trump as like a political entity.
So like around 2015, cause we've known Donald Trump from before then,
but as we all started at the very beginning to assess him as like someone who's
actually running for president, Ooh, someone who's polling in first place,
Ooh, someone who might actually get the nomination, somebody who actually might win the presidency running for president, Oh, someone who's polling in first place. It was someone who might actually get the nomination.
Somebody who actually might win the presidency and, and, Oh,
the guy who's going to be the president and all these steps,
almost all of us, if you just have a little bit of this humility,
figured out very quickly that you're like, okay,
Donald Trump sounds like a buffoon sometimes when he speaks.
Obviously there's a little bit more than that going on there because it's just
not the case. I mean, look like just objectively,
it has nothing to do with how you feel about Donald Trump.
You can think Donald Trump is a war criminal who belongs in the Hague.
Like you can hate Donald Trump, but you would still recognize that you're like,
okay, somebody started from the ground up a
multi-billion dollar company. Okay. Just that right there.
Okay. No, no idiot does that. Period.
That that's just the, like no idiot starts.
And you, his dad gave him a million dollars. Okay. Here's a million. You go turn a million dollars into $10 billion.
It's so easy to do. You know what I mean? Like, and so, and,
but after this achieving that was just the company,
forget all the other stuff he's achieved,
but the thought that you would be shocked that there was a little bit more
going on between his ears than what you have thought of this bozo, this buffoon, like you, you're shocked that, oh,
he's charismatic. How would he have gotten to this level?
If he wasn't able to win people over? Oh, he's interested in other people's ideas.
Yeah. How would he have gotten to this level if he was incapable of like,
you know what I'm saying, Rob? So it's just,
it almost demonstrates something much more about Bill Maher and his liberal
audience that this would be, it's like, Oh, you guys haven't,
you're this clueless about the other side, which you, you,
you know,
it animates you so much how you feel about the other side.
And yet you've got them all wrong. It's not even close to the, you know, the, the, uh,
the vision that you had of them.
And so there is just something interesting watching Bill Maher grapple with
that. Like, you know, and, and also the audience and to kind of think like,
it just makes you wonder, like,
does this poke any holes in that in their mind that they'd be like, Oh, huh.
Maybe we totally misunderstood who this guy is.
My guess is it won't, but it's kind of interesting to me. All right, guys, let's take a moment and thank our sponsor for today's show,
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That's tnusa.com slash Smith. All right, let's get back into the show.
And with the way that Bill Maher tends to be snarky and prod, and I would have think
what it came in trying to provoke more of a reaction, I think also just speaks to, to
Trump's smoothness.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That he could take somebody who has been an enemy and is kind of incentivized to be an enemy and charm the
pants off him and have him being like, Oh, I actually really loved that guy.
Um, but again, I just would have looked to be completely fair.
I know people who have met with Trump and they all say the same thing.
Exactly what Bill Maher is saying here, that he's just like the smoothest,
most charming, really funny, really interested guy.
But even without that, just judging off of what he's achieved, I'd be like, oh, he's
got to be charming.
There's no way that he wouldn't be.
So there's almost like just the cognitive dissonance of we've done so much reporting
about how reprehensible and buffoonish he is.
So certainly he must be that I guess in this case, ironically, after all of our talk of
lived experience, actually meeting with him in person, it becomes undeniable of, oh, there's
some skill here.
With all that said, I do think that there's a lot of stupidity and buffoonery to Donald
Trump, but there certainly is a marketing genius there and a PT Barnum and a guy who knows
how to at a minimum create television and sell himself.
And it's just so funny to the liberals because part of the appeal is that he pisses you guys
off so much, which is what you were saying at the beginning.
That's part of the appeal to conservatives is that he gets this reaction from, uh, from liberals that
we all really hate. And then sometimes even that's sometimes that's the entire appeal
of the guy is just look at how much this bothers the liberals.
Speaker 3rd-5 Dude, uh, there was, um, I forget whose line this was. I feel bad because I
should be crediting the person, but this is not mine, but it's so goddamn perfect. But if you, if you remember in 2016, um,
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton had the,
the highest negatives of any two candidates who have ever run for president.
They were the most hated candidates ever running for president,
both against each other.
And Trump was had slightly higher negatives than Hillary Clinton.
And I forget who said it, but it was somebody goes, he goes,
America hated Hillary Clinton so much that we'd support someone we hate even
more. I thought that was like just the perfect way of saying it,
but it really was that it's just that he was seen and rightfully so to some
degree as being outside of that cabal.
And so we'd take this guy and, and throw him at you. And you're right. It's, it's, it's not a part of his
appeal. It's the biggest part of his appeal. He's a middle finger.
It's the great Howard Stern line from a, if you've, I'm sure you've seen the movie. What
was the movie? I don't remember the movie, but there's that line. I want to say private
parts, but that's not right with a pig vomit when they're reviewing the ratings
that are finding out that fans of the show watch for 20 minutes and the non fans are
watching for 60 or 40 minutes. And the reason being they all want to know what he's going
to say next. Yeah. That's the same, the same thing. And that's the look, there's a, there's
so much of that with Donald Trump, right? It's why he's always just going to be the number one rated thing
It doesn't matter what because everyone's got to watch him. All right, let's keep playing
There were so many moments when I hit him with a joke or contradicted something and no problem a dinner
He was asking me about the nuclear situation in Iran in a very genuine, hey,
I think you're a smart guy.
I want your opinion, sort of way.
And I said, well, obviously, you're privy to things about it.
I'm not.
But for what it's worth, I thought the Obama deal was worth letting play out because we
made Iran destroy 98% of the uranium, and they were 15 years away from a bomb.
And then I said to him, but we got rid of that.
You got rid of that.
He didn't get mad or call me a left-wing lunatic.
He took it in.
I told him I thought parts of his plan for Gaza were wacky, but that I had supported
him in the idea that Gaza could be Dubai instead of hell.
I told him he was wrong when he tweeted the night before that I was critical of all things
Trump.
Not true.
Check the tapes.
Moving Israel's embassy to Jerusalem?
Loved it.
The border did need to be controlled.
I'm glad the cops are getting their morale back.
DEI had gone too far.
Biological men shouldn't be playing women's sports.
Europe should pay for their defense.
And of course, it makes sense that Arab countries should take in Arab refugees,
like the million Syrians who wound up in Germany
when Saudi Arabia took none.
He said to me,
You're right. They took none.
I said,
Well, you should remind your boyfriend in Saudi Arabia
that the next time you see him.
He laughed.
I never felt I had to walk on eggshells around him.
And honestly, I voted for Clinton and Obama, but I would never feel comfortable talking
to them the way I was able to talk with Donald Trump.
That's just how it went down, make of it what you will.
Me, I feel it's emblematic of why the Democrats
are so unpopular these days.
He was even okay when I Dana White, you know, Bill said my father was an orangutan and I really love
my father.
And I said, well, Mr. President, I did that because I didn't like what you were doing
regarding Obama's birth origins.
I thought that was low.
Again, no anger, just a little smile as if to say, yeah, I get it.
The most surreal part of the whole night was when I got home.
I flew back right after the dinner and I'm in bed watching 60 minutes from the night before.
And there's Trump in one of their stories, standing at a podium in a room that looked to me like one of the rooms and places we'd just been in.
And he's ranting,
"'Disgusting! You're a terrible person!'
And I'm like, "'Who's that guy?
What happened to Glinda the Good Witch?'
-"And why can't we get the guy I met to be the public guy?
And I'm not saying it's our responsibility to do that.
It's not.
I'm just reporting exactly what I saw over two and a half hours.
I went into the mine and that's what's down there.
A crazy person doesn't live in the White House.
A person who plays a crazy person on TV a lot lives there,
which I know is fucked up.
It's just not as fucked up as I thought it was.
And I have no illusions now that I'm back to work at my job
that he might start a new list. Because I don't have a good feeling and will be critical about a lot of what he's doing
the trade war and disappearing people ruling by decree threatening judges gutting the government
with glee.
But I also think he now understands I have a job to do, or at least he did on this night,
because he said to me early on that he'd seen our last episode, which was the Friday before
this dinner.
And he said, I thought maybe you'd be nice, but you hit me really hard.
I did, because I'm not going to pull my punches that presidents get to propose a third term for themselves.
He understood that and without animus, that doesn't mean he's not going to try to do it.
At one point I said to him, you're scaring people.
Do you really want to be scaring your own citizens so much?
And I know now you're all saying, and what did he say to that?
Honestly, I don't remember. citizen so much. And I know now you're all saying, and what did he say to that?
Honestly, I don't remember.
But it wasn't OK, I'll stop.
So MAGA fans, don't worry.
Your boy gave me nothing, just hats,
hats in a very generous amount of time,
and a willingness to listen and accept me
as a possible friend, even though I'm not MAGA,
which was the point of the dinner.
My favorite part of the whole night was,
we were standing in the blow job room.
Laughter.
Applause.
It didn't work.
Laughter.
And he said, you know, I've heard from a lot of people
who really liked that we're having this dinner. Not all, but a lot. And I said, you know, I've heard from a lot of people who really who really liked that we're having this dinner
Not all but a lot and I said same a lot of people told me they loved it
But not all and we agreed the people who don't even want us to talk. We don't like you
Don't talk as opposed to what?
Writing the same editorial for the millionth time and making 25-hour speeches into the wind?
Really? That's what liberals have? He takes the piss out of everybody else and we can
hold ours?
Okay. That's my report. You can hate me for it, but I'm not a liar. Trump was gracious
and measured. And why he isn't that in other settings, I don't know and I can't answer
and it's not my place to answer. I'm just telling you what I saw, and I wasn't high.
All right. All right. We can turn this off. So there you have it. I'm kind of curious,
like your overall thoughts on this, Rob. I'm a little bit of two minds. Like, there's part
of me that's kind of like,
uh, like I kind of appreciate the spirit of what Bill Maher is saying there at the
end. Like it's like, yeah, we all gotta be able to talk to each other.
I agree with that. I think that the, um, the over,
like kind of at least with regular people,
forget like the political class and all that,
but I think like the demonizing of regular people is a big problem in this country. And like we're all existing together.
Even if the country broke up into a bunch of smaller countries, we're still all going
to be neighbors. You know, like it's not good if France and Germany hate each other's guts.
It's much better when they're like at least reasonably getting along. And definitely within
a society, you don't want to have that that attitude like you can't talk to each other.
It's much better to be able to have conversations and work through problems.
But there's also just something on the other hand, where I find this to be a
little, it's a little bit convenient for liberals who've gone to absolute war with Donald Trump to after they've lost be
like, okay, now let's, let's be reasonable. You know what I mean? Like go ahead.
I think that's exactly what it is. I think, uh, I mean, Donald Trump in part lost the
last election possibly because of election fraud. And if it wasn't that it was certainly
tech censorship. And if it wasn't that it was certainly the environment of COVID and that everyone was very unhappy
with the government at that time.
But there was another, I would almost put this as a 50% element, which was there was
a temper tantrum reaction to Donald Trump and people kind of felt like just make it
stop. And they, they wrongfully decided to reward the kids having the temper tantrum, which
was the liberal media and blaming that on Donald Trump when it really was the reaction.
And all the way up until when Donald Trump re won this election, there was an effort
to censor Donald Trump, just get rid of him and to have that reaction.
And if the political capital that he won this time around and winning once again was in
throwing out and rejecting the temper tantrum and also forcing liberals to contend with
the fact that they had some really bad policies, which included the ESG nonsense and all the
woke nonsense and everything else that everyday people actually hate.
So even here where he kind of gets the story wrong, where he goes, why is Donald Trump
in front of the media calling them disgusting?
There's also some ownership of the way that the media has treated Donald Trump with the
unfair coverage, which the worst of it was the tech censorship.
But then there's also just the, you know, I mean the disparity in coverage of the media
of the way that they cover Donald Trump versus the kid gloves that they've had for Kamala
Harris.
That's why Donald Trump has to get up there and it works well with his base and his winning
coalition when he just won't take any of their shit because that's what people want to see
is that there's this grift of a liberal media that is just going to criticize him no matter
what and he's the one guy that's up there.
Let's just go, you're disgusting.
I'm leaving this interview like what he did with 60 minutes. And so, yes, I do believe that there is a turn here and that that censorship no longer
works.
It's the Douglas Murray thing.
I think people see through it at this point.
They're uninterested in just hearing, hey, you're not allowed to have an opinion.
This is the way that you're supposed to see and think about things.
And as Donald Trump got reelected, it became clear that that's no longer objective truth
and you can't preach it.
And so especially even for a guy like Bill Maher, who almost, you know, shares his hatred
of the extreme liberals is almost the same as ours.
And he's almost trying to figure out, well, how do I rebrand and restructure and convince
these people that this is lunacy so that we can win once again? So yeah, they're kind of, they're kind of forced to try and
make it's the same thing as when Donna Brzezinski whatever her name is. And I, and they went
to meet with him because they finally realized, Oh, this censorship and yelling things not
working.
Yeah. I think, I think that's right. All really good points. And as you say that, I'm like
kind of thinking like, you know, I know that's right. All really good points. And as you say that I'm like kind of thinking like, you know,
I know this from my own experience and obviously this is drastically
different than being the president of the United States,
but I know from my own experience, like,
and I don't think it's being duplicitous or being phony. It's like,
it's just in different environments, you're going to act in a different way.
So, you know, if I, if some guy came up to me,
you know, like at an event or something and just like,
but we're just privately, you know, came up to me,
I was, you know, it was like critical of me.
It was like, you got this wrong and you got this wrong
and you got this wrong.
I might be, you know, quick to just be like, all right,
well, you know, I appreciate you for bearing those concerns. Okay. You know, see you later.
Whereas like if it was on a show with the cameras on, it's like, well,
there's a different thing you're doing now. Now you're trying to like,
you're trying to come at me in front of an audience of people.
And I might be much more combative in that environment because it's like, well,
no, you're trying to like,
discredit me to an audience now. And so there's just environment because it's like, well, no, you're trying to like this credit me to an audience now.
And so there's just like, it's like, yeah, it's, it's going to be a different environment
when you're coming in.
So, and then if you're saying, why is Donald Trump calling people disgusting?
It's like, yeah, like you said, well, maybe because he's been called disgusting and target.
Donald Trump is not, I will say this, I try to be this way too.
But if you, if you ever see me on Twitter or in debates or anything like that,
I'm not saying I'm never vicious, but I'm always a counter puncher.
Like I never just start a debate vicious with the other person. Like I'll,
I'll go in and just be like, Hey, let's talk about the ideas.
If you're vicious to me, then I'm going to be vicious back to you.
Donald Trump is the master of that.
Donald Trump actually, I don't know if you remember, but I used to, uh,
when we were breaking down his debates with Hillary Clinton,
it was really interesting to watch because he would start,
he was actually like his breathing was crazy.
You could tell he was intentionally like slowing down his breathing because he
was trying to be nice. And he was like, I respect the first lady.
I respect the secretary of state. I think we got to do things in a different way.
And then like, at a certain point she'd be like, well,
it's just a good thing.
Someone with the temperament of Donald Trump isn't president. And he's like,
cause you'd be in jail, you know, like as soon as you hit him,
as soon as you hit him, he's going to hit you like 10 times harder, but he will wait for you to do it.
You know? So that was kind of one of the dynamics. The other thing, um, like,
you know, as, as we were touching on, it just does feel to me that it's like,
I don't know, man, like Bill Maher was, we played the segment on the show.
I don't know if you remember this,
but Bill Maher was talking during the campaign about how he was getting
worried that none of these charges were going to stick to Donald Trump.
And he was like, they should have just gone for the conviction when they had it.
We were in a blue district. You know what I mean? Like we could, and you're like,
wow, you're not even making an argument that he's really guilty of a crime.
You're just making an argument that we got to stop him by any means necessary.
And it's like,
now all of a sudden now because he kicked your ass, you're like, Hey,
Hey, let's all take it down a tone.
There's something about that that rubs me the wrong way. All right, guys,
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I mean, they can get off on some bad,
they can go down some bad paths,
but it is interesting how only liberals it seems like can be truly animated,
you know, horrifically concerned over the,
over gestures and just really ultimately unimportant things.
You know, like it's, it'll just be like the silliest little. And okay,
I'm not saying, you know,
all this stuff about Donald Trump like not like not conceding the election.
That's an, that's an excellent example of one, right? Like it's not, what do you mean?
He didn't kids. And then they build it up to be a thing in their head,
but you're like, what, what do you actually mean? And then they'll,
they'll tell it back to you. Like they'll go,
he didn't peacefully transfer power. And you're like, yes, he did. No, he just,
he just bitched and complained on his way out. But yes, he did
He got on a plane and went back to Mar-a-Lago and Joe Biden was sworn in that day as the president of the united states of america
He did peacefully transfer power
He he didn't say the thing really they are just they have an objection about the procedure
about the decorum because that's what you got to do when you're just trying to kind of like
implicitly or explicitly defend the regime is just be like, well, what really
matters is the decorum. And I just find it interesting how in all of these things
where Bill Maher could go, Hey, I agree with you on all of this. Like, yeah, come
on, dude, we're going to ethnically cleanse the Palestinians out of Gaza. I'm
with you on that or whatever other terrible thing he agrees with them on.
But their big thing is that he's going to run for a third term,
which I, first of all, I, I just,
I don't see any conceivable way that this is true.
I know that he likes to stoke that flame and Bannon is really trying to stoke
that flame. I don't think that's going to happen by the way, America,
Donald Trump's not going to run for a third term, but
isn't there something interesting that that's their huge issue?
It's like the awesome microaggression.
Yes. Because first of all, it's first of all, it's a non-issue. It's not going to happen.
It's not a real thing. It's something that he's saying to trigger you and you're falling
right into it. But then additionally,
you're kind of like if you zoom out and I guess maybe this is our perspective
cause like we actually just focus on shit that matters.
We focus on stuff that the government does. That's really awful that ruins the lives of people. And like,
you're like, so first off,
we've had presidents who have done more than two terms.
So first off, we've had presidents who have done more than two terms.
It was not written into law until the middle of the 20th century that there were
two terms where the amount of it, but like, so what are you telling me here? If Donald Trump were able to change the law and I don't know,
I think you'd need an amendment to the constitution, but I don't know.
I'm not a lawyer, but let's just say he was a,
let's say we made it three terms instead of two.
Is that like the end of the world?
Is that like some like, like again, Rob, I'm just saying,
even in this content, he'd still have to win the election.
You know what I mean? Like it's still,
it's not as if like he wouldn't have to like go back and
win the electoral college again. But even if that were the case, it's inconceivable he could do more
than three just by his age. I don't, I think it's inconceivable that he'll have a third term period,
but like it's inconceivable. You could do more. So you're really just like, I guess essentially
all I'm saying is that it's nothing. It's a nothing issue that's not going to happen.
And then even if it were to happen, it's still just not that big of an issue.
If we went from two terms to three terms, is that the difference between liberal
democracy and Hitlerian fascism or something like that?
It's just all very strange how liberals can get themselves so worked up over
non-issues while completely misunderstanding all of their opponents. I'll let you have the last word.
On the topic of a third term, I agree with you that it's a noise and nonsense and that
we're so far away from the amount of things that would have to fall into place for him
to be able to do it, which just even includes that he's actually having a great presidency
and could be elected in again. The other variable is that if he were to run for to do it, which just even includes that he's actually having a great presidency and could be elected in again.
The other variable is that if he were to run for a third term, I think there's only one
person on the entire side of the Democrats that could win another election and that's
Obama.
And I'm not saying for sure that Obama would win the next election, but if I had to pick
the roster of potential Democrats that could win an election, Obama
would be on the absolute top of that list.
And if we're not in a great economy and we just change the rules right now for you're
allowed to have a third election, that's a tough bet picking Obama versus, I mean, Trump
over Obama, particularly if things aren't going well, which is why, just to take a step
back,
it's nonsense talk because things would have to be going so epically well for him to win
a third election.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
The only thing that I was, cause originally when this came up, my thought was basically
as you had said, which was if someone is the most popular and they still have to win an
election, what's the importance of the term limits?
If someone's actually the best or the most popular, who cares? The only reason I think that maybe
we are better off with the term limits rule, and maybe this isn't really an argument with
what you were saying, is that I think the longer the people can stay in power, the more
potential there is for criminality. And that if people are doing things such as rigging
elections or sending money
directly to themselves or otherwise, there's a better, at least, you know, if they can
only be around for, and this might even be an argument for only having one term and that
you can then can even do a second term, which perhaps, you know, you know, there isn't a
perfect middle middle ground.
But it does seem to me that the longer you can stay in power, the more opportunities
there are for like just complete criminality. Because if you can, if there's more potential
to stick around without getting thrown out, there's less potential for the system to kind
of correct itself. And, and I don't think we're uncovering too many of the fighting
crimes right now, but I'm just saying if Biden could have potentially have done three terms,
maybe it would have been more aggressive.
And I think, listen, there's a lot of these that there's a strong argument for like one
six year term, just so you don't have to win reelection, just to say that a president doesn't
have to govern in a matter to win another election. You could just do the right thing.
There's a lot there, but anyway, I do got to wrap on that. Thank you very much for everybody
listening. Thank you for the overwhelming amount of support that I've gotten over the last few days. It has really been
something and I very much appreciate it. All right, we will catch you guys tomorrow with
the brand new episode. Peace.