Part Of The Problem - Scott Horton
Episode Date: November 5, 2024Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave is joined by Scott Horton to discuss his thoughts on the election, the breakdown of corporate media,... Trump's mistakes as the election approaches, and so much more.Part Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!Support Our SponsorsGo to https://ground.news/davesmith to critically analyze how the hidden agendas behind election coverage are shaping your vote. Subscribe through this link for 50% off unlimited access to Ground News.Babbel - http://babbel.com/problemProlon by LNutra- https://prolonlife.com/ptpCrowdHealth - https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/promos/potpGet your tickets to Porch Tour Herehttps://porchtour.comFind 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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There we go. What's up everybody.
Welcome to a brand new episode of part of the problem. I am your host,
Dave Smith, a couple orders of business before we get today's show started.
Quick reminder to everybody listening live or listening when this first comes
out that tonight is the night.
Robbie the fire Bernstein's debut comedy special goes live on YouTube tonight.
So make sure to check that out.
Support Robbie.
It's a great, it's a great hour of comedy, man.
You guys are really going to enjoy it.
Rob's hilarious.
And so make sure to check that out.
And then real quick, I have, uh, probably been neglectful in promoting these
shows because, uh, it's coming up next weekend and I'm just totally preoccupied with everything
going on this week. But Friday,
I will be in a Poughkeepsie with Robbie the fire Bernstein and then Sunday we
will be in Philadelphia. So comic Dave Smith.com for those ticket links,
make sure to get that. And then last thing I promise, of course,
live election day show with Patrick bet David, uh, at, at down there in Fort Lauderdale with the value attainment guys.
I'm jumping on a plane the day after tomorrow to go down to that.
So looking forward to that. We'll be giving you live election results.
And who knows? Uh, twice in my life, uh,
we have not known the president the night of election day,
which was a 2000 and 2020.
This feels like a real possibility for 2024, but we will see.
Perhaps we will have the results that night. Either way should be a good show.
All right. So for today's show, um,
a little bit different than our normal time because I'm doing a lot of traveling,
but I have here with me, the man, the myth, the legend, uh, my,
my foreign policy guru, the great Scott Horton. Um, the man, the myth, the legend, uh, my, my foreign policy guru,
the great Scott Horton. Um, of course he is the author of fools errand enough
already. And as many of you know,
he's been working these last couple of years on provoked, which is I've,
I've read an advanced copy, man. It's just phenomenal.
The book is coming out very soon. This is not the podcast about the book,
but since this is what everybody's
going to be asking, first off, Scott, how are you welcome to the show? Why don't you
tell people a little bit about when they can expect the book and for anyone who doesn't
know what the book is about.
Hey, Dave, thanks for having me.
Of course.
Yeah. I'm doing like my, I hope final read through right now and then it's the very last
of the technical I still got to do page numbers and chapter headings and table of contents
and all that.
Forget the index just buy the Kindle version and look it up that way if you want.
But then yeah the plan always say two weeks.
I'm like the you ever see Tom Hanks and Shelley Long in the Money Pit.
Two weeks. That's like the, you ever see Tom Hanks and Shelley Long in the Money Pit? Two weeks.
That's me in the book.
But I'm really going for that.
And in fact, I've, I'm now, I've been so bold as to put up a preorder page at provokedbook.com
or scothorton.org slash provoked.
It'll forge you onto there.
And so we're taking pre-orders now because I got this show and I got Tom Woods and some other
things this week.
So I figured I might as well go ahead and get that started.
And then that's, you know, like the kids throwing their hat over the fence.
Now you got to go climb it.
So I'm going to have to pull the trigger on this thing very relatively soon now.
So I'm really hoping it'll be two weeks.
And then it's the story of everything that Bush senior,
Bill Clinton, Bush Jr., Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden and John McCain and Hillary Clinton
did to ruin America's relationship with Russia after the end of the last Cold War and to start
the new Cold War and of course the catastrophe in Ukraine as the subtitle says there. So that's the
book and it's um as they say comprehensive. Yeah sure is that. You think? Um but it's got look I got
um not as long as we're talking about it. I got all the NATO promises and NATO expansion. I got
shock therapy and all of the color-c the Balkan Wars, the color coded revolutions
and including the Maidan revolution of 2014.
And then a lot of the backstory, the history of the different conflicts over Crimea and
you know, different parts of Ukraine, the history of the world wars and all that going
back.
And then I have a whole section on Russiagate and, uh, Trump years there, of course,
and then on the war itself and, uh, where we are now.
And so that's what took so long, but every attempted and failed coup in
Belarus is in there, all of them, everything.
So, uh, that's what people are looking for is the full story.
That's the full story from Bush senior all the way through today.
people are looking for is the full story. That's the full story from Bush senior all the way through today.
I was, uh,
I was talking about the book with a mutual friend of ours.
And I said, at one point I said,
it's as if Scott's prosecuting the case against the regime for how this whole
situation, you know, is all their fault.
And, but it feels like it's like the process,
the prosecutor's case is so airtight that like halfway through the book,
you could see the regime just stand up in court and be like, we just,
we'd like to change our, our like, do we have to? All right, fine.
And it really is. It's very satisfying for, for someone like me, um,
you know,
who's been out in the world kind of arguing about this over the last few years to just be,
cause it's so thorough and comprehensive. And it's just like, come on, man,
like look at this in black and white and tell me that this wasn't like that we
didn't at every single inch pursue the most aggressive hostile policy toward
Russia constantly. You know, it's like the whole book is, is as you've been,
you know, talking about for, for the last few years,
just you see all of the different off ramps,
all of the off ramps where it didn't have to end here.
It could have ended in so many different places. There could,
it's not even like even after doing everything wrong through the nineties and
everything wrong through the first 10 years of the 21st century,
there were still opportunity after opportunity.
And instead at every turn, they were like, nope, we're driving toward conflict.
We're not getting off here on peace boulevard.
Conflict is right ahead.
Let's keep driving forward.
So anyway, I just, I'm very excited for, for everybody to read it.
And, uh, the next time we have you on this show, it will be because the book is out
and, uh and we're
spending an episode promoting that.
Hey, let me say real quick, two things.
One of them is part of the good part of being so old is that I've been messing with anti
war.com for 20 years now a little more.
And so ever since the orange revolution back then, and so and working with Justin Ramondo
and all the guests on the show, And we really call this this whole time
for 20 years is, you know, just like in
moving into Iraq in 2003, it's like
the slowest motion train wreck.
Right. Of things that did not have to
happen. You can go find
and that's how I know so much about it
is because I've been covering it this
whole time.
And then the other thing is I hope
people aren't too intimidated by the
size of the book, because almost half of that is footnotes.
It's literally hundreds of pages worth of footnotes, 6,000 footnotes, well, more than
6,000 footnotes, 7,000 citations, because a lot of footnotes have more than one citation.
So there are some pages where there's more citations on the page than there are, you
know, space of paragraphs of prose. So
that's you know, showing my work and you know, hopefully proven that I'm a reliable narrator, but also giving you guys the
opportunity to follow up and see whether all these footnotes say
what I say they say by steering toward and I have them all right
there at the bottom of the page, so that you can check my work as
you're reading. So that's how I like it.
So that's how I did it.
And so that's part of why it's like that is because the overkill on the citations there.
But I hope that's useful for people too.
Yeah, 100%.
And also like, you know, if you live in a blue state where you're not allowed to have
guns and someone breaks into your house at the middle of the night, now you got something
to whack them over the head with.
So it's all doing a lot for you. You're not going to survive too many of those heads.
Or like if you're real short and you got to give a speech, you just stand behind the podium.
So I wanted the reason I wanted to have you on today, which obviously, of course, you're
you're our great foreign policy expert. But I wanted to talk about something more broadly. So I had Michael Malice on the show recently,
and then I just went on Tom Woods show.
And of course, I've done a bunch of episodes
about the election.
A lot of libertarians are supporting Trump in it.
I've kind of been beaten down to saying
that I also am going to vote for Donald Trump.
There's a lot of drama about the libertarian party.
And I just kind of felt like I think my audience should also hear from you about
this stuff before the election, as you're kind of one of the pillars in this,
this movement. So you can,
you could start almost wherever you want to with this, but what are,
what are Scott Horton's thoughts on the 2024 election,
which really has been a wild one and,
and different in so many ways than any election I've ever seen.
What do you think about all this?
Well, most I regret that I've been writing a book. I always do this.
This happened in 2016 and in 2020 as well.
I want to cover the election all year long on my radio show and now I'm hardly a radio show at all.
I'm an author. It sucks. I'm going back to being a radio show as soon as possible
because I love talking about this kind of stuff. Of course, it's hugely important.
And you know, in my, I don't know,
you might be too young for this,
but when Futurama first came out,
they had Robert Johnson versus John Robertson.
And they're like running against each other for president.
And like this going,
I think your 3% capital gains increase is too extreme.
And then he's going, I think it's not too extreme enough.
And then like, that's it.
Bush versus Gore, you know?
This is not quite like that, right? It's a bit different than that.
I mean, the parties, I mean, if we're talking McConnell
and Schumer, then yes, right?
We still live in their world.
But as far as like, who's the figurehead
sitting in the chair behind the desk?
Actually, and look, I know, I just said figurehead and a lot of people say that and there
is, I'm on a show here.
But, uh, you know, the president in the United States has a lot of power, a lot.
And, and you can see it, especially with Donald Trump, where he's willing to do
things on a whim, it does matter who's sitting at that desk and you have.
I mean, what can you say?
You got Donald Trump, who's a caricature of his own self versus Kamala Harris, who was
the emptiest suit anyone has ever seen.
And the polls say that they're neck and neck.
You know, I don't know, I can, I try very hard to put myself in as many other shoes as I can and not just see the world
through my own stupid eyes.
I'm very biased in all of my very biased ways.
I tried very hard to believe that people believe in her and I can see how on the margin there's
got to be some. But, and, and, and I can see why people just, they never liked Trump and now they even more
don't like him.
Maybe even if they, if they already lean left, maybe they'd been just completely hooked into
the hysteria about his danger of what he represents is, you know, America will never be America
again after this, cause he's going to turn it into a Nazi stand or whatever thing.
I could see people voting for her out of fear of him.
Or even I think this is a big part of how he lost the last election.
He should have won it by 50 points as Hillary would say or whatever.
But it was just people were exhausted and half of it wasn't his fault.
Half of it was the false accusations against him. But half of it was his fault that like just all day long, it's Trumpian antics. And
people are just don't want to have to care about what the president's doing and saying
every single day of their life the way it is under him where it's a constantly the Trump
show, you know? So I think there could be maybe people just want to not have to live that way again or
whatever and would see her.
Is she basically running as Joe Biden, right?
Like everybody knows that he is essentially not there.
It's rule by committee and that you can trust that it's basically the same committee is
going to be around her helping to carry her along or whatever. And so if you like this, then keep with this same safe state status quo kind of thing compared
to whatever Trump represents, it's going to be disruptive.
If you like it, then good.
But if you don't, then maybe people I could see, I'm trying, you see why I'm rationalizing here, how people could try, you know, in their mind to figure how she
could be the better choice.
Um, just like the last two elections, I will be rooting for Trump.
I cannot vote for the man.
There's just, he is so far over the line on so many things.
But then again, too, like, I gotta tell you, Dave, every time they lie, I
move a click
to the right.
And it's every day.
Like, so right now I'm like somewhere between Suharto and Genghis Khan, right?
Like, I want to throw a communist off of something or something.
I'm upset.
I mean, when they told me, and look, I mean, it happens every day, right?
The latest one is that Trump said that Liz Cheney should be executed when he was just
calling her a chicken hawk.
He said, give her a rifle and put her out.
That's not a firing squad.
Like don't lie.
I don't like it when you lie to me kind of thing.
And then they told me and I met this guy because I was piling around with you.
I met Tony Hinchcliffe.
I seen him on the TV there
when he was making fun of the football man.
And I know that he's not just a comedian,
he's a Don Rickles guy.
He's a guy that goes,
ha ha, your wife left you and whatever,
you're black, blah, blah.
He's a insult comic, right?
Those are not exact quotes of him.
I was, yeah, but that's the joke. And forgive me, Tony Hedgecliffe, for saying this, but just for
people who don't understand who maybe are coming from a different perspective on this.
It's sorta like Sarah Silverman. The joke is that she would dare say such a thing or that she's in she's playing a character
Who would be so tone-deaf to say such a horrible deal or whatever?
That's the joke and so you can pretend to not get it, but you're just pretending
It's still a joke, but I met this guy and then I got a read in the New York Times that Tony Hinchcliffe is a
man
who made
remarks a man who made remarks that hurt people's feelings
and were racially insensitive and this and that.
Like, I'm sorry, that's like an H-bomb goes off in my head
when you lie, and I'll tell you why too.
It's because of my tiny, fragile, childish little ego.
I don't like being called stupid like that.
And when you're telling me that I'm so stupid
that I'm gonna believe you that Tony Hinchcliffe is a man
and not an insult comic who told an insulting joke
because that's his thing, then like, yeah,
that makes me wanna vote for Trump three times
just to spite them.
Somebody was just playing me a clip.
Oh no, I saw it in the margin at town hall
of of course everybody films their every
interaction out in public with strangers now, right?
And so it's a black Trump voter being lectured by a white Kamala Harris voter, a liberal
woman who's like the most hectoring, you know, Hillary Clinton, I NPR draw, you know, Prius
driving lady hectoring this black woman that, oh, man, how could you vote for Trump and all of this thing?
And as I, man, just, I do, I hate liberal white women so much right now.
And other liberal women too, I guess, but mostly the white ones, I don't know why
they're just the more obnoxious to me and the more condescending and I could see
maybe voting for an Israeli
spy like Donald Trump for president if just the collateral damage would be that
these women would cry for the next four years and bankrupt their husbands their
weak pathetic husbands that they must be on therapy bills for all their panic
disorders and all of their things I just I want them to be miserable.
I hate them. I hate them.
The women who all believed Russiagate, right?
Like these are the women who was I'm totally ripping someone else.
Probably wasn't that said?
No, I know what it was.
I was watching this great YouTube about the Me Too movement
and how it was totally crazy and all these innocent people got hurt and whatever.
And he was like, yeah, it's like the Salem witch trials, which was at least initially led by women,
right? Like they're the worst kinds of truthers when they all get in a gaggle on the view and
decide that they know what's going on in the world. If Vladimir Putin has inflicted this New York
real estate tycoon on us, somehow everyone, and like it's the dumbest crap that they talk themselves into believing.
And right now they think that Donald Trump is a white supremacist, Nazi Hitler who wants
to enslave them and put them all in concentration camps. And they sound like Alex Jones in 1997.
Bill Clinton is going to suspend the Constitution and put us all in camps. That's what all the
liberals at the New Republic and the Atlantic and CNN and MSNBC sound like right now
and the View and Whoopi Goldberg
and all the women who believe them.
And okay, good, I want them to be that afraid.
Like I know that that's not going to happen,
but I want them to wallow in the fear caused
by the depths of their stupidity
and depravity in their willingness to go along with power.
And it's not just because they ruined Star Wars, and that is part of it,
because they did ruin Star Wars, and that's really bad. But also, you know.
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Let's get back into it. Everything that the Democrats have done, it's all cumulative to me,
you know, but it's the day to day lies that just drive me out of my mind. I just can't stand it.
Oh, Donald Trump. I says to my wife who she's not watching the news much lately, but she used to live
in New York City, you know, she's one of the Jews who didn't show up at the World Trade Center that day, Dave,
because she was sick, not because she was warned. But anyway, I says to her, I says,
hey, honey, what's the most important entertainment venue in New York City?
And she goes, well, Madison Square Garden, of course. Like, hey, has anybody held any events there since 1939?
She's like, yeah, everybody.
What are we talking about?
I think Adam Yalck was up there singing, she's crafty, you know, in 1986.
What are we talking about here?
And then, and the only parallel they have, the only parallel is
Madison Square Garden rally. That's it. And I'm supposed to swallow this whole
that Trump and they don't even pretend to say why you should believe that Trump held this rally
at Madison Square Garden as some sort of homage to these Nazis. And as his like secret code to all
Nazis and as his like secret code to all every single person on the right in America who are all secret Hitler lovers, even though our fathers all fought the Nazis in the second
or our grandfathers fought the Nazis in the Second World War.
But anyway, no, that kind of thing, man.
It's just again, it's my fragile, pathetic little ego.
I can't stand being told that i'm stupid
enough to believe that i just can't stand it you know and again i want to make the people who are
stupid enough to believe it i want them to be that fearful and miserable because f them
yeah well especially it's it's interesting from like the radical libertarian point of view
because you know we kind of live in this world
where we're like, okay, first of all, you're all Nazis. Yeah, right. You know, like, you know,
they're all fascists. Yeah, it was like, well, it reminds me, I was getting into this argument
with like this corner of right wing Twitter. That that was in. So basically, there's a bunch
of right wingers on Twitter who are in love with calling Kamala Harris a communist and when I was on Tucker
Carlson show last time I was talking about how stupid this talking point is
from Donald Trump I was like calling Kamala Harris a communist is like I don't
know it sounds to everyone who's not 80 like something their grandpa would say
and also like what do you really mean?
I mean, she's not a Marxist. She's a tool for big business. This isn't, you know,
like our,
our economy that's run by big banks and big pharmaceutical companies and big
weapons companies aren't about to nationalize the means of production.
Like this is all stuff. But anyway,
so I got in this argument with a few right wingers who want or like, no, no,
no. And let me give you the argument for why she is a communist.
And it is the same thing where you're like, OK, first off, I know this stuff better than
you.
And if there's any argument that she's a communist, fine.
But then they're all communists like this.
It still doesn't just apply to her.
Then you're not you're not defeating the communists by voting for Marco Rubio or something, dude.
Like they're all that.
You know what I mean?
So it's like whatever. If you it, if anyone wanted to have an
interesting conversation about like the evils of fascism or even Nazi is, um,
it's like, okay, then we could talk about the similarities that our regime has
with those regimes or we could talk about all of the Nazis that were absorbed
into the United States of America after the second world war.
Like there's a lot of really interesting topics there, but of course they want to
have the dumbest conversation.
The only other thing I will say also is that I didn't, I saw the news reports
about, uh, uh, Donald Trump threatening or, you know, wishing violence on Liz
Cheney before I saw his clip.
And my first thought when I saw the news reports was like, I'm already voting for the guy.
Yeah.
I can't vote for him anymore.
I could try.
I could go back and try to vote for him again.
But anyway, that's.
Yeah.
Cindy Sheehan.
But Cindy Sheehan put out a thing that said, oh, orange man bad promises to execute
lizard Cheney.
Fine.
I'll vote for him.
Promises to execute lizard Cheney fine. I'll vote for him
To finally convince the Indy she hand to turn out to vote Republican guys. Oh, yeah, it's all well look It's I will say and maybe you I don't know if you'd feel the same way
I was gonna make a joke about good the thing where oh
One general told Jeffrey Goldberg that Trump said Hitler did a lot of good things
in the beginning and they're all having a big fit about that.
It was like all of the things that Hitler did in the beginning are all things that you
love.
Giant infrastructure projects, inflationary money, war, you know, all of it.
The Hitlerian program, basically other than the black leather and
the marching up and down, it's you guys.
You kill millions of people all the time.
Everyone knows it.
Down to the architecture.
You have all of it.
You love the whole thing.
Go look at Washington, DC, man.
They love every inch of it.
Like you said, maybe not.
All the giant flags and yeah.
Maybe not, maybe not the uniforms and maybe not the
seizing of Jewish businesses.
But other than that, if you're talking before like the war,
they love everything.
It's fascism with American characteristics, dude.
We call it the New Deal.
You know, what do you know?
Well, actually and whatever.
It's interesting chapter in history.
But you know, the Nazis borrowed quite a bit from the
progressives like they were keeping their eyes on the progressive movement in America. And in fact, that's where the Nazis borrowed quite a bit from the progressives. Like they were keeping their eyes on the progressive movement in America and in fact... That's where the eugenics
stuff comes from. Yes, yes. Hey the Klan were leaders of the clean up government man. There's
way too much corruption in government. The Ku Klux Klan is here to end this patronage system. You know.
You know they actually, they, I remember reading about this years ago. I'd have to go back and find where I read this, but the Nazis, when they first were coming to power,
they first won the big, they won like a bunch of seats
in, I want to say it was in 30, in 1930,
they had elections in Germany.
It was like the first successful,
like Nazi party actually got some seats in there. And, um, one of the things they were talking about with how to deal with the Jewish
problem was like, what the standard for how do you, how do you decide someone's Jewish?
You know, you got a whole lot of mixed people is Germany was not a primitive ancient society.
You know what I mean? And they, they, uh, considered the Southern Democrats one drop rule of how you can sit,
what you can serve. And then they rejected that as just being too extreme.
And so they were ultimately like, and then they settled on,
I think it was like two grandparents.
If you had two grandparents who were Jewish, you were considered Jewish,
but it is just kind of a funny little note of history that even they were kind
of like, well, I mean, when you're actually implementing this, we'd need some type of system to determine it.
They were like, I don't know, these southern Democrats are a bit extreme with their one drop policy.
I mean, come on.
You know, John Taylor Gatto, I'm sure you've read him, right?
Oh, the origins of American education. He wrote about how when the Nazis would forcibly sterilize a woman,
they called it the Indiana procedure
Because that's who they were copying with that. Yeah, so yeah. Yeah, there's anyway, there's a lot of embarrassing
history there so I I will say there's
obviously
There's look there's to say that Donald Trump has his flaws is an understatement and
there's you know lots of policies where he has just been
You know kind of unforgivable
And I certainly as I said on Tom show the other day
I mean if there's any libertarian who were to say to me I you know
I just cannot vote for a president who supported lockdowns or I cannot vote for a
president who, who backed the Saudi war in Yemen or, or whatever,
his rhetoric on Israel or any of that stuff. I can't really argue with you.
I go, yeah, he's, he's awful on those things. I understand.
We are in kind of a weird, unique situation though. Um,
both with I think how awful the Kamala Harris campaign is and not just,
it's not that she's so uniquely awful. I mean,
I I'm not going to say she's more evil than John McCain, you know,
the Republicans have run some bad candidates.
I'm not going to say she's more evil than,
than Bill Clinton or Barack Obama. Um, there is,
does seem to be something different though about the Kamala Harris
campaign where you're actually unlike all of those guys,
you're running there. First of all,
the sitting president was essentially cooed out of his
reelection, uh, campaign. I mean,
obviously he's senile and in no position to be president of the United States,
but that's what the 25th amendment's for. You know,
like you could invoke the 25th amendment and remove him.
You can't do whatever the hell they just did. Um, which, you know,
we could get into, but, and then she's running on just literally,
as you said, like nothing, essentially I'm nothing. And implicitly I'm government, government by committee will continue,
I guess, but explicitly it's like,
I'm just going to tell you that I grew up in a middle-class out, you know,
like I have nothing else to say. And it does, you know,
particularly at a time where we've kind of seen what the machine
wants to do over the last few years and what they'll continue to do. There's not much benefit to that.
And it does seem like Donald Trump, at least in this,
at least in this election cycle has made some attempts to throw some promises,
throw some red meat out to people who are concerned with the type of stuff that
we're concerned with. So like, I don't know what,
what do you think of all that?
Well, you know, I believe it when I see it, I mean,
the big one that everybody's really excited about is the promise that Ron Paul
could get some kind of position helping Elon Musk fire people and close
departments and stuff like this. But the fact of the matter is,
you need real consensus in the country. You're going to close departments down.
And I just don't think they're going to do that. And man, my whole life, I've heard politicians
run against waste, fraud and abuse. What they mean by that is they're going to cut 0.00001%
from nothing. Fire the janitor, the one guy in the building they needed, you know, keep
everybody else. I don't take that seriously at all.
You want to end waste, fraud, and abuse,
abolish the central bank,
close down entirely the Commerce Department,
the Department of Education, the IRS, the ATF,
at least two thirds of the FBI.
I'm being generous today
Right if we're gonna
Talk about Ron Paul and downsizing government in any serious sense
Then we're talking about questioning the post New Deal
post World War two Consensus on the role of the national government in our society. Does anybody really think that that's happening?
Come on.
And I love Angela McCardell and she may be right.
Who knows exactly what influence she might have,
but I was like complaining.
I was on a show with her yesterday.
I says, Miriam Adelson wrote Trump a check
for a hundred million dollars.
And she's like, yeah, well,
I'm talking with their people all the time.
Says, did you write him a check for a100 million. And she's like, Yeah, well, I'm talking with their people all the time. So did you write him a check for $100 million? And so like, yeah, the libertarians,
if you're Donald Trump, did the libertarians need to be patted on the head implicated somehow,
you know, free their one guy from jail, maybe or whatever, that'd be great if they did.
And I mean, that'd be everything to Ross and to his mother, you know what I mean? So like, I'm not trying to sell that short, but like, I'm not one to take bribes well
either.
I mean, the thing is, the very worst thing about Trump is what an Israeli chump he is.
But even though everything that's happened in Palestine for the last year is all his fault. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris
are the ones who gave Benjamin Netanyahu all those bombs and sanctified this and armed
it. They gave him $23 billion worth of weapons and aid extra in the last year to slaughter
these poor people. And Trump didn't do that. He might well have. He might've told Netanyahu,
look, just kill them all and
finish the project once and for all.
I don't know.
And he still might.
I don't know any reason why Donald Trump wouldn't just tell Netanyahu,
do whatever you want.
I don't care.
And then who's going to stop them then?
The EU?
And as they always say, well, ask for forgiveness later instead of permission
first, so it wouldn't be that hard for the Israelis to start, you know, heavy
shelling of the major cities of the West bank and try to cleanse those people
and force them into Jordan, at least millions of them.
There's 3 million there.
Kick out two out of three or whatever.
Would Netanyahu go that far?
Sure.
If the U S president would let him.
And does Donald Trump know any reason why in the world
he shouldn't just let Netanyahu, as he said, quote, quote,
finish the job is what he told Netanyahu the other day.
Well, what do you mean by that?
How about, well, we finished cleansing all of historic Palestine
and we'll call it greater Israel.
How about
that for finish the job? And what does Donald Trump really care? His son-in-law
and I guess people don't know this, seems like they should talk about this
every day all the time. His son-in-law Jared Kushner, you know the guy who was in
charge of his entire Middle East policy for four years, is Benjamin Netanyahu's
godson. The whole time when he was a young boy growing up in New York City, when Benjamin Netanyahu
would come to town, he had to sleep on the couch because Benjamin Netanyahu would sleep
in his bed.
Google that.
Okay?
That's who Jared Kushner is.
He's an Israeli agent.
He's an Israeli cyanim.
He's here to represent the interests of a foreign power and he's got Donald Trump completely
pwned like the gimp in the box on Pulp Fiction.
Pwned.
So Donald Trump can dress up like Pat Buchanan all he wants.
He's not Pat Buchanan.
He's a Zionist.
And when you're a Zionist, you can't be America first.
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Well, that's the thing, right?
He's compromised, man.
It's so amazing to see someone run in America first campaign with his position on
Israel. I mean, it's just not, it's just the two things are as you know,
I don't know. It's like, it's like I'm running an anti-racism campaign,
but I am for slavery.
Yeah.
Hey, by the way, so a lot of people are listening to this.
Let me explain what I mean.
And I'll do it real quick here.
Sure.
What he did was when he was president before
was one he quote unquote recognized
as though he has any authority whatsoever
to recognize Israel seizure of Syria's Golan Heights, which they stole in 67 and officially annexed in 1981,
but that no one else ever recognized until him and his story told the story about it.
I told him, tell me about the Golan Heights for five minutes. And after a couple of minutes,
I interrupted said, fine, you can have it. In other words, he didn't know anything about
it. He never even heard the word Drew's before. He doesn't know whose property that is or where they're from or what.
The Israelis want the land.
It's high ground, huh?
And you need it, you say, okay, fine.
It's yours, he said, for money, for money that they gave to him, you know, to his family,
to his son-in-law.
Then they rigged these Abraham Accords.
And everybody says, oh, this is his great victory.
But what this is, is it's engineering the final sellout of the Palestinians, that they'll
never get independence and they'll never get citizenship.
They will be, you know, the lowest caste Indians on a reservation forever.
And that no one's ever coming for you again.
And not that any of these countries ever promise to come for them and really
Help them but just they promise never to normalize relations with Israel until the
shape and that's always been the hope right like the hope from the
Palestinians from the very beginning has always been that the surrounding Arab
nations with their
Populations who are like 100% on the Palestinian side of this,
that they would someday come to their rescue.
Cause you know, they actually have-
Or at least politically.
Well, right.
They actually have governments and militaries.
Yes.
Yeah, it could just be, yeah,
the nations of the region are just never going
to normalize relations with you
until you do the right thing.
Like it shouldn't have to be any harder than that.
Right?
The Saudis put out a great peace plan back in 02.
Right.
Colin Powell was for it, you know?
Um, so, but, so that was part of it, right?
Not necessarily that anyone's really coming for you literally, but like maybe they'll
pressure the government of Israel to finally give in and, and do the right thing here.
You know?
Um, and so this was the final sellout of them by Morocco, Sudan, Bahrain, and
UAE by normalizing, and then they were working on Saudi Arabia, normalizing relations and telling
the Palestinians, you're screwed, you get nothing. And that was Netanyahu's big speech at the UN
at the end of September 23, bragging that he got away with it all. And then it was just three weeks
later that the October 7th riot happened where they broke out of their cage and said, no, the end of September 23 bragging that he got away with it all. And then it was just three weeks later
that the October 7th riot happened
where they broke out of their cage and said,
no, the status quo will not hold.
And instead we got this.
And then this was the reaction that they provoked
is something approximating.
I mean, I'm not up to date really.
You got to ask the guys from antiwar.com,
but there's major operations and apparently
a renewed cleansing campaign going on in north Gaza now where they're going to cleanse at
least major portions of it more than before. And, you know, I don't know, I know that someday
they'd like to own all of Southern Lebanon up to the Latani river if they can, going
back to Jabotinsky, um, you know, greater Israel, they mean it. You know, the eastern border be the Euphrates River all the way to Kuwait, if
they can have their way.
Um, and the American people can afford it, Dave.
So I don't know why not, you know?
Um, but look, so, and then he also recognize he moved the embassy to Jerusalem.
And this is something that Clinton and W.
Bush had promised to do.
I don't think Barack Obama ever said he would, but Clinton and Bush have both promised to
do this.
But the idea was, yeah, yeah, yeah, someday, someday, but never do it because it's really
important symbolism because the Israelis have the way they put it in their slogan is this
is the eternal, indivisible, united capital of Israel forever and ever and ever.
And then, but so if that's true and it has the American stamp
of approval on it, then that means that East Jerusalem will not be the capital of a Palestinian
state, which was always the plan if they were ever going to have their independent state.
So it's not just like, oh, boo hoo, I care which street your embassy is on. The point is that by
moving it from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, America was ratifying the Israelis
claim to the entire city, including the Eastern half, and which of course means severely implies
the further cleansing of the Palestinian Muslims and Christians that still live in East Jerusalem
and eventually the seizure of the last of their holy sites.
And if the Israelis blow up the Al Aqsa mosque
and build the third temple there,
then we're gonna have a world war.
And that's what's at stake there.
And Donald Trump goes, oh, you want East Jerusalem, huh?
You want me to move the embassy?
Gee, Sheldon Adelson gave me a bunch of money.
And gee, he's a casino guy that I always really respected
for being bigger and better in the casino business than me. I guess if he says I should move
the embassy there and he gave me a
bunch of money, then sure.
And so he did.
And so it goes to show that one, he
doesn't know anything about it.
He doesn't give a damn about the
Palestinians whatsoever.
And he can be bribed with simple
green dollars, even though he's
already in his late 70s
and his grandkids are already set for
life. And he's already been the president of the United States of America before. And the idea that
he's going to get in there and say, oh, Miriam Adelson, I'm not really your friend. I'm not really
fond of you. And I don't really appreciate the hundreds of millions of dollars you and your
husband have given me. And now you can go screw yourself lady, because now I'm George Washington
and I'm going to put America first and Israel can go suck up to Russia if you don't like
it.
Yeah, right.
He's going to do that.
And then if he doesn't do that, well, what's never mind the opposite of that.
What's just short of that?
He's W. Bush for another four years.
That's what yeah.
Well, certainly when it comes to relations with Israel, I mean, how about the worst?
Yeah. Yeah. Well, look, I mean, there's like, like you said, I mean,
he did go a step further than even, even W was willing to, um,
do you, where there is a stronger case, uh,
for Donald Trump is on the topic that of course you're writing,
you're just finishing this book on where there does seem to be at least
rhetorically. And of course you can get into it's in the book and I highly recommend people read it.
Donald Trump's track record on Ukraine is not good and his track record with
Russia is not good. However, there,
there does seem to be at least at times a meaningful difference in the rhetoric
between the Biden administration and Donald Trump, the entire campaign. And since well before he was
subbed out for Kamala Harris, Donald Trump has been saying some actually pretty great things.
Now he'll go back and forth at one point. He'll say,
I just want the killing to stop. I could negotiate an end to this in a day.
The war will be over if I'm in there.
And then at other points he'll start talking about how Europe isn't paying
their fair share or something like that, which doesn't, you know,
that's it's kind of this slippery thing where you're like, wait a minute,
I liked that last guy. What's this guy talking about? Like our,
our beef here isn't just getting some additional funding
from the other European countries.
However, it's hard to ignore that he does seem,
he does his from day one,
despite all of the Russiagate nonsense,
which is also in the book.
Yes, it is.
There's Donald Trump's attitude toward Russia and certainly the way he's
talked about this war over the last year or two,
it it's hard to argue that it's not light years better.
Yeah. Where the Democrats are at. Sure. Yeah. And you know,
he ain't Ron Paul. So he says things like, well, look, if Trump,
if Putin doesn't do what I want, well, I'll
massively increase arms to Ukraine and I'll force them, you know, whatever.
That's the only way you can think about it.
You know, is so and look, whatever you can just say, yeah, he has to say tough guy stuff.
That's how you close the deal.
But I think, you know, he surely does not want the war.
And I think it is probably true that the war would not have happened if he was
there. You know, he says that about Hamas, like, Ooh, they would just would
have been too scared of him to fight back or something like that.
But when he says that about Ukraine, I think it's more realistic because I
think just he had any kind of better relationship compared to Joe
Biden, who's just absolutely hated Putin for, you know, since at least the late
Bush years, since at least like, oh, seven, oh eight.
Um, I'm not sure exactly when Biden turned on Putin.
He liked him for a little while there, but maybe even by like, oh, five, when
he went after Yukos Kordakovsky.
when he went after Yukos Kordakovsky.
But he, you know, insulted Putin to his face in 2011
in Russia. And, you know, he, so there's just that enmity there
between them.
And then also, and I think this must be a big part of it,
that Putin saw Biden's weakness.
He just saw that like, I'm gonna be able to do this
and didn't think that Biden would be able to do anything to stop him. And then probably he was reaffirmed
in that thinking, watching the fall of Afghanistan and how indecisive Biden was in finishing
out the withdrawal there. Not withdrawing at all, but just botching it the way he did. And you know, the Bob Woodward book,
the new Bob Woodward book has quotes from the high level intelligence officials saying
that they assess that they even claimed, I think to have sources in Russia saying this
was part of their thinking was that Afghanistan made Biden look so weak that they thought,
yeah, we can definitely press our advantage now.
But the problem is you got to throw out that whole Bob Woodward book.
Cause he's got a big fake quote of Sergey Lavrov on page 88.
And so, and then the whole book, the whole point of a Bob Woodward book,
cause he has quotes from people that nobody else can talk to,
but he gets interviews with.
But so if he's lying about a quote that I can check on the OSCE website,
then what is he saying when he's
quoting Blinken and Sullivan and the rest of these people?
Like if they don't dispute all the quotes, then I'm supposed to accept them or something?
I don't know.
I just can't.
I started to write a note in my book because I had actually, you know what, man, in that
book there's all kinds of quotes of Biden saying how right I am about everything.
Like I started quoting some good stuff in there and,verill Haynes, the DNI, I had them
admitting, oh yeah, Horton's right after all, blah, blah, blah, all over the place.
And I had to cut all those quotes out.
Once I got to the part where Woodward's lying to me, I started to write in the footnotes,
well, you got to kind of take these with a grain of salt.
And then like, I can't put quotes that you got to take with a grain of salt in the book.
We're like, I'm already I got a disclaim, even though he is the most prominent journalist
in America.
But like, he just happened to have a quote in there.
I and I happen to be writing a book about this.
I have the Lavrov quote already.
I know what he said.
So when I read the live version of it, I'm like, hey, I know that quote.
And that's not right.
And so it's page 88, if anybody wants to check this out
and also Amazon removed my review about this,
saying that I claimed I got an inauthentic copy
of the book.
That's not what I said.
I said there's a fake quote on page 88.
So I had a great one-star review on there
and they took it down and there's now all the one-star
reviews are my book was torn or whatever,
and no criticism of the actual substance of the
thing. But if anyone wants to check the quote is the playing with fire quote of
Lavrov on page 88. If anybody, I'm not selling it. If anybody already has the
new Woodward book, um, and then go and check the OSCE websites from December,
I'm pretty sure December 2nd, 2021, but certainly
December 2021. And you'll find the quote from Sergey Lavrov playing with fire. And you'll
see how Bob Woodward turns the meaning of the quote entirely upside down to he's saying
essentially it's so reckless the way you guys completely disregard our opinion about your expansion of the NATO
alliance. And then they turn, he butchers the quote into saying, Lavrov is saying that
America has no right to decide who should be in its alliance or not. Which of course
makes no sense whatsoever because that's not what he said. The whole thing is stupid. But
anyway, point just being you can't trust Bob Woodward to tell you a quote, right? Not when Google's right there and you can check him
So it sucks because there are a bunch of quotes in there Biden going. Yeah, it's NATO expansion
It's really got Putin paranoid that guy is so paranoid about NATO expansion Dave and like mmm
Yeah, I guess I can't have that in the book after all then. Thanks a lot Bob
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Okay. So, but there is, uh, I think no question that there,
look, there's, it's not just Trump.
It's the core of people or at least a lot of the people around him.
And a lot of the, who will, you know,
when it, when it comes to Israel,
even the guys who are good around Trump aren't going to just say it the way it
is. They're all going to tip toe. They're all going to tiptoe around that one.
Even though there are a couple people in Trump's orbit who are pretty damn good on the issue.
But regardless of that, when it comes to Ukraine, they pretty much all just say it.
I mean, it's kind of unbelievable.
But if you hear JD Vance talk about Ukraine, if you hear, I mean, the's kind of unbelievable, but if you hear JD Vance talk about Ukraine if you hear I mean the people like one more degree like that like David Sacks is
phenomenal on on the issue
But in general, I think Elon Musk and Tucker Carlson and Vivek Ramaswamy and like Bobby Kennedy
I mean all these guys when I mean if you asked any of them to talk about Ukraine,
okay, none of them are going to do it with the detailed knowledge that you do, but almost any one
of them, if they were talking about Ukraine, would be, you would feel more than comfortable just
standing and clapping for what they said. You'd be like, I don't even need to force my correction
in there. Very good. You know, so there does seem to be something there that it looked like.
I just feel like it would be unfair to ignore.
Yeah, no, you're right.
Um, and look, this is really the most important issue in the world.
Israel, Palestine is one that really gets under my skin because I'm still
carrying a grudge from that time that Israel lied us into Iraq war two and Syria for that matter.
Yeah. Um, well, and it's also the worst thing happening in the world.
And it is the worst thing it's, and, and, and I just say that because I,
like, I don't know exactly how you measure all these different conflicts,
but just the number of kids dying,
the number of kids dying alone just makes it the worst thing in the world.
I mean, yeah, cause the difference there is in Ukraine, it's almost entirely
combatants fighting combatants. And there are missile strikes that hit cities and
this kind of thing, some infrastructure stuff, but mostly the civilians have
fled where the fighting is taking place. And it's conscripts fighting conscripts,
which is still a horror show. To me, they're like, just half a degree removed
from being a civilian, you know, they're an enslaved combat To me, they're like just half a degree removed from being a civilian.
You know, they're an enslaved combatant. So they're fair game, but only unfair game really.
But that's not the same as the slaughter in Gaza. On the other hand, the Ukraine war has
the potential to turn into the worst thing far beyond anything that anyone could imagine and a real potential.
And when we talked about this a couple of years ago, I says to you, I says, this is
an emergency.
We got a war on Russia's border.
But Dave, right now we got a war inside Russia.
And since the end of August, the Ukrainians took a couple hundred square miles of Kursk,
Oblast there, that's what they call province. And the Russians have taken about half of it back by now but you know we're this is
like counting on the cool patient wisdom of George W Bush to see you through
right like Vladimir Putin we're benefiting right now from the fact that
this guy is such a sociopath but he's like, oh, they invaded Kursk, huh? Well, kill them as soon as you can. And apparently doesn't get
all upset because man, what have you got all upset that guy, Dmitriy Medvedev that replaced
him for a little while. That guy gets upset. You know what I mean? This guy Putin is like,
oh, well, we'll have to make sure that they all die horribly or whatever, but it's just business to him.
He doesn't even give a damn when they invade Kursk.
Apparently he doesn't like react in any way other than standing orders apply, kill them
till they're dead, drive them out of the thing.
He already incorporated four provinces of Ukraine into Russia officially. So I guess in his mind, Kursk isn't any different than Luhansk or Donetsk at this point.
I don't know, but man.
Okay.
So if he had a bad day, we could have a nuclear war over just that.
Right.
I mean, Moscow is only two, 300 miles from Kharkiv anyway.
We're talking spit in distance here to the capital city.
And I'm not saying that there was no reason
for them to perceive a threat to the capital, really.
But still, like, I don't know.
We're supposed to just accept that the meanest,
craziest, most tyrannical psychopath killer on the planet, other than
Benjamin Netanyahu, I guess, is going to just always be completely stable and reliable and
predictable and not do anything that we would not expect him to do and not go too far.
And meanwhile, and as I show in the book, there's endless citations of these
Americans, especially Democrats, go, well, he hasn't nuked us yet.
We, you know, they said we shouldn't give them these kinds of weapons because
maybe Russia would nuke them.
But then we gave them those kinds of weapons and he didn't nuke them.
We gave him tanks.
He still didn't use nukes.
We started hitting targets in Crimea.
He still didn't use nukes.
In fact, in the Wall Street Journal, I had a thing where I'm pretty sure it was the journal where the Biden
administration is talking about, you know, maybe the lesson of the Kursk invasion is
we've been way too squeamish about what the Russians will put up with. And maybe we can
have a conventional war with Russia without it turning into a nuclear war. And they're just brave and getting braver.
Where, and this is the riddle of the nukes
that people maybe don't understand
or hadn't thought about or nobody explained yet,
but maybe I'm wrong about this.
I know a nuclear war expert
who says that I'm wrong about this,
but I know other ones who say I'm not.
And all the war games that I know of going back say
that once you start a nuclear war with
Russia, then it's on because it's use them or lose them. If we don't hit, if we don't launch
everything we got from our silos, they're going to nuke our nukes in their silos and we'll lose them.
So we might as well go ahead and launch everything we've got. And so essentially, once anybody starts
tossing around even lower scale what they call usable tactical
atom bombs Hiroshima Nagasaki sized bombs or even smaller than that that
Within a day or two it turns into general thermonuclear war and everybody loses all their military bases in all their capital cities
a thousand targets in Russia and a thousand targets in the United States and it's the end of civilization and
and a world war two worth a dead in 45 minutes, and that's just the start.
And that's what a nuclear war would look like.
It'd be, you know, imagine a couple of H bombs going off over the five boroughs.
Nobody ever lived there again.
And even not to be crude about it, but just a separate argument.
Forget the people.
How about everything at every museum in New York?
Loss to humanity forever.
How about just the value of that?
How about just the value of all the written works at all those publishing houses?
Lose Washington DC and lose the Library of Congress,
like the Library of Alexandria,
where humanity that does survive in the future loses all
of that, you know, not just financial, but human capital, the investments that we've
made in our own civilization over the last few thousand years, gone in a week, gone in
a day or two, that can really happen. And they act like, well, whatever, dude,
it hadn't happened yet.
Look, look at us, we're boiling the frog.
The frog, you're talking about Vladimir Putin, right?
Yeah.
The guy that you accused of being the most ruthless,
insane assassin, killer, election rigger, murderer,
coup d'etat, or H bomb possessor in the world.
That doesn't seem right to me, you know, and especially when, and this is the
thing about Kamala Harris, right?
Is I just can't have someone that much dumber than me lecturing to me.
You know, I'm sorry.
Like Donald Trump, whatever he knows some things about things I don't know, right?
Like how to be a New York real estate tycoon or something, I guess.
How to lose money on a casino.
I don't know.
He could teach me some things.
But Kamala Harris, what does Kamala Harris know that I don't know other than a recipe
for something or another?
She doesn't know anything.
And like that clip of her with Liz Cheney, where she's trying to struggle through
the lesson of Pearl Harbor and World War II.
And she's, she's attempting to essentially approximate, you know, repeating
something she thought she heard someone else say somewhere else before, maybe in
a movie she saw one time or something.
She doesn't know what to say. Not really. She's hoping as she's talking that it's going to kind
of come to her and she's going to know what to say and then she never can. So she has the most
imperious, most condescending tone of voice. Look, let me tell you about the lessons of Pearl Harbor,
right? And then she goes, yeah, the lessons of Pearl Harbor, the people of Europe won't soon forget.
Wait, wait, what?
Like, oh, and just the whole thing of it, man.
And then at the end,
I couldn't even quote it with the built-in pauses
because she's got to like really stop and concentrate
just to get from one word to the next.
But she finally concludes,
sputters and just gasping, crawling.
Finally concludes that.
And because we got into that war, we were able to win that war.
And then so that's the end.
And history is a thing and we should never forget it.
And so she couldn't even come up with the story, which the story, Kamala, is that the lesson of
Pearl Harbor and World War II is that we can never come home again. They woke up the sleeping giant
and the sleeping giant got so wise defeating Tojo and Hitler that the sleeping giant learned he can
never afford to take a nap again or the world will spin out of control.
And so that is why America must dominate Asia and the Middle East and Europe forever is
because if we don't, someone else will and things will be worse than when we're in charge.
Can't you just say that you dumb bitch?
But she no, she can't.
The best she can do is that the lesson of Pearl Harbor is that we beat Japan.
That's it. That's all. And then, but that's why I got to stay at war.
She goes, we got to look at this recent history, Dave, by which I mean we got to go back 80 years
and not talk about anything that happened since then.
We've done nothing but fight wars and lose wars the whole time.
The only victory that any president can name
for the last 80 years was George H.W. Bush's victory
in Panama and I guess Reagan and Grenada,
if you wanna count that.
But don't say Iraq War I, we're still bombing Iraq
33 years later from the consequences that first war never stopped
We've been bombed on the whole time. The only time we stopped was for two years in 2012 and 13
No, you're right. I mean look even uh, even Kosovo
Milosevic was still in power afterward
We've had successful color coded revolutions,
um, where we were able to like overthrow it.
We've had successful regime changes, but in terms of like,
actually they all led to wars too. Terrible wars. Yeah.
And like any of them that you could say, like, I mean like, uh, again,
like if you're narrowly defining winning a war is like overthrowing the regime,
then I guess, but every single time, like even, okay, we overthrew Moammar Qaddafi,
but then the country's a failed state afterward and there's open air slave
markets. It's hard for any reasonable person.
That's kind of hard to spin as a win. And like if you stay, you know,
if you have to stick around like, uh,
occupying the country for almost two decades afterward,
like okay, we overthrew Saddam, but it's pretty hard to call that a win.
And yeah, it is.
You know, I remember.
By the way, those slave markets are still open.
If anybody thought they're like, oh, when Barack Obama reopened the chattel slave markets
in Libya that somebody like took care of that, right?
No, they didn't.
That's 13 years of the reintroduction of slavery to North Africa due to the
Democrats, the USA.
Yeah. Yeah. And there's, there really is, um,
it's like kind of as you, as you look through all of it,
I remember a Pat Buchanan wrote once, I can't remember which book this was in,
but it was just a, it was like a simple way that he put it. But he was like,
uh, he was like, no matter how uninformed DC thinks the American
people are, you can't, um,
you can't pull the wool over their eyes that their country can no longer win
its wars, control its border, balance its budgets. Like he went through like a,
a budget, like, like the most basic roles of government.
And there's something very interesting from like the libertarian perspective to
me about a government,
which is the biggest most powerful government in the history of the world that
routinely fails at what all of the most basic services of government,
like what you, the, the thing that the normie American things like, well,
the reason we need a government's like, I don't know,
someone's got to build the roads or run the border or, you know,
prosecute wars or whatever.
It's like, and every single one of them, the government's an abject failure.
Yeah.
All 30,000 people a year die on the roads, man.
You'd be on the freeway on some high embankment and there's no rail.
Like somebody has died here before.
Like I'm sure they have.
You know what I mean?
Like what?
No private company could get away with taking that kind of risk with, or, or
the subway in New York city.
That guy's on trial right now for providing security on the subway.
How come he had to provide security for people in the subway?
Wasn't that supposed to be somebody's job or something?
Yeah, no, I'm with you. And Kamala Harris, man, at least Trump is a protest vote in his way.
And I'm not a fool. I don't see him as Ron Paul. I don't even see him as Rand Paul. He's Rudy
Giuliani to me. But at least not just the Democrats, but the regime hates him and wants him out of there. At least he says
things that encourage right wingers that hate war. And that
is the most valuable thing that he's ever done in his life
really is normalize this thinking more and better than
Ron Paul and Tucker Carlson could ever do is Donald Trump
telling people, man, you're a chump if you believe in these war, stupid, right?
And like, man, that'll cure you.
If you're a right winger, then like, boy, we don't believe in this anymore, I guess.
So now he can get him to turn on time.
He wants to bomb Iran.
They'll jump and joy for that.
You know, kill Soleimani or bomb Syria or whatever.
Then all of a sudden they'll find an exception for him.
But at least overall, he's normalized that kind of America first discourse.
Um, that is hugely important.
And quite frankly, like, you know, I think the, honestly, the worst threat of
Kamala Harris other than the war in Ukraine is the censorship regime.
Yeah.
Because it's already so far out of control.
Look how bad it was under Trump under his nose when he couldn't stop his own regime from doing it to him while he was even the president.
But imagine, and I think Biden is just too out of it.
Kamala Harris at least can like put in a seven or eight hour day or six or seven
hour day or something and like be worse.
I think she could be worse, especially on the censorship stuff.
And once you listen to what these liberals talk, man, you know, once they know that they're
fighting the good fight against disinformation from the people who are trying to sow discord
and disrupt our society or whatever, then like they don't think they're evil, man. They don't
think they're like, oh, no, this is a war against the sacred, most precious right of free speech.
And I'm going to cause a war and I better shut the hell up and like, no, they're like,
Oh, I just want to go get a job working for Michael McFaul, censoring people.
And, um, there's so much of it.
And it really could be like, you know, remember, um, I'm pretty sure who's
that horrible Zionist lady, Barry Weiss.
Wasn't it her that said that, um, that yeah, you know, no, I'm sorry. Maybe this is a New York Times. No, it wasn, Barry Weiss. Wasn't it her that said that, that yeah, you know,
Oh no, I'm sorry. Maybe this is a New York times. No, it wasn't Barry Weiss. It was the
New York times. It said that, yeah, you know, podcasts are the last, Oh, you know who it was.
It was that, Oh, she writes for the Washington post, Taylor Lorenz.
Oh, she writes for the Washington post, Taylor Lorenz. Oh, yeah.
The worst.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She says her, her expert that she was interviewing, where said that, yes, podcasts remain unfettered.
You know, betters are leg shackles, you know, and then she's like, Oh no podcasts are the
last place where a dude can talk to a dude without a liberal FBI agent lady shadow banning him
for it.
And we can't have that.
And of course, boy on YouTube, the algorithm's insane.
It's so censored, it's out of control.
But like, as far as I know, the algorithms on Spotify and Apple and these kinds of the
basic ways that people get their podcasts, their audio podcasts are essentially unfettered
still. Substack, you know, they don't censor their people based on pressure
campaigns and this kind of thing, but remember how Twitter was before Musk
bought it when you're like living in the bowels of MPR lady, you know, view watch
or hell, and those are the censors.
Remember Elon Musk when they all let they had like the pictures of the employees and who was left after Elon Musk bought the thing. And it was all the white girls
had left. And where do they go? Who were they? They were the ones in charge of making sure that
no one can hear what you say. And they were the ones that got fired. It's not perfect over there.
There is still some censorship on Twitter, but man, it was just an absolute hell. It was like having Kamala Harris herself decide who's allowed to tweet what on there.
And I'm terrified of the second coming of that, man.
And not just because it sucks for us to get censored, but because I fear how people react
to being censored.
I interviewed a CIA counterterrorism analyst lady one time about the protest movement in Syria, I guess, and different stuff. And she told me that the CIA's
framework for how groups become terrorist groups and all that. Mohammed ain't on there, has nothing
to do with Islam whatsoever. What it is, is it's when protesters are silenced, they turn violent. That's what people
do when you take away their last ability to complain about things, is they get really upset,
man. What do you expect them to do? So here she was saying in context, she was saying,
when all these protests broke out in Syria, Bashar al-Assad should have said, good, good protest.
That's cool, man. I'm listening. And even when a few cops got killed, he should have still tried to play it very cool until
he just couldn't anymore, at least.
Because boy, once you clamp down, it's on.
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restrictions may apply all right let's get back into the show. And so this is what happens. There was a lady.
Same with Yanukovych in Ukraine. I mean, no question.
Obviously it was a U S backed coup,
but he played right into their hands by cracking down on the protesters and then
just drew even more people to the protest. A huge mistake. Yeah.
And there was some lady, I can't remember. I think she was like an Iranian ex Pat.
She was probably toeing the regime's line, but she had said something that got her censored. I could have
that backstory wrong, but anyway, she was a lady who was a YouTuber, a YouTube podcast video,
a political lady, and I believe involved in Middle East politics stuff. And they censored her channel.
You know, maybe she accidentally said COVID-19 or something.
And so they just deleted her channel right off the YouTube.
And of course, it's just like Neil Postman technopoly.
There's not even a person to complain to.
Now, you know, argue with a robot about whether you're allowed
to be on YouTube anymore and this kind of thing.
And so she didn't get anywhere with her appeals.
And so she took a gun to YouTube headquarters.
And I forget if she killed anyone or she tried to think she's like shot people. And it was like, that's
just a taste, man. That's what happens. You know, that's not me threatening anyone. That's
like a warning of what happens when you have a censorship regime. And think about in America,
man, you've seen the South Park, where they go, what we'll do is we'll have war all the
time, but we'll let them we'll have war all the time,
but we'll let them have free speech
so they can cry about it.
And then as like a pressure valve, right?
So that they don't get too upset and stop us.
They'll at least be allowed to complain, right?
Like look at it from their point of view.
You take away people's ability to complain,
they're gonna freak out and maybe
shoot you. You know, like that's how people are. And this is a society lousy with firearms,
man. You know, you can be like Bugs Bunny and just reach off screen and grab a gun from
anywhere in America, you know?
Yeah. Well, and look, I mean, I think that while everybody does like to get excited over
the big show that is the presidential election, the truth is that this everybody does like to get excited over the big show That is the presidential election
The truth is that this threat is going to be with us going forward even if Donald Trump wins the presidency
And in fact, it's one of my concerns about so on on one hand
I am very much rooting for Donald Trump to win. I think that it's my my feeling
so I was I I argued briefly with Robbie Suave and Michael Tracy both took issue
with something I said that like it was, I said something along the lines of like
the most exciting thing about Donald Trump getting reelected is that it could
really be a death blow for the corporate media and that they've, they've been
taken hits, but this really could be the end. And I was like, look, I mean,
these guys for him to be elected again after the entire
corporate media, you know, did through everything they did at him, including,
you know, the latest rounds since he's been out, you know,
democracy is on the ballot. He incited an insurrection.
He's still kind of a Russian spy, I think. I don't think they've ever really retracted that. And
he's a Nazi and all of this stuff. It's not just that he gets elected again, but
it's that the narrative just writes itself that Joe Rogan won him the
White House, that Kamala Harris refused to go on. He was willing to do it and
that's the biggest show in the world and that's what put him
Up there. I haven't checked the numbers recently. It was over 30 million just on YouTube last
I saw it's got to be in the tens of millions on Spotify and then all the clips and other channels and everything
I mean, it's just gonna be enormous numbers
Now both of them made the same counterpoint to me, which is a reasonable counterpoint, which is that they said, well, look,
Donald Trump was actually good for their ratings last time he was in.
My feeling, my hunch, I suppose,
is that I don't think they're going to be able to recreate that.
And I don't think that I think the Russiagate insanity is what drove so much
of those, those ratings. And I just don't see after the Russiagate thing falling apart,
after the COVID thing falling apart, after sharp as attack and she's joy,
and all of these things, I just,
I think it's going to be very hard for them to recreate any of that. Um, I,
again, I could be wrong about this. That's kind of why that's, yeah.
I mean, it was all just so ridiculous,
but I do think the COVID one being That's yeah. I mean, it was all just so ridiculous, but I do think the COVID one being the biggest
one.
I mean, it's so much bigger even than the war in Iraq or any of that.
Cause at the end of the day, most Americans, they didn't fight the war in Iraq.
They really had nothing to do with that.
And sure there are people in the country who either served or know someone who served.
And I'm not like downplaying that, but the numbers, like if you just run the equation,
even the like tens of thousands of soldiers who killed themselves after
those wars, that's still tens of thousands in a country of hundreds of millions.
It's just, but COVID policy affected hundreds of millions of
Americans, you know, and,
and for them to have gotten that all completely wrong.
And a lot of people know that I'm not saying everyone knows wrong. And a lot of people know that.
I'm not saying everyone knows it, but a lot of people know
because it was like exposed in front of them in real time.
It was just you think it's going to be a blowout?
No. The election?
No, I don't. I don't.
You know, I mean, the Democrats just just on the covid alone,
the Democrats deserve to pay.
And Trump absolutely played his part in that.
But especially in hindsight,
it's so clear that it was the Democrat governors locked their states down the most as part of a
destabilization campaign against Donald Trump. Right. That was why they locked the people of
their own states, the citizens of their own states down in the United States of America,
was just because they thought ultimately it's going to redound on him worse than them.
And Hey, if they got to lose a few governors, fine.
It's still worth it to get rid of the president.
And, and, and so they should all be in solitary confinement for the
rest of their lives for that.
And that is why they did it.
I already know they're guilty of it.
We'll find the paperwork later, but we all know it wasn't a coincidence why it was the Democrats who were all
worse in the year, in the election year, 2020 on the COVID lockdowns, dude,
that's not 100%.
I think, okay, so this is how I tend to feel about it. Um,
as you mentioned earlier, uh, there was a round election,
the election of 2020. And if you could picture this as November of,
of 2020,
and there was a real pitch that the Biden
campaign had that I think resonated with a lot of Americans, um,
which essentially was a return to normalcy.
And if you could put yourself in November of 2020,
you know, it's not just the insanity of the media
and how crazy Trump was and that there was always some new scandal
and there's riots all summer.
Yeah, there's riots. There's lockdowns.
It's like what the hell is going on?
And it was at least plausible for the establishment to say,
look, Trump brought all this chaos with him.
And how about this guy who's been in the Senate for 700 years,
who everybody knows is just basically Joe Washington, DC.
Let's just get back to normal United States of America stuff. And oh,
by the way, the reason he is in his basement this whole time,
and you're not hearing from him is because he's being responsible. I mean,
we're in the middle of a pandemic. It would be irresponsible, super spreader events.
This was still the narrative at the time in November, believe it or not,
in November of 2020.
That has evaporated because we got rid of Donald Trump and we didn't go back to
normal. We continued the, the new normal, as they called it.
So I think now with, I think it's a much tougher sell.
And if I look everything, this isn't scientific, what I'm saying here,
but everything forget like the polls or the media or any of the betting markets
even, or any of the projections, everything that I can see, touch, feel, you know what I mean?
Like everything that I can observe with my senses tells me Donald Trump's got this locked up.
I mean, look, Donald Trump, this was one of the more interesting things that got completely under-reported
about Donald Trump's Madison Square Garden night was that there were no protests.
There was the... Like two guys out front, right?
Yeah. Pierce Morgan was at the event and he told me the next day,
he said, you know, this is hearsay, but he said that he talked to a
secret service agent who said he asked if there were any
protests and he goes, max 100 people at
max. There was like 100 people out there who were protesting this thing.
And that in itself is like radically different than 2016.
I mean, 2016 Donald Trump has an event at Madison square garden.
There's a real security concern about that man.
You would have seen people hit with bike locks outside and all types of brouhaha
between proud boys and Antifa and all this
it's just not there anymore and
So now while all of this is happening and while I'm watching it on TV and you go, okay
So Donald Trump's final pitch in the last minute of the fourth quarter was I'm gonna go on the Joe Rogan podcast and do great and
Make Joe Rogan love me. And we're laughing together. We do a three hour conversation.
And then I'm going to headline Madison square garden in deep blue Manhattan.
And the corporate media and the Democrats,
their final sale in the campaign was a like huddle up guys. And they go, okay,
I say we call them a Nazi again. Yeah. And they went, okay, let's go with that.
Like that seems...
And they totally dropped that, right?
That was Biden's thing.
And then when it became Harris, they said, no, we're doing
Joy and Vibes.
What does that mean?
Beyonce songs or something?
I don't know.
But then that's not working.
And then so what do we do?
Nazi?
Well, that's all they got.
It was so David Sacks, who I think is really great, I really like that guy a lot,
but I heard him say this and I think he was the first one who called it,
I think he got it completely right, is that he basically said,
so when Kamala Harris was at her height, right after she was subbed in for Biden,
what he said was, he goes, look, she's getting a bump in the polls now
off an enormous sigh of relief from Democratic voters,
that they're just like,
they're watching this dementia patient,
and they're like, oh my God,
we have to sit here and make excuses for them.
And then all of a sudden, okay,
you don't have to do that anymore.
And they kind of breathed a giant sigh of relief, and then, hey, that's got, you don't have to do that anymore. And they kind of breathe a giant sigh of relief.
And then, hey, we can project the whole thing onto her.
Yeah, no, she's not the awful candidate we were talking about five minutes ago.
She's joy and hope and all these things.
And demographic boxes checked.
Right.
Exactly.
A historic thing which liberals love.
Liberals love to add a little historic thing to their campaigns. What he said back then was that he goes, look, if she isn't able to maintain this
and if the polls start tightening again, she's going to enter the death spiral,
which is kind of the Hillary Clinton death spiral.
You know, when people go like, well, how come you didn't do more events in Wisconsin,
Hillary Clinton, that's why you lost the election.
It's like, yeah, because their numbers go down every time she does events in
Wisconsin. There's a real problem you have here. And he,
he called this a few months ago because she's going to enter the death spiral
where, Oh, you're, you're losing ground in the polls. Better go do an interview.
Hey, you're losing more ground in the polls now because of that interview.
Better go do a couple more interviews. Oh shit. You're lit. And it's like every,
it's the same thing as after the debate was like your bit about Biden in your
standup where you were like, well,
I guess we'll just put them out there again and go double or nothing on black.
Cause what other choice do we have? Put them back up there. Hope for the best.
Dude, it was a great, it was a great joke that lasted for three weeks.
Unfortunately there's just no, no, you tell the same joke about her.
Yeah, I got to just switch it to her. Yeah. But there is. So this is what,
and the thing is like with Biden, right? There was the dynamic shifted.
So the thing is that Joe Biden was always going to stumble and say the wrong
words, but now there was a microscope on them.
And now the corporate media wasn't going to pretend you like the senile
conversation was a right wing fringe talking point. And so it was like death. And it's anyway, I say all of this to say that everything I
see around me tells me Donald Trump's got this thing in the bag. But then you look at
the polls and I'm not one of these people who are like, Oh, the polls are all lying.
I don't think that's exactly right. I actually think they do a decent enough job. They're
usually within the margin of error, not always,
but you look at the polls and you're in a, I mean, look,
Donald Trump is doing Donald Trump always performs better than he
polls and he's polling better than he was in either of the last two
presidential elections, but it's still really goddamn close.
Um, but I was talking by the way, I would not be surprised if Donald Trump ends
up winning, like I wouldn't be surprised if by 10 PM we know Donald Trump has
been reelected, but I'm also, it's also one of these things.
It's kind of like a jury where you're like, okay, listen, the longer the jury's
out, the worse it is for Donald Trump.
Like if we don't have results by the end of
Tuesday, and we're going into Wednesday, not having them and we're going into Thursday,
not having them, Kamala Harris is going to end up winning that. Like if it's, if it's
the thing where it's gotta go into like, you know,
you know, what's a Pennsylvania that shot him. So Pennsylvania kind of owes him one,
you know what I mean? I don't know. Yeah, no, you're
right, man. Listen, I saw who's that guy, Kyle, who's he's kind of a leftist, but we
like him. I think he's married to crystal ball, right? Kyle, Kalinsky, Kalinsky. I saw
a clip of him where he said, Hey, check it out, man. Brand new YouGov poll. Sample size, 48,000.
Neck and neck.
Donald Trump's stuck, he says, at 47%, hard ceiling on 47.
Can't seem to crank it up any higher than that.
And on the biggest sample size of any poll going around,
and usually a thousand will get you
within three or
four percentage points.
But here they're going for tens of thousands of surveyors.
And I think the qualification was likely voters.
I think it was registered voters.
Trump is ahead, but likely voters.
It's Harris by two or something like that.
Yeah.
And like, I don't know, man, you know, I don't think.
Predictions on it.
Remember four years ago, I said Donald Trump rigged this election against
himself because someone had told him that mail in ballots help Democrats.
So he decided to go on a demonization campaign against mail in ballots.
Even though he didn't have a solution.
He was the one who signed the cares act that like did all a lot of this stuff.
And he had no way to stop the States from doing it the way that they were doing
it. They're not in his chain of command whatsoever. So he made a terrible mistake to just try
to be a bully and say like, you know, you're stupid if you vote by mail or like what? And
he did that. He kept that up all summer long.
And the contrast was made especially, um,
plain when he was in Florida. And I think this was even on camera.
I dunno, maybe I just read about it, but, um,
DeSantis kind of elbowed him and said, man, don't say that. No, I did. I did just read about it, but he said, don't say that, man.
We win by mail in Florida. And so Trump goes, oh, no, mail and ballots are terrible
and horrible. And they'll turn you gay, except in Florida. They're great in Florida. But
what was he telling the rest of Republican voters in America? He was telling them, listen,
if you're not willing to show up and vote for me in personal election day, forget you.
Don't even bother. But Republicans skew old
and old people skew afraid of the germ. And those are the people who probably want to vote by mail
and probably people who live in more rural areas who have a harder time getting to the polls are
also people who are going to probably be Trump voters. So wouldn't you want to say, Hey, Jimmy, make sure your cousin Carl gets
his ballot and mails it in? Well, it's all those non-voters out there, all those wrestling
fans, all those potential Trump people who aren't going to show up on election day because
that's not been their habit in their life, but they might vote for Trump if they could.
Now, what's the opposite of that?
The opposite of that would be him doing everything he can to encourage Republicans to vote by
mail all this last summer long and leading up to right now.
Has he been doing that?
No.
And I've seen a couple of places where he's like kind of torn on it and goes, no, you
should vote for him by mail.
Voting by mail is OK, too, and whatever.
But this should be a massive push.
They're like, Hey, you, whose friends and family are pro Trump, make sure they vote.
The ballot is at their house right now.
They don't have to do anything except put a stamp on this thing.
It's the fact it's probably even returned to return mail stamp on it already.
Right.
Like, so that would be,
if he was smart and not a bully, if he was positive, he would just go, okay,
the Democrats have an advantage by mail. We're going to shrink that advantage.
We're going to do everything we can. You know,
I've said on the show before, it was like,
you would think if he was concerned in 2020, this is about the voting by mail, is it like,
this would be a conversation like with his,
like chief of staff and attorney general and like a couple other people in his
cabinet when it starts by going, listen,
I think there this vote by mail thing is ripe for fraud.
And so here's the plan.
But instead he just said the first part publicly at every single stump speech
without a, here's the plan. It was just, Hey, this is going to be fraud.
Yep. And there probably was. Yeah, sure. But listen,
I do I do have to to wrap up here. Of course, next time I have you on,
which will be soon, we'll be, we'll be promoting the, uh, the release of the book,
but I'll let you go. Any, any final thoughts next, next time I talk to you, we'll be, we'll be talking
all about provoked.
Um, and we'll also probably know who the next president of the United States and,
but final word and, and also just let people know where they can find your
stuff.
Sure.
Okay.
Well, final word, I don't know what the hell is going to happen, man.
I don't know what's going to happen on election night and I don't know what's
going to happen if he wins and I don't know what's going to happen on election night. And I don't know what's going to happen if he wins.
And I don't know what's going to happen if she wins.
And it's going to be the Carlini in me is excited to see the coming chaos.
Yeah.
You know, I'm afraid to make a prediction.
I guess the force is telling me that it's going to be a blowout, dude, that she's just
pathetic. There's no way he's the most famous man in the world and she is just some dumb
Oh, like you've got to be kidding me and he again boy. He's got problems, but still he's a superstar dude
Yeah, he's like Michael Jackson. He's bigger than Michael Jackson
You can't beat that with just some dumb ho some absolute idiot who has nothing to say about anything because she's never been curious
Or care about anything in her life. It just can't be, dude. I don't know. I don't know.
We'll see how it goes. But also, you know, I'm going to be doing a live stream competing with
you and Patrick, but David, I guess I'm going to have Keith Knight and Connor Freeman are coming
into town from Arizona. And we're going to be doing a live stream from here at Libertarian
Institute HQ here on Tuesday
night. So that should be fun. So people could just, I guess, probably tune into the blog over there at
LibertarianInstitute.org or check out our YouTube channel. And then yes, all my stuff,
go to ScottHorton.org right now. You can pre-order the book. This is the most important thing.
You pre-order Provoked at ProvokedBook.com or just ScottHorton.org slash provoked.
We'll take you there and we're taking pre-orders now.
And that means that I swear to God that this thing is going to be done and, uh,
in your mailbox by Thanksgiving.
So you beat, you beat Christmas.
That's what, that's what matters.
You can give it.
This is the Christmas gift to give to somebody who you love.
That's right. This is going gonna be the pickle me Elmo of
2024 dude all the bros are gonna be free
Alright, well Scott you're the man
Thank you so much for for taking the time and well
We'll talk soon after the election and it'll be fun to to watch all this craziness unfold. Alright
Thanks everybody for listening. Catch you next time. Peace.