Part Of The Problem - Non-Essential Products
Episode Date: May 6, 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 Trump's quote about American children ha...ving fewer toys as a result of his tariff policy, Matt Walsh's statements on Tucker Carlson's podcast, and more.Support Our Sponsors:Proton Mail - proton.me/davesmithBrunt Workwear - http://bruntworkwear.com/ Use code PROBLEMPaint Your Life - Text PROBLEM to 87204 to get 20% offPart 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.
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What's up, 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.
We are back from San Diego.
We had a great weekend out there. We had a rough time getting home the two of us but we are we are back home. How are you feeling today Rob?
It was a fine weekend out in San Diego and for all you good listeners porch season is in session. I've got St. Augustine Florida and West Palm Beach this weekend. And then I think the following weekend I got've got Lorden, which is right outside of DC. I got Virginia Beach. I
got some spot out in Jersey and then a whole run of Texas shows.
So we're gonna be porching hard. Come join us.
Hell yeah, make it out there. Of course, me and Rob's next date
together is in in 10 days. We'll be out in Appleton, Wisconsin,
at the Skyline Comedy Club, which I've heard, uh, I've heard great things about.
This is my, uh, this will be my first time ever in Appleton.
Um, but I've heard that there's a great club and it's a great town.
And I've already heard a lot of people are excited to come out.
So looking forward to that.
And then after that, we're, we're back at, uh, wise guys in Salt Lake city.
We had a great time there, uh, last year when we were out there.
We're up, you could still, can you still ski in June out there?
But I hope if unless I'm still shuffling around like a Chinese lady with an injured
back, I'll do some mountain biking, some hiking or something.
There you go. And then, of course, it all leads up to the one we're real excited
about is the Denver Comedy Works for the first time.
Me and Rob will be out there for a full weekend.
Then we're back at Hilarities, the the comedy connection in Providence, Tacoma,
Spokane, Detroit, Tampa, Florida, a lot of fun stuff coming up.
Comic Dave Smith.com to grab those tickets.
Um, all right, so let's get into, uh, today's show.
There are a few things that I, I really wanted to talk about.
There's let's start with Donald Trump,
who sat down with Kristen Walker.
For the life of me,
I do not understand why Donald Trump
still does interviews with these people.
I just, I don't get it.
It's like, isn't your whole thing
that you broke this media apparatus?
Why, it just, look, whatever, he could talk to whoever he wants to.
People sure do enjoy him owning the journalists and stuff like that.
I just don't, when it seems like you're, it seems like you're breathing life back
into your enemy institution that you already crushed.
Why go give them a thing that's going to be big ratings?
I that is already crushed. Why go give them a thing that's going to be big ratings? That is beyond me.
There was one moment in the conversation that's really been going viral. It is a Donald Trump
discussing the ramifications of his tariff policy.
And so here, let's play it and then respond. I was
personally myself a little bit surprised
that he took this line, but let's watch.
You said this week, got a lot of attention.
You were at your cabinet meeting.
You said, quote, I'm gonna quote what you said,
maybe the children will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls.
And maybe the two dolls will cost a couple of bucks more
than they would normally.
Are you saying that your tariffs will cause some prices to go up? And maybe the two dolls will cost a couple of bucks more than they would normally.
Are you saying that your tariffs will cause some prices to go up?
No, I think tariffs are going to be great for us because it's going to make us rich.
But you said some dolls are going to cost more.
Isn't that an acknowledgement that some prices will go up?
I don't think a beautiful baby girl that's 11 years old needs to have 30 dolls.
I think they can have three dolls or four dolls because what we were doing with China
was just unbelievable.
We had a trade deficit of hundreds of billions of dollars with China.
When you say they could have three dolls instead of 30 dolls, are you saying Americans could
see empty store shelves?
No, I'm not saying that.
I'm just saying they don't need to have $30.
They can have three.
They don't need to have 250 pencils.
They can have five.
You said this week got a lot of.
All right.
So this was the comment from Donald Trump
that is drawing a lot of scrutiny.
And I gotta say here, Rob, I think, listen,
I think we've tried our best to do a good
job here of just like calling balls and strikes.
So like I will be the first one to give Donald Trump credit when he does
something good.
I'll be the first one to criticize him when I think he does something wrong.
I'll be the first one to defend him when I think he's being unfairly, you know,
villainized by the corporate media or whatever.
Um, this is retarded bullshit.
This is just ridiculous.
It's ridiculous on so many goddamn levels.
First of all, it's like you can't have it both ways, dude.
You can't say that like,
maybe you only need $2, you don't need $500 or whatever.
But then also go, oh no, but it's not going to raise prices at all.
It's like, which one are you talking about here? I also, by the way, you know, I do,
I find this in a weird way to be kind of an interesting topic. Uh,
this is something that I've,
I've talked a lot about with like close friends and family members about just
how we get our kids too much stuff these days.
And like it's, I, I do feel like my,
my house is just like covered in toys. And I was like, you know,
and maybe in some way, like if my kids had less toys,
they'd appreciate the ones they have more or something like that.
But that's a very different conversation than a conversation about a government
policy that makes it more expensive to get your kids' toys.
And I'm curious to get your thoughts on this, Rob, but I just,
for a few reasons, I find this to be totally indefensible. And okay,
here's one of the major ones. Well, a couple of them. I mean,
obviously the point that we've made a million times that you could keep making,
he could just sit here and assert that the tariffs are going to make us rich.
Again, it's like, well, which one is it?
Are we going to be getting more dolls or less dolls? You know, like,
what are you talking about here? Um,
but if you're saying the tariffs are going to make us rich,
you got a whole lot of problems there. Like why? Okay. Then like, why,
why wouldn't a full blockade make us rich? Why,
why do we trade with the world at all then?
Why don't we get super rich and just never trade with them?
Why don't we make ourselves rich and just never trade with them? Why don't we make ourselves if the principle applies let's stop trading between the states
Right like let the states get real. Let's just stop trading between households
Just you produce everything in your household if this principle is true, and it makes you rich to stop trading with others I don't see what the limiting factor there is,
but regardless of that,
one of the, like when I'm having these thoughts
and these conversations with friends and family of mine,
I also recognize that I'm not in the financial position
that everybody's in.
Many people are not in the financial position I'm in.
And there's lots of good data on this,
but if you look at the amount like since the lockdowns and the price inflation that followed the insane
monetary policy of 2020 2021
Credit card debt skyrocketed like a lot of families are buying those dolls on the credit card
are buying those dolls on the credit card. Also, there are families that the difference won't be
having 30 dolls or having two.
There's families that currently have two,
that the answer will be have zero,
which maybe would have been a better question,
you know, for Kristen Walker to ask.
Like, how about that?
How about if it's the difference between now your kid
doesn't get to play with a doll?
The other thing, and I'm sorry, but
there is a good argument that like, um, you know,
maybe we give our kids too many toys.
Maybe my house is filled with too much cheap toys that were made in China.
And maybe in general kids would appreciate things more if they just had,
you know, like we do have for people, at least in the situation,
like a certain amount of abundance,
we have more than we really need.
And there is to some degree like a minimalist argument for why,
like you don't want to have too much more than you actually need
of all of the people in the history of the world who have ever existed,
I don't know that there's one human being who is worse equipped to be the one
making that argument than Donald fucking Trump. I mean,
I'm sorry, Rob, that is goddamn insane.
It is insane to spend your entire adult life being the poster child of capitalist
to spend your entire adult life being the poster child of capitalist excess to
the point that you're going to,
I'm going to take a shit on a gold plated toilet. I'm going to live it up.
You know what I'm saying? Like it's just for Donald Trump to be the one making the argument that people, and like, again, it's just, I'm sorry, I just, I'm somebody who's driven by like principles and logic and
just explain this to me. Then like, if this is what you're saying,
then wasn't price inflation actually a good thing?
Wasn't Joe Biden's economy actually good? I mean,
it forced you probably to get less things, you know, maybe that's nice.
Maybe you don't need all that stuff. Maybe you should have less stuff.
I don't know, dude. I mean, this is just to me to try to sell this and not spin
it as like, look, this is the cost. I'm going to be honest with you.
These are the negatives that are associated with this policy,
but here's what I think the benefits are.
But to spin this as this is a benefit
and of all people for Donald Trump to be spinning it,
it's like, I'm sorry, I just can't defend this.
This is too ridiculous.
What are your thoughts?
Well, I think that's a very funny observation.
I hadn't even thought about that of Trump preaching people
on that they don't need to be to consume in excess.
My thought was a little bit different that, you you know Trump saying Trump picked a very good example here because when he
says hey your kid will have three toys instead of 30 I think we can all go oh
yeah if my kid needs to have less toys and there's an American job for him to
have the less toys maybe that's a worthwhile trade-off and so we picked a
very good example for selling it. She asked a great first question she didn't
right ask the right follow-up question which is are you acknowledging that prices are going to
go up? Because now what happens if prices are going up on things that aren't toys?
What if we're talking about not being able to buy a washer and dryer? What if
we're talking about not being able to buy clothes? And then how much central
planning do we want in our government? Where are we going to figure out what
goods are considered excess goods that the government can decide
we're gonna put a tariffs on those.
And then there are gonna be other favored industries
that don't have the tariffs because the government
can understand, hey, you being able to consume this,
such as a car, you need a car to get to work.
Right, like maybe we could break them down
by essential and non-essential goods, Rob.
Which already is kind of happening. I read this article firstly is for car
manufacturers the increase in cost I think was expected to be $6,000 and so
Trump temporarily has halted the tariffs on some base items such as like steel
and so because General Motors was able to lobby the government and that it
would affect their business you know, their now preferred industry. What about every small business owner
that can't actually get Donald Trump's ear and explain, hey, you didn't give me enough notice on
this, you're ruining my business. I don't have enough time to make these adjustments. And so,
to me, part of the tariff just speaks to, do you want central planning in the economy? Do you want
the president to be able to say, these are goods that you should not have in excess
so we're gonna tariff them these are important goods or these are favored
industries there's not gonna be a tariff on it and then what's gonna be the
fallout from you know the market versus central planning? This is a president
saying hey I don't think it's important for you to be able to consume blank
amount of this item. Now the two that he wants to tell you about
is pencils and dolls.
But what other items are you gonna see price increases on?
Are those ones that will be vastly more detrimental
to your lifestyle?
And then what, does he make an adjustment down the line?
Did he not foresee it?
What does those adjustment periods look like?
This is all just the stupidity of central planning.
Yeah, no, I think that's absolutely right and there is something
like the point you're making is a really good one and there's something very frustrating about like
Constantly almost like like minimizing what the issue with rising prices is
Like you know like and you would think after living through the last few years of, of serious price inflation, that that would be gone. Um, that it's like,
yeah, dude, this isn't just like, Oh yeah,
you got to pay a couple more dollars for cheap Chinese garbage or something like
that. It's like, what about really important items? And there's always,
this is something that's always been frustrating to me As I've I've I've said this many times over the years and I really I'm very influenced by Hans Hermann Hoppe
the great German libertarian theorist and economist but he always used to say
that essentially like that libertarians needed to learn a conservative lesson
and conservatives needed to learn a libertarian lesson.
And from my perspective, I think most good libertarians did learn that conservative lesson,
which is like that there's something about like,
if you want to have a free society and you want to have a stable society,
and particularly if you want to have a libertarian society where the
government isn't like hyper regulating social activity, well, then you've got to,
you've got to find other ways by which to promote social cohesion and normalcy.
And like, you can't just have a nation of degeneracy that's not going to work
out and that's the kind of the conservative lesson that libertarians needed to
lead, uh, learn.
But then there's like an economic lesson that conservatives need to learn,
that they just never seem to make any progress toward.
Maybe sometimes when the opposition party is in, they seem like they are,
but it's like things like this, like you, if you want to say, oh,
rising prices is just, you know what I mean?
That's just your kid having three dolls instead of $30 or something like that.
It's like, listen, first of all, as I mentioned,
we've seen what rising prices did over the last few years. It, there is no,
you can't remove these economic issues from like cultural issues,
societal issues, religious issues, all of it. You know, um, it's, uh, I,
I think it's right around the divorce rate is like right around 50%,
something like 50% of marriages end in divorce.
And the number one reason for divorce is financial difficulties.
Like this is the number one thing that breaks families up.
This isn't just a question of like, is,
are your kids going to have $30 or $2? In fact,
a lot of times it might be the question of whether your kids are going to have
two parents or not.
Like it's not a game to just make life more expensive,
especially when so many Americans are living paycheck to paycheck.
So many Americans are putting necessities on the credit card. Um, you know,
like there, there's some of these studies where it's like, I mean, you could,
sometimes they manipulate the numbers and it's not exactly what it is,
but it's still pretty close. But like where they'll,
there'll be these things of like what percentage of an Amer of Americans can
come up with a thousand dollars for an emergency.
And it's like a shockingly high percentage of them can't and like, or, or, you know,
sometimes like I've seen people nitpick these studies where it'd be like, well,
they do have credit cards.
So like they could put it on the credit card if they needed to, but still,
like it's still pretty wild.
And like the idea that we're going to embark on a policy that is going to make
life harder for these people is not something,
it's not something that should be shrugged off any more than during lockdowns when
they'd shrug off the non-essential jobs who cares about that job that's not
essential go look at the mental health results of that policy it was it was not
good oh yeah Natalie pulled up one of them here. It says most Americans can't afford a thousand dollar emergency expense report
fines. Now I have seen,
I think there was something where people said like this didn't account for,
for credit cards or something like that. But regardless, even if, if you're,
if most Americans can't just come up with a thousand dollars with that,
that's a really, that's, that indicates something. There's a real problem there. And of course,
there's a lot of government policies that have contributed to that.
But I just like, I will,
I will never be on the side of anybody,
particularly people, you know,
when it's a conversation between a billionaire and a multimillionaire,
which is what you're watching here, conversation between a billionaire and a multimillionaire,
which is what you're watching here.
This conversation between Donald Trump and, uh, and, and Kristen Walker.
And it's like, yeah, like you, you both anytime, listen,
I don't have money like either of them have money,
but I'm doing well enough that if I were to ever talk about prices going up,
I would always be like conscious of the fact that like, Oh, there's a lot of people who that's a completely different situation for.
And like, yeah, it is kind of true that like, if my coffee,
my cup of coffee goes from like $4 to $6, it doesn't mean that much to me.
But I also know that there's like, there's a whole lot of people out there who
it's like, okay, well I can't get coffee coffee out now if that's the case. Like there's, and it is,
you know, the, the, what is it? The average,
the median salary I think is under $60,000 a year.
I think the median household income is under $80,000 a year.
And if you, you know,
if you're in a situation where you're making around the average or,
or beneath the average salary,
this prices going up is a huge deal to you. It's crushing.
It changes your trajectory of where you were going in life. You're like, Oh shit,
thought I was going to be comfortable for a second here. Nope.
I'm back to being totally screwed. And you know,
I just think there's something really fucked up about rich people down playing
that. Like that's an acceptable, you know, again, like I said,
Donald Trump of all people being like, no, it's acceptable that you'll be able to,
you'll be able to, um, to, to have less stuff.
What is it? The median salary in us 2025 is about $61,000.
Okay. Did I say under 60? Okay. I was wrong.
I guess it's a little over 60, but still I was pretty close. Um, yeah,
I don't know. Tariffs are bad economics.
If you want to make an argument that they can be used as a leveraging tool to
get a better outcome. Okay, fine.
But then your whole argument hinges on the outcome.
But the tariffs themselves are just a bad policy. And for this reason,
that raises prices and that makes life harder for middle class and working
class people destroys poor people.
And yeah, it doesn't matter that much to rich people. That's the truth.
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All right, let's get back into the show. That's really what it is.
Okay. Anything else on the tariff talk or you want to switch gears here?
Let's switch gears.
Okay. So I did, I didn't want to make this an entire episode, but I did feel, uh,
and for those of you who listened to the, uh,
the members only episode, uh, this week, by the way,
we do record a fourth episode that is only for subscribing members,
but you got to sign up at part of, uh, partoftheproblem.com in order to get,
uh, that episode. But so sometimes it goes like this where I'll figure something out on the
members only episode and I'll be like, you know what?
I didn't even want to say this on the show for everybody,
but I'll say it for you guys. And then as I'm saying it, I'm like,
you know what I think I'm going to have to bring this up on Monday.
So you guys who watched that episode,
we may have have seen me develop these, this thought a little bit,
but I do feel that I kind of have to respond to, uh,
to Matt Walsh who was on a Tucker Carlson show.
Um, and they, I ended up coming up, um,
for quite a bit of the conversation. And what's,
what started it of course was they were talking about the debate with Douglas Murray.
We don't really have to get back into that.
This has kind of been litigated to death,
but it was an interesting dynamic. So here you have,
um, Tucker Carlson, who has, uh,
let's say him and Ben Shapiro have been, uh,
not seeing eye to eye, uh, for the last year and a half or so. And now he's got Ben
Shapiro's guy, his big number one guy over at, uh,
at daily wire and the topic of, uh, you know,
Israel is coming up and it did. I, again, much like I said with, uh,
when Jordan Peterson went on Rogan,
I did appreciate that I thought I got,
it was like about as,
as nice as I could expect somebody from the daily wire to speak about me.
There, there was an interesting thing in this, uh, clip. And there's,
there's one part where, look, I don't, I don't even know how to say it.
I can't like beat around the bush.
There is this strain of, um,
kind of non interventionist types
who do not wish to criticize Israel.
who do not wish to criticize Israel.
And I would say both Tim Pool and Matt Walsh fall into this
category. Now, full disclosure,
I liked him pool and I like Matt Walsh. I don't know Matt Walsh. I've never met him. I have met Tim Pool many times and I liked him a lot.
And I, but I also like Matt. Like I think Matt's an important voice. I think his documentaries are good.
I think he's like,
he's been a very effective voice arguing against a lot of,
uh, woke insanity. Um,
he's a strong voice for like social conservatism.
And I think that's been particularly important over the last few years,
but both of them kind of take on this, um, they,
they have this tone and this line of reasoning whenever it comes to,
uh, Israel specifically, weirdly, not with other countries,
but with Israel where they will take the non interventionists position
officially,
but then they will also kind of like mock
people who they claim have Israel derangement syndrome. They just, they get fidgety and
defensive in a way that they never would with other foreign countries. And this is part
of like what Matt Walsh is talking about in the episode, it comes to a lot of this, like, look, I don't care. I'm an American. Like, I don't care what's going on over
there. And just to be clear, I think that would be a completely reasonable position
if the U S government wasn't already involved in this. But once we are, I think you kind of don't get to play that card anymore.
It's like on the level of like in, in 2006,
sitting here and being like, I just don't care about Iraq.
Why is everyone so obsessed about what's going on in Fallujah? I mean,
who cares? This is America. It's like, Oh, okay. Well,
the reason why we're focusing on that right now is because our boys are dropping
bombs on human beings over there right now.
Oh and they're doing it for bullshit reasons. Like they were lied into it.
And likewise, when it comes to Israel today, it's like, listen dude, if you're a non-interventionist, well, we are intervening.
We are propping up this country. This country is actively trying to get us more intervened in the region.
And so at a certain point, not criticizing them just comes off as cowardice.
Like as I said to you on the members only stream, Rob, I have, and I have always said
this, if you do not care about politics,
I have no counter argument to that.
Like if you're like, dude, I just don't care.
I want to tune out, I want to tune out, tune off,
go live my life.
I don't want to focus on all this other stuff.
I have no argument to that.
Fine, then go do that.
I focus on this stuff because it fascinates me.
If it doesn't fascinate you, then I completely understand it.
But if you do this and you're a political commentator for a living,
and you also kind of brand yourself like the guy who I'll say the thing,
and I don't care about the flack that I get back from it.
I'll say it.
It's like, okay,
but you won't say this one. You, there's this one line. And I understand you don't want to cross the line because there's a lot of flack
that comes with it. Like, okay. But then like, I don't know, there's something,
I kind of can't respect you being this person then. Like I think if you're,
if you're going to say that you're against all these wars and you're a
non-interventionist,
then I don't know how that comes without being critical of Israel.
No, you don't have to go down. You don't have to be like a Jew hater.
You don't have to be deranged.
You don't have to make it something you focus a ton on,
but it is on the level of being like, look, I'm a,
it's like you're sitting in 2004 and you're like, I'm a non-interventionist.
I don't believe America should fight wars that we don't have to be involved in.
I don't think we should do a nation building or,
or democracy promotion or occupying foreign countries.
I don't believe in any of that. And I'd be like, I know, right?
That's why I can't stand Bush and Cheney.
And they'd be like, what's with the obsession with Bush and Cheney, dude?
Like I don't even care about them.
They're in Washington DC and I live out here in Alabama.
Like I don't care.
That's the whole, it's like, oh no, come on.
Like let's just be real here.
Take this to its logical conclusion.
I'm not even saying, you don't have to obsessively hate
Cheney and Bush, but if I ask you, you have to go like,
yeah, I don't like, yeah, those guys are wrong.
I don't know.
And there was something about this, which was so like, I don't know, dude, it's like Matt Walsh has all the balls in the world.
When it comes to calling out gender theory, you know,
but then like I'm just watching how uncomfortable he is in this Tucker
interview, when Tucker's asking him specific questions
And I just found it interesting and then he did
At one point in the debate he tried to
Insist that douglas had made one really good point. That's the clip that we're about to play
Um, and then we'll we'll respond to that but any any thoughts on any of this stuff rob?
Uh, well, I think you said it during the Iraq war, you weren't criticizing what
we're doing, like, you know, we spend way too much money over in Israel.
Their lobby is a little bit, uh, too advanced and, uh, good at strong
arming our government and making sure that they continue to have their support.
And so if you're America first and you don't like foreign aid and you don't
like other countries intervening in our government and managing to get a lot of
Aid well then Israel's probably on top of the list of people that you'd want to criticize
And so, you know if I'm just saying if you totally believe hey
We don't need to be sending when propping up other countries and spending our money or broader being involved in these messes
If you want to look at the current world environment and what the most egregious actors are of people who are getting our money, I guess you'd be
opposing Ukraine right now and you'd be opposing Israel. And if you do a daily
show or a pretty frequent show where you're commenting on things going on in
the news and you don't like our money being spent in those places, why aren't
you talking on the the two biggest topics on the exact thing that's
important to you? Yep, 100%. And believe me, there's a lot of things I wish we didn't have to focus on.
Almost everything I focus on, I wish we didn't have to focus on.
Like, I don't, I don't think there should be an-
I wish I could have just gone to work during COVID.
Yeah, right. Exactly.
I wouldn't have had to talk about it.
We wouldn't have had to spend any time talking about lockdowns if the government hadn't instituted lockdowns. But the thing is that they did.
And so then just not talking about it isn't really an option unless you're going
to leave this space altogether. Unless you're just going to,
unless you're going to be that guy who goes, I'm not interested. I'm tuning out.
I'm focusing on my own life. If you are more power to you,
if you're not and you're staying in this,
like I'm going to be a political commentator through the year 2020,
you got to have something to say about lockdowns
for it or against it. You can't be indifferent. It's too big of a deal.
Okay. Let's, uh, let's jump in, uh,
to the clip here where Tucker asks a Matt Walsh a very pointed question.
And notice, see it by the way, if you think I'm like, I don't think I'm like inferring something
that's not there just right away, pay attention to how the reaction.
It was interesting.
I really did.
And I thought they both made valid points.
They both know more about the subject than I do a lot more.
That was very clear to me. And I think he could chop off the first hour of the debate.
It was an interesting conversation.
Who do you think made him work compelling case on the mat once they
actually got down to the question at hand?
I don't know. I think that it's just, you can watch him going like, all right, there's the correct
answer.
There's what Ben Shapiro will say about this.
I mean, it was literally that I've never seen a moment like
that other than when I asked Bobby Kennedy if he thought Israel had too much influence on American
politics. And it's just this like long pause of like weighing out every so careful. Just answer
it, Matt. Like what is a woman? Just answer the question, dude. It's a real simple one. You know,
I mean, look, he went on a whole thing before this about how Doug was just basically made this whole nonsense experts
argument and all of this. But like, anyway, okay. So now he's trying to figure out how
is there a way that you can say Doug has more, he made some point or something like that.
So here, here's what he's got.
And one thing he made one point that I thought was really good.
It was just a simple one.
I like simple points.
Me too.
And at one point he asked Dave, because once they got into arguing about what happened
after October 7th, how Israel responded, and Dave has all of his criticisms about what
Israel has done.
And then Douglas Murray said, what would you have them do?
What would you prefer for them to have done?
If they want to rescue the hostages and also destroy Hamas, what do you want them to do
instead?
And then from what I remember, Dave,
he pointed out that, okay, destroying Hamas
and rescuing hostages are kind of,
are not necessarily the same objective.
And then they started talking about rescuing hostages.
They didn't really circle back to the destroying Hamas part.
I would have liked to see him stick on that point,
like get an answer.
So if you're Israel, you have a foreign,
you know, these foreign enemy that's come into your country, slaughtered hundreds of people,
how should you respond to that? And I think he should have pressed that and he didn't.
And so it became, it was sort of unfocused.
Cause I would legitimately like to hear the answer to that.
For sure.
What would you have them do?
So we could talk about maybe there are other ways
to rescue the hostages,
but do you think they should try to destroy Hamas
given what happened?
And if you do, how else should they go about it?
But they kind of moved on to other things and it became this kind of, it became a sort
of unfocused, in my mind, sort of like circular conversation, as these debates tend to devolve
into very often.
If you were in control of what people on Twitter debated, what would they be debating right now?
Let's pause it here. Um, all right.
So, you know,
really the thing that kind of got this response out of me was that Matt Walsh
very specifically asks, like, I would like to hear the answer to this question.
So let's try, I mean, I've, I've given this a thousand times, but why not?
Let's give it a go. No matter how many times I say this is there'll always be people who go,
Dave never offers a real solution. He never offers an alternative. Um,
if I'm being completely honest, I don't even remember being asked for this in
the debate, but the debate went in so many different directions. I do.
I got a start though by saying,
I think it's kind of funny that after this most pregnant of pauses
Matt Walsh comes up with you know, Douglas Murray did make one really great point
It was a simple point and I like a simple point and then never gave a point
He claims that he asked a question
Like a question isn't a point
Okay, it's it's a question and like if he had pushed me on this question, I certainly would have been happy to give my answer.
I don't remember, did I give this answer a little bit on the thing, but regardless,
I mean, getting into it, it's like, okay, I don't know.
He didn't give a point that Douglas Murray made. It was just a question.
Listen, as I said, as Matt Walsh repeated there,
these are separate goals.
If the goal is retrieve the hostages and the goal is destroy Hamas, those are two different
things that you're trying to accomplish.
Now you could say you're trying to accomplish both of those things, but if you're asking
how to accomplish them, just understand that those are two different goals, which might
actually be in conflict with each other.
Like, okay, if you want to now look, I'm not saying just to disclaimer this.
I'm not saying that Hamas can be trusted or that they come through on their word
or anything like that.
But the truth is that the best way to get hostages back,
and this is not just something that, uh, we know, um,
because we can deduce it, but we know it because we can deduce it,
but we also know, um, this is the, the way that's been most effective for
Israel retrieving the hostages that they've gotten back is negotiating.
That's how they got just during the first phase of that ceasefire, which
never even made it to phase two that, uh, with cough Trump's, uh, envoy
negotiated, uh, shortly after Trump won the election.
Israel got like 30 hostages back by negotiating with Hamas as of,
I believe it was October 10th of 2023 Hamas offered a deal where they'd return
all of the hostages. Now it was, you know,
in exchange for some things they wanted.
Israel may have felt that some of those demands were
Unreasonable, but the truth is if your number one priority is getting back the hostages then
You try to negotiate for those hostages back and I would argue that I do think that is what any government's number one
priority should be if they have hostages their citizens taken into another country and by the way, I would
if they have hostages, their citizens taken into another country.
And by the way, I would definitely say,
seeing as how there was at least one Israeli with us citizenship who was a hostage,
it should 100% be the U S government's number one priority to get the
hostages back.
I don't think it's too wild for most people to
understand that if your number one goal is retrieving
hostages, what you're not going to want to do is level the place.
That seems to be inconsistent with the goal of getting the hostages out.
And in fact, some of the only Israelis who have been loud protesters of this war have
been the family of hostages
because they're like, yo, what are you doing?
You're leveling the place where like our daughter is, you know,
you can imagine how infuriating that would be. Um,
but so that's the first part of all of this. The,
the, the second part is that,
and I think I did very specifically say this in the debate. It's like,
look, let me say, okay, a couple things here,
and you can jump in anytime you want to Rob, but there's a couple things here.
Number one, I do,
it does bug me a little bit if you're opposed to something when people will say,
well, what's your plan?
Because you don't actually have to have a substitute plan to say like something is egregiously wrong.
I could give you a substitute plan, but you don't actually have to have that.
You know what I mean? Like if you, if you see somebody like, you know, I don't know,
their, their kid isn't listening to them.
And so they just kick their kid in the face and knock them unconscious.
You could be like, Whoa, that's horrible.
That's no way to respond to your kid, not listening to you.
And then someone goes like, well,
what's your plan for what you do when they're not listening to you?
It's not actually incumbent on you to have an alternative plan in order to say
this one is morally unacceptable. So that's kind of first. Um,
and if we're having a debate about Israel's response to this and someone is
taking the position that what they're doing is morally unacceptable
The onus is not on that person to have an alternative plan. So first of that's like a bullshit cop-out response
However, the plan is fairly it fairly obvious what Israel should have done after October 7th, right?
Which is that number one there should have been a real
like immediately what they should have done is,
um,
ramped up border security and started negotiating to get the hostages back.
Take whatever deal you can to get these people back.
Nothing's more important than precious, innocent life being held in captivity,
by the way. All right, guys,
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checkout. All right, let's get back into the show. Um, so, okay,
so that's number one,
have a real open transparent investigation into what the hell happened on October
7th and tell the truth. Don't go around spreading all types of like, uh, um,
horror propaganda, trying to make October 7 7 seem worse than it was, what
really were the failures here?
And if you had that, what they would have come up with is that the Netanyahu government
embarked on an explicit policy of propping up this ruthless terrorist organization so
that they could deny the Palestinian people a state.
And then they totally underestimated the threat of Hamas.
They thought they could control the height of the flame.
Turns out they weren't able to. So what you'd want to do,
rather than not protecting your border and propping up a terrorist organization
right next door, stop doing both of those things,
protect your borders and stop propping up Hamas.
After that, I think like, look, I've never suggested that Israel was supposed to respond
to October 7th with zero violence and that there would be zero.
I don't think it's practical to expect just about any government to have a response that
involves zero violence.
However, Israel had a long history of dealing with the terrorism problem through targeted
assassinations and special operations and intelligence operations. They never treated
the terrorism problem amongst Palestinians as a problem for the regular old army, just bomb cities.
That was never how it worked until Benjamin Netanyahu came into power.
And so, yeah, I would argue that Israel had an opportunity as I've made this
point before, I know sometimes people think this is a little like, like hippie
ish or something like that.
Um, but I don't think it is.
And if you, if you recall after 9 11, after,
after 9 11,
they had these huge candlelight vigils for the victims of 9 11 in Tehran across
the Muslim world.
There were lots of people who felt terrible for America.
And if we had just fought the war on terrorism with special operations forces, as we did
in the months following 9-11, which is what took out most of the Al Qaeda cells in Afghanistan.
And if we had done that and then caught Osama bin Laden and Tora Bora and then wrapped up
the whole thing by New Year's Eve of 2001, we could have maintained the moral high ground in that.
But instead we launched multiple 20 year occupations and killed hundreds of
thousands of people.
And then we were left with instead of a few hundred bin Ladenites, tens of
thousands of them and hatred across the Muslim world.
And Israel could have like everything you see about global opinion turning on
Israel didn't have to be this way
Israel could have taken this opportunity to go like look we're gonna have this transparent investigation
We're gonna admit that we made a huge mistake by propping up this terrorist group so that we would never have to give
Palestinians their independence and we could have said right now we're gonna do that. We're gonna take our boot off the neck
We're gonna end the blockade. We're going to end the occupation,
but we're not doing that unless we get our hostages back.
And if there are any more rockets coming in, then we're going to do X, Y, and Z.
We're going to make sure that we, uh,
let the world know that we do value Palestinian life and we'll make sure we're
not going to kill an unnecessary amount of people. Like again,
I'm just spit balling here. I'm not a fucking expert,
but there were alternatives where Israel didn't convince the world that they
were the monsters that the world is seeing right now. So no,
I don't think the onus is on me.
I don't think that it certainly wasn't a good point that Douglas made.
It wasn't a point at all. It was a question, but honestly,
I don't think the onus is on me to have the answer to that question. But the answer I just gave is much better than what they did.
I don't know. Anything else you want to add to that, Rob?
Well, in regards to not having to answer that question, Douglas Murray refused to answer
for why is Israel justified in killing kids and civilians. And he mostly lied and said
they have not. It's most of the damage that you've witnessed was booby trapping done by Gaza.
And then, of course, they always like to say Israel doesn't target.
Well, they seem to hate a lot of it.
So I don't know what that means when you keep going, well, it's not our intention.
Well, if you explode a building with kids in it, it might not be your intention
to kill all the kids in it, but it's your intention.
Yeah, product of what you're doing.
So it doesn't really help to say it's not our intention.
But speaking to, you know, go after the leadership.
There's money.
There's influence.
There's people who are making money off of what's going on over there.
And they quite specifically, while taking food aid,
decided to continue to send money, which is the most fungible of all goods.
So you know, if every single item that goes into Gaza
can't go in there because it can be used as a weapon, if someone can explain how
money can't then be converted into weapons through the tunnel, oh the tunnels
with Egypt, well my guess is the money is what helps those operate at the highest
capacity and is what actually makes the most amount of weaponry available. I
don't think it's the food that you send in. And I think that Israel has not taken the opportunity to go after whatever
leadership of Hamas exists in Qatar. I don't know, people want to say that that's a different
branch of it. Someone's making money here. And I bet if you turned off that money, and
all actually offered some incentives for peace. You might have some opportunities
there. But as you said, the framework to me appears to be Israel trying to do everything
they can so that they have people that they don't have to offer a state to and that they
have got no choice but to murder.
Well, you know, it's funny too to see. Yeah, I completely agree with you. I mean, it's
amazing. The potatoes are dual use, Rob. And so we can't let those in,
but suitcases of cash to Hamas that's could only have one use,
I guess that could only be used for aid anyway.
But it's like to hear Matt Walsh of all people kind of going like,
you know, it's like, why even is it such a good point to ask? Well,
then how do you get rid of Hamas? Like, how about if you gotta,
if you gotta murder tens of thousands of innocent children, then you don't,
then you don't get rid of Hamas. Like then you, it's here.
Here's a principle for Matt Walsh, um, which it'll be tough, I'm sure,
for him to figure, but let's say I had this principle
that's against murdering children.
This might be hard for you to think of.
Let's call it, let's call the position pro-life, okay?
Which, you know, imagine you were a pro-lifer
who was against murdering innocent children.
And then I were to say to you, like, hmm,
you know, you made this really good case being against, you know,
abortion. But you know, the,
a really good question is like, so then what do you do? You know,
what do you, and then I think you realize right away,
that's actually not a hole in the pro-life argument.
It's not a hole in the pro-life argument to be like,
but you haven't spelled out what that pregnant teenager should do. And like,
look at some point as most pro-lifers do, they probably do what I just did,
which is like offer some other, Oh, you can give the baby up for adoption.
Or maybe there'll be some social services or maybe there'll be this or that,
or maybe you should not have protected unprotected sex or maybe whatever.
But like you could have the principle that it's wrong to murder a baby and you don't actually have to have any more than that.
That's we do this all the time where we say like, no, I'm sorry.
For moral reasons, that solution ought to be off the table.
It's and it's not incumbent on you to then have all of the other answers
necessarily.
And it's weird how like the standard is the standard on me
or whatever is that I must have all of the answers to this,
but you don't even have to criticize the government that's trying to get us into a war with Iran explicitly.
It's literally drew up war plans with us involved in them and is still working and
has been working, has been working for many, many years.
Again, this is not, I'm not alleging some secret conspiracy here.
I'm saying like Benjamin Netanyahu testified before Congress and urged the U S government
to overthrow the Iranian government.
Like back in 2002 and he's been arguing for the entire way since including this week.
So okay here let's let's keep playing because I think there was one more interesting part
here.
Circular conversation as these debates tend to devolve into very often.
If you were in control of what people on Twitter debated, what would
they be debating right now?
Everything we talked about for the first hour of this conversation is what,
like, let's talk about the war on the family, on marriage, things that affect our kids, you know, how do we raise
healthy, happy kids? Let's talk about that. Any of these issues, there's like serious, deep cultural
issues in our country is what we should be talking about in my mind. You feel like it's very hard to go from
Alphonse to less Alphonse.
You know, that's, yeah, we could turn them off.
That was really the part of why.
Again, I care about all of those issues
that Matt Wells just mentioned.
And I think almost like the angle he was coming at it from,
because he said at one point, like the thing about how
there's these like concentric circles, you know, I care about my kids more than I care about any
other kids. Then I care about my friends, my family's kids.
Then I care about my neighborhood. Then I care about my city.
Then I care about my state. Then I care about my nation. And like,
I certainly get that. I don't disagree with that at all. Um,
I feel the same way,
just like the moral calculation changes a little bit
When your government is funding the intentional murder of a bunch of children
It just changes the moral calculation. Like I'm not you know, I don't uh,
Like we care we all care, you know, you don't want to see anyone get mistreated
Like we care we all care, you know, you don't want to see anyone get mistreated
But of course we all care about our own first. That's just part of humanity
And I can't like I don't I don't like that There's homeless people but like I care I care much more if my kid like skin their knee
Than I do about some homeless person. It's just that that's the truth
do about some homeless person. It's just that that's the truth. Um,
but like if I was driving in a car full of my family and like one of my family members got out and then just murdered a bunch of homeless people and then got
back in the car, I'm not going to sit there and be like,
why is everyone talking about these homeless people?
I mean like my kids skinned her knee at school today, you know, like you'd be like,
Oh shoot, no, now we got to talk about that. Cause you just can't do that.
I don't know. And particularly when I'm being forced to fund it,
I'm going to have a problem with that. So, you know, um,
unless, unless the social conservatives want to abandon the pro life position,
I'd say that like,
conservatives want to abandon the pro-life position,
I'd say that like you'd kind of have to acknowledge that us funding kids being killed is a bit of a moral issue that it's kind of incumbent
on all of us to care about. And I also don't think, you know,
I don't think these things are as unrelated as you think. I mean,
if you want to talk about like the policies that have been bad for kids
and bad for, uh, families, um, you know,
a whole lot of families have been broken up by these wars over the last 25
years. Um, tens of thousands of, uh,
of our young guys have,
have committed suicide in the aftermath of the wars.
These are the kids who now will grow up without fathers.
Or these are young men who will never have kids who they may have gone on to.
Not to mention the, you know,
the $10 trillion we've spent over the last 25 years on all this shit.
That has put quite a bit of pressure on families.
As I got back to what I said before, financial stress being the number one cause of divorce.
Well, we had to print a whole lot of money to make up that $10 trillion.
And that's done quite a bit to hurt the purchasing power of families.
So again, I just don't think these issues are nearly as separate as people make them out
to be, but also then, you know, on, on a moral level,
I do just think that at least the way I look at it,
there's, you know, I've,
I've taken a lot of flack for the position that I've taken on Israel.
And, you know, like whatever,
I took a lot of flack for my position on COVID and Ukraine
and other things too,
but I've taken a lot of flack for this one.
And in many ways, especially at this point in my career,
things are going pretty good for me.
It might be a little bit easier for me
to just not talk about this.
I could have that same position,
be like, hey, I'm vaguely non-interventionist, I don't just not talk about this. I could have that same position, be like, Hey, I'm vaguely non interventionist. I don't really want to talk about this.
Um, but I'll tell you, like, I have,
I have a son and, um, I mean, I have a daughter too, but this,
it affects me more, um, thinking about my son, but like,
at some point he's going to grow up and he's going to know what I did
with my life.
And hell know that I was like a, uh, a, a person in this space,
a political commentator that had a show with hundreds of thousands of people who
regularly goes on shows with millions of people.
And the idea that while this was going on,
like for my son to know that while this was going on, like for my son to know that while this was going on,
I didn't speak out against it because it,
it was a little bit easier for me or something like that. I don't know.
Like my,
my attitude as a father of a little boy is that like nothing,
nothing scares me more than that.
More than ever like having your son look at you and go like,
yo, the worst thing in the world was going on
and you were funding it and you didn't like
say anything about that.
You didn't want to speak out cause it was gonna what?
Like some people might say mean stuff about you
as a response. You
know, to me that's like, it's kind of all related. I'm not saying it's exactly the same
thing, but there's something, there is a relationship there between like the evil foreign policy
and our own collective soul as a nation.
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All right, let's get back into the show. Um, so yeah, anyway, I don't know.
Anything else to add to that rub?
No, let's talk about this, uh, hero at the park.
Oh shit. Okay. You want to talk about that a little bit? Sure.
We can do that kind of quickly at the end. So this is a big, this is a big story.
Um, it's a, it's a sad story all around. It's a sad state of story. Um, it's, it's a sad story all around.
It's a sad state of affairs. Um, but so,
yeah, I mean, I guess people have seen, so, uh, this is blowing up.
It's a really huge phenomenon of a story. But so evidently, now,
this isn't all on video,
but evidently a woman at a playground called like a little black boy, the N word.
And then someone else rushes up, puts a camera in her face.
Supposedly the child that she said that to was autistic and also going through her child's like diaper bag or you know,
something that belonged to them.
Sure. Who knows? But let's assume, let's just assume for the sake of argument that that's the story.
So a guy comes up, puts a camera in her face. Like,
did you just call this child the N word? She's like, yeah, fuck you. I did.
Blah, blah, blah. She has a whole thing.
She drops it a few more times in the, uh, in the video.
And then of course the video is posted as a like,
I'm going to ruin this chick's life type post.
She puts up a go fund me or something to raise money.
And last I saw she was over half a million dollars. She had started,
I think asking for 10 grand and then just kept upping the goal because money
kept pouring in. And now she's at like over half a million dollars.
And there, you know, of course, as you could imagine, pouring in and now she's at like over half a million dollars. And they're,
you know, of course, as you could imagine,
you've got people on the left are going like, see my God, this is proof tax that you're, uh,
you're saying the N word in the park collections.
Did they want to cut it? Of course I did. I didn't report my, my N word park money.
You tell me that's not deductible.
That's a crazy thing for the government to take its cut of.
Well, it does. It seems to me that, um, there's,
there's an interesting thing going on here. And I do think it's,
you know, it's important when you see something,
something like this is like it's information about our culture.
You know, it's like letting you know, like this is where you are right now.
And I think when you get that type of information,
what you should try to do is assess it, um,
as rationally as you can. And like what I'm seeing,
because of course a lot of people will go, well, look,
this is proof that
we're in like a white supremacist country or something like that. Now I will say don't
get me wrong I do find the thing kind of disturbing I think it's disturbing for a lot of reasons.
And to be clear I don't actually think you know you should be using that word and certainly
not towards kids at a park. Yes I don't you should. I don't think you should use like any derogatory language or curses toward a
child. And it's like totally fucking horrible. And you know,
like I have little kids, I know about the playground rules.
I even know about other kids being problems at the playgrounds,
but like that's not an option. Like you just can't do that.
And I certainly would never send money to somebody who had just been in a as being problems at the playgrounds, but like, that's not an option. Like you just can't do that.
And I certainly would never send money to somebody who had just called a little black child, the N word that I would feel like sickened by that.
I do understand what's going on though.
And I think that a lot of it is that.
Look, white people are, especially young white people
are starting to play this game now too.
And it's a, it's a sad thing to see, but there is to look, this has been going on for a long
time.
This has been very true in the black community for a long time where they will
defend their own and it does not matter. It does. Whatever.
There was this kid who just raised something like $500,000 himself,
who seemingly, I don't know if he murdered this guy or not,
I guess maybe they're going to go to trial,
but like the guy who stabbed the kid in the chest and killed them,
like he just killed a white kid and then he gets all this money and it's just,
and of course his lawyers and the civil rights activists around him will all make
it a race issue.
It doesn't matter whether Michael Brown attacked a cop or Trayvon Martin attacked
a neighborhood watch guy or whoever they're going to say this guy was a gentle
giant. He was an angel.
Like the OJ Simpson jury was the,
the whole thing came down to all the black people voted not guilty for him.
And half of them didn't even care whether he did it or not.
And there also is another dynamic where like, look, I don't,
obviously you should never, you shouldn't be calling anyone the N word.
You should never be calling a child the N word.
But there is something where like when you stick a camera in someone's face and
goad them into saying the N word and then post it online,
you're attempting to ruin that person's life.
And I think what you've seen from this is like it's white people going,
okay, then we're going to play that game too. Like you, if you go on social media, you could see videos all day long of like
black teenagers beating the crap out of some white kid and that doesn't ruin
their life, you know, but like a white person saying the wrong word will ruin
their life.
And I think at a certain point there's, it's just, it's hit a point where like
white people are not in larger numbers are just not
willing to play that game anymore.
They're not willing to say the thing that like everybody else gets to act in
their group interest except for us. Now,
I do think a much, a much more preferable answer to that would be like,
let's all stop doing that. Um,
it's kind of a sad thing to see it coming to this, but it's also
particularly tough when the entire establishment embraced this racialism
for like 15 straight years.
It's a very tough thing to turn off.
And so here's where we are.
Um, I'll, I'll let you have the final word on that one, Rob. Then we got to wrap off. And so here's where we are. I'll let you have the final word on
that one, Rob, then we got to wrap up.
Yeah, listen, that I do not endorse that lady's behavior, and you can't be doing that. But
I think on top of what you're saying is, sometimes you can have a bad moment in life, and it
doesn't need to be for the entire internet to judge or shame you for. And in this case,
you know, in my opinion, words are not violence.
That does not make it okay to engage in it,
but it's not like she beat up the little kid.
And so you can have a bad interaction in the park
and move on from that in your life.
I don't think that that will,
I don't think that that autistic kid's life
has been ruined over that incident. And I don't know that that autistic kid's life has been ruined over that incident.
And I don't know.
There's something it's like both parties are just wrong.
You know, you're not allowed to do that at the park, but taking every moment
that people have and then just post them online to try and ruin them.
I don't think that that's necessarily.
Yeah, I even sometimes I even think violence is the answer is
preferable to like public
public shame ruining like I remember back in the day where and it was to me at least
the worst thing that Louis CK was accused of that I heard because I didn't really think
that much of like like, oh, you're like, you're like girls drinking in his room at like two
in the morning and then he brings up like jerking off in front of you and then you agree.
And then he does it. And then later you feel bad. Like I was like, I don't know.
So leave, don't be there to begin with.
I didn't there was one story where I guess they were like on set
at work and he just went to one of the girls and he was like, Hey,
can I like masturbate in front of you? And she was like, no. And then he was like,
Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm like sick. I shouldn't have said that. And then to me that was like, Hey, can I like masturbate in front of you? And she was like, no. And then he was like, Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm like sick.
I shouldn't have said that. And then to me, that was like the most inappropriate,
but I almost go like, I think the answer to that should have been her boyfriend
coming in and punching Louie in the face.
And then moving on and then you move on with your life,
but your answer to this shouldn't be to like ruin you to put this out for
everyone so that you're for the rest of your life.
You're just known as this person. You can never get a job. You can never,
you know what I'm saying? Like this, that's just, that's not right either.
So I completely agree with you. It's all kind of sad and wrong,
but I also do think it would serve people well to,
to read the temperature in the room. And look,
that stuff that I was saying about like how black people were siding with OJ in the truck, listen,
there's probably was a time where this was understandable and made sense.
And that black people have been fucked over in this country for long enough
that they were like, nah, fuck that. We're going to be on the side of our guys.
At a certain point, you have to stop doing that or everyone's going to do it.
And so I would just say,
I think we'd all be better off if everyone just stopped doing that.
Perhaps that's a pipe dream, but I am not so sure it is. All right.
We got to wrap on that. Thank you guys so much for listening.
We'll be back tomorrow with a brand new episode. See you then, peace.