Part Of The Problem - The New Trump
Episode Date: February 5, 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 the issues with USAID, RFK Jr's status i...n his confirmation process, Warren's comments about him to the senate, and more.Support Our Sponsors:Tax Network USA - 1-800-958-1000 or go to TNUSA.COM/SMITHNative Path - https://NativeHydrate.com/PartOfTheProblemYoKratom - https://yokratom.com/Part Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!Get your tickets to Porch Tour here:https://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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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 how you feeling today Rob?
Oh, I'm excited for some Key West gonna swim in the ocean drink drink some drink out in the Sun
I'm hanging out with Tom Dustin. It's gonna be a good time. I've I'm uh I think I'm gonna really enjoy
Hanging out in Key West for a few days
I was just bitching and complaining to our producer Natalie Natalie, before we started, which is, you know, it's, uh,
you should never bitch and complain about your job when you do what I do for a
living. Cause, uh, you know, I don't work,
but I've just been on a stretch of getting no sleep for quite a
while. And I'm, I'm, I got a big one.
I know people like when I do these big shows got a big one that I'm recording
tomorrow so I got to go do that I'm not gonna sleep tomorrow I'm not gonna you
know it's like I'm gonna be up first thing in the morning then I can't sleep
that night either I got to be up in the morning and then we get to Key West and
then my wife's flying in to meet me down there so we're gonna hang out in Key
West and just relax and enjoy the beautiful weather, which if you're in the Northeast, it's a good
time. It's a good time of year to go get some, some warm weather. So yes, very much looking
forward to that. And of course the shows for you people, that's a little bit more relevant.
There's also shows going on and there's still some tickets available. So go on over to comicdavesmith.com
and then we got like a bunch of other gigs that are all coming up coming up
Yeah, that's right. We'll be back in Houston always love doing stand-up in in Houston
I'm gonna be at the punchline February 20th 21st and 22nd then
our return
To Boston which is like one of my favorite places in the country to do standup. And we haven't been there. I believe was it 22 that we,
I think it was early in 2022. Cause if,
if you remember our last show at Boston,
what a different world by the way, three years later, our last show in Boston,
we did a show the night before the vaccine passports went
into effect. Do you remember that Rob? And it was just so, it was so funny to, for those
of you guys, of course, I'm sure most of you remember, but during the COVID insanity, this
was at one point, well after, well after it was clear that the vaccine wasn't preventing
you from getting COVID or transmitting COVID, they did this thing in major cities across the country where they said you can
only come into a comedy club, whether that was one of the places, you could only come in if you
showed proof of vaccination, which doesn't work too well for me and Rob's audience.
And we just, you know, we weren't going to play places
that had that rule in effect. Like that just seemed, I don't know, just seemed so wrong.
You know what I mean? Like, I'm not going to go somewhere where first off, I have to
lie. I have to, me and Rob have to lie in order to get in there. Or maybe there's some
artist exception or something like that. But like, regardless, it's like, then all my fellow purebloods are not allowed
into the show that I'm doing. That just doesn't seem right. It's everything I'm against. So
I was like, well, I can't do that. I stopped even doing gigs at Fox news at the time. I
was like, well, fuck that dude. I like, what am I going to do? You know, I remember during
COVID when they first like reopened shit, I would go into
Fox news and I did Kennedy show live.
I did great gut filled show.
I did a bunch of them.
And because they were doing the rapid tests, they'd make you sit there and get tested and
then you could go in.
So I was like, whatever, I'll do that.
You know, I don't care.
But then once they were like, you have to show proof of vaccination, it was like, wait,
so now I got to show you my fake vaccine card.
And like I could do that, but it just seemed to almost be, and I don't know,
I'm not really arguing like that this is the case, but it felt,
I'm not saying like you're wrong if you went and did that. I'm not,
but it felt to me like that was kind of like a tacit endorsement of it
in some way or a capitulation
to it.
And I just wasn't willing to do that.
Anyway, the long of the short is that was the last time we were in Boston.
That's always one of our favorite cities to play.
So I'm really looking forward to getting back there.
And what a different I remember like, it was such a weird thing.
I mean, thinking about it now, especially just after the first few weeks
of Trump's presidency and the vibe shift
as it's being called in the country,
like the idea that I remember sitting there
and being like, that's it for like doing standup
in all these major cities.
Where the hell are we gonna go?
We're gonna have to, you know what I mean?
Like the concern at the time was like, they're never going to,
they're never going to stop doing this.
This is just going to be the policy from now on proof of vaccinated proof of
updated boosters, you know, forever. Luckily there was enough, um,
pushback that they ended up pulling the thing back. But now it's like,
I don't know. It's just, it's a
very strange thing to think that like three years ago, verse
today, you're we are living in a completely different country, a
completely different country than we were then. And thank
God, because that was not good.
Prosecute Fauci.
Prosecute Fauci. There we go. Okay, anyway, anyway after Boston then we'll be I
will be in Nashville I'm not sure if you're on that one with me Rob but then
Chicago Rosemont San Diego Appleton Wisconsin Salt Lake City again Denver
Cleveland Tacoma Spokane Tampa bunch of dates coming up comic Dave Smith comm
for all of those dates
Yeah Prosecuting fact sheet that always sounds like a good idea. It's pretty uh, it's pretty crazy
But Elon Musk tweeted that out again something about prosecuting
Fauci and it is wild
Just to even think about
how much steam that idea is getting.
And obviously he's gotten a presidential pardon now from from Joe Biden.
But you know, and I don't know, Rob, you tell me, I'd imagine you probably agree with me on this,
but I will say that, okay, it like I'm old enough to remember that after when Barack Obama first got elected in 2008,
and he assumed the presidency in January of 2009, there were some left-wing activists who wanted
to prosecute Bush and, you know, top cabinet level people for the blatant war crimes that
they had committed. So there was enough pressure that Barack Obama
had to give a speech about it and say he's not gonna do it.
It's one of my favorite things always.
I love mentioning when Obama goes,
he goes, I hear your concerns,
and yes, there were some crimes committed,
and we tortured some folks.
That was how he said it, we tortured some folks.
And then he goes, but now is the time to look forward,
not backward. And I he goes, but now is the time to look forward, not backward.
And then I remember always thinking like, well, that's,
here's the thing about prosecuting crime. You really have to look backward.
It's really the only way it works anyway. But that even then it was not,
it never felt like it was,
it was like a small enough contained group of left-wing
activists who believed that, you know, I mean, I,
I completely agree with them, but it wasn't that big.
When Donald Trump ran in 2016 and there were like the lock her up chance that
always felt to me like it was a novelty.
It was like a fun thing to put on a t-shirt, but it never seemed like that.
Like, did you ever hear
any of Trump supporters, you know, being like, man, he really didn't come through on that
promise to prosecute Hillary Clinton. Like, you know what I mean? It just wasn't even
taken as like a serious thing, but it does seem like prosecute some of the people who were,
you know what I mean, guilty of these heinous crimes against humanity over the last few
years.
And there's just something interesting about that.
And the fact that, like, that feeling was taken so seriously that whoever was making
decisions for Joe Biden decided
he better issue these pardons that that in itself is just kind of wild.
I think, you know, I was talking about this with Nicole after you hopped off yesterday,
but I do think that so much of the the hysteria that we're seeing right now from the
establishment, which again, one of the most fascinating
developments of the current moment is that we're not seeing
this level of hysteria from the shock troops, like the young
useful idiot leftist activists, we don't see a level of hysteria
from them like we did
in 2017. Um,
but the hysteria that we are seeing from the corporate media and from the
Senate and things like this, you know, when it's,
when it's about Tulsi Gabbard or it's about Bobby Kennedy or it's about this,
uh, the USA ID stuff or any of that,
it's like the dynamic here is that it's not just that like,
oh no in outsiders coming in and they may get the policies
that they want rather than the policies that we want.
There's something much deeper than that.
And it's I think it's much more like, oh shit serious crimes
have been committed.
And if these outsiders come in and have access to these books, oh my God, are we
going to be in trouble here?
You know, it's like it's not if you think about in the post-terror war and post-COVID
world and you think about the pics that people are freaking out about the most. And
it's, well, they got Matt gates out there. Tulsi and Bobby are yet to be confirmed, but
are still in play. But you think about the fact that it's the director of national intelligence the person who oversees the CIA and the NSA
it's
The health department and it's the Justice Department
Like I don't think it's a coincidence that there's a freak out over like hey
You know what?
I mean like these people might have access to all the crimes that were committed by the deep state all the crimes that were committed
by the the health institutions and they also have the Justice Department. They also have somewhere that they
could send these complaints to. And it's just an interesting dynamic. It's hard to say exactly
where all of this goes, or even if Trump really has the political will to go through with some stuff like that, but
it certainly is interesting to watch the freak out about all of that because like the the truth is that the level of crimes that
Have been committed are so heinous that if they were to be exposed
I mean look it when you think about even just what already has come out, right? I
Mean this this thing which by way, was news to me.
I don't know if you had heard of this, Rob, but like, I knew that, like,
the NIH subsidiaries had had funded the Wuhan lab.
I didn't know that USAID had.
But even just think about that.
You're like, oh, look at it.
We made COVID.
Our government made COVID. This is like, Oh, look at it. We made COVID. Our government
made COVID. This is like the biggest freaking scandal in the world. Like this, this virus
that not only you think about the fact that it's not only the virus itself, which, you
know, obviously the people who died of COVID were sick and old people 99.9% of the time.
But still, I mean, you know, that's a lot of people died of this thing and got, you know,
in many cases, maybe it only robbed a year of their life or two years of their life.
But dude, that's a big deal to rob somebody of the last two years of their lives.
But it's not so it's not just the virus that killed millions of people worldwide.
But then it's also all of the cost of the government response just the virus that killed millions of people worldwide, but then it's also all
of the cost of the government response to the virus, which was also done by the government.
So like they made the virus and then locked down in response to it.
The amount of human suffering that they caused because they wanted to have these, I don't
know, is it too far to classify
it as bio weapons? I mean, whatever the hell you want to call it. They decided they wanted
to do this gain of function research in a, in a shoddy Chinese lab with like substandard,
you know, like protocols. They decided that they wanted to do this and then just did this
to the entire world. I mean, how do you look at that and not go like wait?
You're telling me if I bring my gun that I legally own in my car and drive to
Philly I could be arrested and be looking at ten years in prison
But no one should go to prison for that
You know what I'm saying? Like how could you possibly believe both of those things?
It's just, you know, it's pretty wild.
It's also pretty telling with the fact that they were involved in the creation of the
virus that there's a freak out over the agency being absorbed by anyone else.
It really seems like people that had their hands in that pie
and that payment processing are a little bit concerned
that they just lost a piece of pie.
Well, it's amazing too, because it kind of demonstrates
in a way like the mentality that so many of these people have.
Where like, so you have, you know, in the backdrop,
you have all of these people shrieking about democracy
for the last four years.
You know, January, January 6, then Donald Trump, election denier.
And this is the democracies on the ballot says the former president of the United States
of America before having tea with Adolf Hitler.
There, you know, this is the end of democracy if Donald Trump wins.
And then you have the, so there's this hyperbole, this insane hyperbole, and then you have the
reality of the situation, which is like, hey, Donald Trump comes in and he's running on,
hey, we're going to go over the entire federal budget.
We're going to look at the whole thing and see where there's waste.
And I'm putting this Elon Musk guy in charge of this new, you know, imaginary department where he's
going to go over all of this stuff. And then like, Elon Musk's like, okay, let's take a
look at this USAID, you know, thing. And then their attitude is like, excuse me, sorry,
unelected bureaucrats over here, who the hell are you to tell us about our budget?
You're like, well, he was picked by the guy who was just democratically elected. Like that's
What do you mean?
Nobody at USAID was elected by the people, you know what I mean?
And it's like you just see this dynamic where you're like, wait
I thought you guys were so concerned with democracy and yet the way this thing actually works is that you're completely outside of any democratic force. And you're just this permanent governing structure,
and you're supposed to just be able to do what you want to do and then fund things like,
like think about, think about how crazy it is that we're just finding out that they were funding the
lab. Like this is, this is the most major story over the last five years. And the American
people have no way of even knowing this. Like how can you believe in democracy without some
degree of the most basic degree of transparency, right? Because if you could hide the biggest
story in the last five years, by far, there's nothing even compares to what COVID was. This
is the biggest thing that happened to this country in the last five years.
And if you're telling me that you could hide that our government was funding
the creation of the thing, how the hell is a voter supposed to make an informed decision
if they're not even allowed to know the biggest fucking thing?
Which, by the way, Rob, I don't, you know, explain to me what their rationale could possibly be.
Is it a national security threat that we know this?
Are there sources and methods that were compromised
by us knowing where the USAID budget was allocating money?
I don't think so.
It just makes them look really bad.
That's it.
I do think that there is, I'm neutral on Elon Musk.
He clearly did us a big favor with Twitter and restored free speech to the internet
So and you know you think what's the problem you think the cars are gay?
I know but I do think he's a defense contractor, and he's made some of his wealth off of
Favorable government contracts and being in on credit schemes, so I don't think he's an entirely
neutral or good force
And there is something odd about you know a billionaire who still has his own private businesses
Having access to government data to me making decisions now
You could say if he's just acting as a hatchet man
Then there is no conflict of interest and he's actually working as a force for good.
The big claims was that he had acts. It's always funny when they tell you that there's a massive
threat, but they won't tell you what it is. It's kind of project 2025, the boogeyman of project
2025, project 2025, project 2025. Well, what exactly is the threat of project 2025? No one
articulated it. I mean, how many news stories were there? Oh my God, if Donald Trump comes in,
project 2025 will be enacted and then what?
What is the bad thing or project 2025? I'm supposed to fear and so in this case
they're screaming about the data breach of Elon Musk having access to this information and
Explain to me. What is the issue is that that now he's gonna
Incorporate that into X. He's gonna have user data like if there's a data breach, I'm all for hey,
I don't like people having my data.
I try to the extent that I can opt out
of collecting my data, I do.
But if it's that he just has 19 year olds
taxpayer records, they're all trying to paint it
like it was some sort of like, not quite a pedophilia thing
but like he's endangering our kids
if he can see 19 year olds tax returns.
And it's like, well, can you explain can you explain to me what the risk of that is?
Where's the data breach here?
If he's just looking at the information to actually axe people, what is that?
What's the threat here?
What is the data breach?
And I've yet to hear it articulated.
Yeah, I mean, I really agree with everything.
I co-s cosine that entirely I think that in a lot of ways what it comes down to for us is
Almost like the way I'm looking at it is almost like I know I'm sorry. I'm going into a metaphor
That's all I that's all I'm really good. I like your metaphor
Well, I try I'd like to do them because they you know
It's a good way to you know
Stretch your brain and like be like how to think about these things
But I'm looking at Trump and Elon Musk and all these guys more and more
like if someone's breaking in to your house and you just look and it's like they're about to bust through the door and you
Look around and you know, whatever you grab something you grab a kitchen knife or a frying pan or something
You know something he uses a weapon and then a frying pan or something you know something he uses a weapon
and then somebody could be like you know that's really not the ideal weapon the ideal weapon is
like this thing that you don't have you know the ideal weapon is an ar-15 but you don't have one
and you're like yeah okay it may not be the ideal weapon it seems to be a weapon and that's better
than nothing and i think that with a lot of this stuff with the Trump administration,
we're going to get into some more specifics on this.
But it's like, okay, there is at least some positive motion in some areas.
And that is so much better than what we've had for quite a while,
including Trump's first term, you know, including his first four years.
And in some ways it does seem I know this is early in the administration to say something
like this, but it does seem to me that it's like, okay, Trump maybe needed those first
four years to figure this shit out.
He may have needed those years.
And then he may have needed to be that burned by the system in the four years he was out to come in now with at least a little bit of a game plan, a little
bit of a sense of how to wield this power of the presidency.
Again, still big question marks.
The guy's only been president for, you know, what is it, three weeks or something like
that.
So, okay, let's not make, you know, jump to conclusions here.
But it does seem like it just seems like it's a different Trump in a lot of ways this time.
And it's also incredible that if you just desire to clean up some of the mess, how easy
some of the mess is to clean up. So the fact that some criminals are actually being sent
out of the country, that's common sense. Or the fact there some criminals are actually being sent out of the country,
that's common sense. Or the fact there was some guy who's making a $10 million salary
year like in Kentucky on like farm construction equipment or something and he just got fired.
Elon Musk came back that the people that process payments in the Treasury have never declined
a payment ever. Or in this case, the fact that that this organization was
responsible for sending money over to Wuhan we never heard about that and I
can only imagine how much fraud and abuse is in the USA I can only imagine
so I mean we're only and it's not again you know the issue with the USA ID is not
even that it's um it's not so much that it's there's there's fraud or an abuse. It's not
like there's like oh there's this waste you know what I mean and that's the thing about
the USA is that it's the CIA front. It's like that's the whole game. Yes that's it's the
whole game. It's for it's for development. You know what I mean? Well, it's like the National Endowment for democracy, right? We're just democracy promoting, AKA overthrowing regimes that we don't like. And
the USAID, I know they were big, you know, like the thing I know about them the most
is that they were the ones who pumped $5 billion into Ukraine between 1991 and 2014. They were
pumping in. And what were they doing with the money And they were pumping in.
And what were they doing with the money that they were pumping in there?
Well, they're establishing independent media.
That's what they call it.
Independent media, right?
And helping these NGOs and all this shit, the same organs that ended up fomenting the
Maidan revolution.
And so it's like, which, by the way,
overthrew a democratically elected government didn't stop the National
Endowment for Democracy from pouring money into that protest that the that Yanukovych
was democratically elected, as I've mentioned many times, by the way,
elections verified by the EU.
And so it's not as if it's not even like
the West is claiming that the elections weren't legitimate.
You know what I mean? Like it's just that like the West is claiming that the elections weren't legitimate. You know what I mean?
Like it's just that's the way this game works.
And so what they do constantly, you know, Mike Benz was just talking about this the
other day, where he was like, there's nothing that the USAID does that isn't a CIA op.
Like even if they're just doing something that might seem kind of like aid, like, oh,
they're just helping to irrigate
these crops in this country somewhere.
It's like, yeah, because we want other resources that they have.
What it is, they have a $50 billion budget, I believe.
Double check me on that number, but it's a $50 billion budget that the USAID has.
And they're just in the game of empire.
That's what it's about.
It's not about this idea of like,
oh, helping people here and there.
Like that's all bullshit.
It's about controlling the world.
There's always strings attached.
There's always a goal in mind and it's never, you know,
like, I mean, like it really doesn't take too much
to notice this stuff, but you know, when when you're let's say when you're as deeply
connected with say Saudi Arabia and Israel don't tell me you're overthrowing some other government
over human rights abuses get the fuck out of here what are you you know what i'm saying like
don't tell me you were overthrowing
Momar Gaddafi because you were
very concerned about the human rights abuses
and that's why we support
the Israeli War Cabinet
and the House of Saud. Like, get out
of here. This is too ridiculous.
It's like, how stupid would you
have to be to not see through that immediately?
You know? Oh,
that's our, you you know our real problem
With this is why we had to overthrow
Milosevic because he was ethnically cleansing people
Yet we have to support is real in their effort to ethnically cleanse people. Come on
Well, I'm gonna venture to say I don't think the real issue there is ethnic cleansing. I
Think it's something else.
Right.
Like I think it's about oh oh Milosevic was aligned with Russia.
OK.
Now it's making a little bit more sense.
So this isn't about democracy promotion.
It's not about human rights.
It's about empire.
It's about ruling the world.
This is you know like it's like in the same way that every company wants to make more money
Every company wants to expand every government wants to expand every government wants to get bigger and bigger and
America is the most powerful government in the history of the world and that's not enough for them. They would like more
That's all that it's about so the real
Freak out is that that could be revealed and then people have a whole different look
This is the the essence of why the Kennedy files have been sealed for this long and by the way
I should get ahead of this on record because I've just I you know because when this comes out
I'm sure there'll be people who look back and go like a see there was nothing to it
I don't think anything's gonna be major is gonna be revealed by these declassified documents
I know I don't believe that like enough time to clean them up
Holding them for 40 years the fact that they can't just be brought out of their file and release yes the president
Yes, they need to be released is insane. Right. But listen, for anybody out there, it's not like there's a document
that they're going, the CIA killed Kennedy and then they just left this document in there
for all these decades. And then they're like, we sure do hope a president never gets elected
who decides to declassify these things. But the reason why there's been so much secrecy over the Kennedy assassination is like
And look, I mean there's people who have done much deeper dives on this than me and it's
Aside from World War two
There's probably been more books and more research done on the Kennedy assassination than like any other topic
But all you have to do is know some very basic things about it,
and it's so obviously a coverup.
It is just so ridiculously obvious.
Like, if you just know like a few key pieces of information,
like you know that like, okay, like, dude, I mean,
first off, just looking at it on paper,
how the hell anybody believed the story where you go,
it was a lone gunman who then happened
to be assassinated by another lone gunman. You know, there's just like that happens.
That happens a lot, right? Like the what? I mean, that's insane. And then the, Oh, by
the way, the first lone gunman was also working for the CIA. Don't let that fuck with you
too much. Don't like, don't even overthink that. He also, by the way, at the height of
the cold war just went and popped into Russia for a little bit and then popped back here. Like it's
just and then, you know, if you just know that Jack Kennedy had fired the head of the CIA shortly
before his assassination and that that fired head of the CIA was put on the Warren Commission to investigate what happened in his assassination.
I mean, I think just having those points down would be like,
okay, my working assumption now is this is a conspiracy.
Like now the onus is on you to prove that this wasn't a conspiracy.
But the reason why this has to be kept secret
for all of these years isn't because anyone's
like protecting their own ass, nobody's alive anymore.
I mean, and if they are, they're ancient.
You know what I mean?
It's because like the similar thing I was saying
with the USAID, it's because like, if you figure that out, that's just such a juicy secret that you can't let the American people all know
that because once you know that the CIA murdered the sitting president of the United States
of America, well then this whole country isn't what you thought it was anymore.
That's the only next conclusion you're like, Oh, every normie out there is like, oh, okay.
Well, now I have to totally reevaluate
what I think about everything.
And then one of the next logical questions might be like,
hey, so what year did it stop being like that?
You know?
And then you realize pretty quickly,
oh, that is some year in the future maybe, but that year has not come yet. You know, and then you realize pretty quickly. Oh That is
Some year in the future maybe but that year has not come yet
So anyway, that is it's just very very very interesting time for people like us who have cared about these issues for quite
a long while and kind of
Just a lot of the things that are happening right now and I again I'm not trying to oversell it, you know
there's there's bad that comes with Donald Trump. And I he I guarantee he's going to disappoint at some point in the next four years,
probably at multiple points. And I'm not at all claiming that like the establishment has been
overthrown, or that permanent Washington isn't still running the show, but there are so many of these things just seemed impossible
not very long ago.
It just seemed like so much of this was never going to happen and so much of it is happening
now and that's very encouraging and exciting.
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That's native hydrate.com slash part of the problem. All right,
let's get back into the show. Um, I should, okay,
a couple of things that we should address. Actually,
I'm just going to real quickly, um,
double check the news on this. Um, but it,
Bobby Kennedy did pass the Senate committee vote.
So he passed the Senate committee, the finance committee vote, so he was confirmed by them,
and now I guess it kicks it over to the Senate Senate vote so that should be in later today from the reports that I'm seeing
It's it's looking like he's going to be confirmed by a very small margin
Never know until the time comes you never know
What you know when you're dealing with these small margins?
All you need is a couple of senators to kind of do the wrong thing.
Tulsi is in a similar situation.
I'm hearing that she's probably going to be confirmed, but that it's a razor thin margin.
And again, these are like, you know, if you remember John McCain famously voting down
the repeal of Obamacare, all it takes is like one or two of the Republican senators to fall in line and just go no
We're not gonna do this. I'm not counting any chickens before they're hatched on this one, but
That's the latest of where we are and you know for the for the rest of the show
Well, I'll check a couple more times and let you know if there's an update there
Okay, let's uh
Let's see. What uh, What should we go to next year?
Because I had a few.
So I'm just kind of debating on which one.
What did we have here?
We had the, this is, OK, let's go to the Elizabeth Warren
video, because that's on the topic of Bobby Kennedy.
And I believe this was her reacting to him passing the Senate Finance Committee.
So this is Elizabeth Warren reacting to Bobby Kennedy passing the initial Senate Finance
Committee vote.
Here she is.
... stated, this is not only about a private company that gets sued and has to pay out.
Vaccine manufacturers often operate on very slim profit margins. If they get sued repeatedly
and successfully, they simply move out of the vaccine space. We've already seen this
happen with vaccines in the past. 20 years ago, we
watched vaccines just move away if they did not have protection from these kinds of lawsuits.
The consequence of Mr. Kennedy's ability to make those lawsuits easier is also the ability
to shut down access and manufacturing for vaccines for every one of us.
And I think that's a terrible statement.
All right. Now, Rob, I got to say this comes off as a little dishonest to me.
And I just I'm shocked to see dishonesty out of Elizabeth Warren.
It's really a betrayal of her Native American heritage.
This is, you know, they're very honest people.
They pride themselves.
Their word is their bond.
Yeah, Rob, I don't know, dude,
you ever take a moment to think about
how tough it is out for these pharmaceutical companies?
You know, big ph farm is operating on razor thin
profit motive. Like, uh, you know, isn't it wild that this is a defense of a John, this
is Elizabeth Warren we're talking about. And the issue we're talking about is giant corporations
talking about is giant corporations being able to be sued for injuring people.
And Elizabeth Warren is on the side of the giant corporations and is making the
argument that like there's, um, you know, the person who always wants the wealthy to pay their fair share and is always
concerned about big money or whatever.
to pay their fair share and is always concerned about big money or whatever.
She's making the argument that this could disincentivize them
from further production. And therefore, we can't have the threat of lawsuits like what is it?
It's just wild.
Nothing exposes how phony people are than when they totally go
against their own
stated worldview
Just because they don't well, I don't know. I mean it seems like trying to protect these big companies But again, I mean, I don't know Rob. I don't know what you think about this, but I just kind of go like, okay
Well, like what's the art if you're making the argument that the lawsuits are frivolous or that like they weren't really injured
Well, then the argument would be to tighten up the legal system and be like, yeah
You shouldn't be able to sue a company if they haven't actually caused any harm. That is kind of already the case
It's pretty hard to sue a giant company like like really think about this, right? You're a vaccine injured person
You're trying to take on like
Pfizer, you know
probably they got a few more bucks to throw at lawyers than you do and it's kind of it's already
pretty difficult to prove vaccine injuries that's one of the messed up things about vaccine injuries
is that it's very easy to say like hey you know this happened to you but how can you prove that
it was from the vaccine could have been from something else? And I know a
lot of people, I know several people very well, um, who have had like, um,
heart issues since COVID and you know, the suspicion is that like, yeah, I
mean, I don't know, this person got double vaccinated and then took two boosters and all of a sudden
You know a 44 year old perfectly healthy person is having heart issues
That seems to me like but I can't prove that that's what it was
You know what I mean like that person eat a lot of chicken nuggets that weekend
Yeah, right, right. So who knows for sure but it does seem like a likely culprit
but it if the argument here really is right, that they well, listen, if you had to pay
out every time these vaccines injured somebody, then it wouldn't be profitable enough to make
the vaccines.
I don't think that's the winning argument you think it is.
Cause that would kind of suggest that like the vaccines may not be worth it, right?
Like isn't that the lot isn't that the information that you would get from this economic reality that
it's like this is a math equation. If you're telling me that having to compensate people for all of the
harm that this product causes would then make it not worth it to produce this product
Then that is the economy telling you it's not worth it to produce this product
Kind of like if college is so expensive that you can never pay off the loans that kind of lets you know that college isn't
Worth it at that price right am I missing something Rob. What do you think?
well, I
Got a hot take which is any guys can check out tomorrow's on your mouth because I'm gonna play this clip
But I happen to agree with Elizabeth Warren that RFK jr. Should have to divest his financial stake in these lawsuits
and
But I believe I believe he said he would well
He's passed it on to his son right and the problem with that is that it's not a true divestment,
but on the other side of it, I don't
know that you can really hold politicians to the standard
that your own relatives can't possibly
be profiting from any of the auxiliary things of what you do.
Because I'm sure that there's not a single senator
or congressman who doesn't have a kid in some sort of an agency that, you know,
that's a tough standard.
But speaking more specifically to the clip
that you just played,
and I've broken this down before on the show,
removing vaccine liability removes the market mechanisms
to figure out whether or not these products are safe.
And so it just doesn't make sense,
specifically because if they did not have those protections,
it would be absorbed in the cost of the vaccines.
If it serves the greater good
that everyone needs to be vaccinated,
then there's no reason why we wouldn't pay into a fund
where the people that are injured by them get paid out.
And the easiest way to collect those funds is,
let's say there's a vaccine, and I'm going to give it to 100 million people, the people that are injured by them get paid out. And the easiest way to collect those funds is,
let's say there's a vaccine
and I'm gonna give it to a hundred million people
and one of the hundred million people
is gonna lose their life.
Well then great, instead of charging a dollar,
charge $2, now you can pay out $100 million to that family.
Or you can change up the math,
you can decide what that value is.
But the point I'm just saying is it's actually very easy
to compensate the people that will
be vaccine injured.
And then it also creates a market mechanism by which, if a vaccine is not overwhelmingly
good, then it's not worth producing.
Can you please explain to me why their product is so good, but it can only exist on the market
if they can't be held accountable for when it doesn't work the way that it's supposed to? Then, how can the product be that thin? Why are their margins
that thin? If their product is so good and everybody needs it, why does it have such
thin profit margins? I thought that this is usually revolutionary technologies, have room
for profit. Is it other legislation that the government created
that they can't make the profit that they need to like?
And so now you got to overcompensate for that distortion by not giving them liability.
And is that better? Is that a better system?
So think about the claim. I mean, imagine, imagine I was selling computers
and I started with the claim that I was like listen Rob. This is a perfect computer
It's never gonna blow up and and kill you
I do need
to
Enshrine in the law that I cannot be sued if this blows up and kills you though
You know what I mean? Like it's like wait a minute. Hold on first. Your claim is that this isn't happening
Then your claim is that, and then I go,
oh, and by the way, if I don't have liability protection
over that, then it wouldn't even be worth it for me.
I wouldn't even be able to sell this computer to you.
Come on.
Can't you see through this?
And then there was also a good stat of,
would you give me a second?
I can pull this up, but Elizabeth Warren,
I think is in the top 10 Senate list of who receives money from
pharmaceutical companies. Here, I can give you the exact number
right here. She comes in third at $1.2 million.
There you go. Well, I'm sure that has nothing to do with her
position on this whatsoever. All right, guys, let's take a
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Smith that's Tnusa.com
Slash Smith. All right, let's get back into the show
All right, the other thing that I do have to
get back into the show. All right. The other thing that I do have to, uh, we got to at least mention quickly is that, uh, at least a closing, according to a disclose.tv. Um,
and this is as of two hours ago, uh, the white house is preparing an executive order to abolish
the federal department of education. Um, and they, they say this is NBC News is where they got it
from so how about that? Where will the kids go to get the shit kicked out of them by
bullies? Well of course this isn't you know abolishing the Department of
Education wouldn't even be abolishing public school it would simply be kind of
kicking it back to the states
and not having Washington, D.C., you know,
centralize the control of education and the,
what's the word that I'm looking through, the curriculum.
It is, first of all, just because a few people,
and I know particularly this is, I've seen some libertarians who are saying this
It is true that doing this through an executive order is not as ideal
As doing this through an act of congress
You know the concern being another democrat can come right back in and then just undo all of trump's executive orders
While that is true, it is still preferable to not doing it at all.
So this is, I don't know why.
I'm telling you, I'm going to have to get out of the game of making this exact point
because I just make it too much that it's starting to drive me crazy.
You know what I mean?
Like it's like, yes, okay.
By the way, Thomas Massey has just introduced legislation into the Congress to do this.
So what the move here would be to do it through executive order immediately and then really champion
codifying it into law through the Congress. But this would just be such a remarkable win for the country. I mean just a win for education a win for the taxpayer
there's just nothing but wasted money and and totally at the expense of children's education to have this
ridiculous socialist model of
centralized control over the indoctrination of children
of centralized control over the indoctrination of children.
Like why? It makes no sense.
And by the way, I will go a step further and say,
public school in general makes no sense.
You know, it's really funny
because there's kind of like these things,
let's take it back to libertarianism 101 for a second here,
but there are so many of these things that like, because we're used to the government doing it, people just take
it for granted that the government does it. And then if you're against the government
doing it, they're like, well, you must be against the service. You know, like, like
if there was, if there was like the, the department of shoes in shoes in you know in DC that we make all the shoes in the
country which you know it sounds kind of goofy but like socialist countries actually had things
like this you know what i mean like they had centralized you know like in the Soviet Union
you could only get that one crappy car or whatever you know like there were experiments like this
but it so you have this Department of shoes and they make all the shoes and all
Americans have the exact same shoes and obviously the government's making them so it's like the
crummiest pair of uncomfortable shoes and then you were like hey I think we should abolish this
department of shoes and just let the market take care of this and then someone's like oh so you're
against people having shoes on their feet you think everyone should just walk around barefoot? And it's like, no, that's not exactly my claim.
Now, when I use the example of shoes,
nobody thinks that way
because we already have it completely decentralized.
And if you may notice,
everybody's got shoes on their feet.
Like notice that next time you're outside,
even drive through a really poor neighborhood
and people have shoes on their feet.
Okay, there's some exceptions to this.
Generally speaking though, it's not a major issue
of getting shoes to people, because the market takes
care of it.
As with everything, the market provides a better quality
product at a cheaper price that is more tailored to what
the consumer actually wants.
Yet somehow, when it comes to education,
there is this idea that the government must do it.
And look, I can understand on some level
where people feel like, well, look,
we want to make sure that every kid is provided with education.
But again, you could make the same argument with shoes
and say, well, we have to make sure that everyone is provided
shoes.
And the truth is, once you take an example like shoes, you realize that you're like, say, well, we have to make sure that everyone is provided shoes. And the truth is, like, once you take an example like shoes, you realize that
you're like, OK, yeah, but even if our concern is that everyone is provided
with these or that if somebody is so poor that they can't get shoes, they can't afford them.
We want to make sure someone gives that to them that you can't jump from that to,
therefore, it must be centralized in Washington, D.C.
You just be like, yeah, we could have charities do that
We could raise money for that. You know what I mean? Like we could have you know, the companies themselves can
Do things like ask you if you want to pay a dollar more when you get your shoes because that goes toward the shoes of less
Fortunate people like there's just lots of other options and likewise with education when you think about it
Uh, you think about it,
when you think about public education, government schools,
the idea that you're going, hey, there are these like,
there's poor people and they can't afford school
so the government comes in and gives it to them,
that is just not what happens.
That's not actually true.
The truth is that in all of these neighborhoods, even in poor communities, in poor neighborhoods,
in poor towns, the people there are paying taxes.
They're paying for the schools.
And you could say maybe these people people are maybe they're they're
unemployed or maybe they make so little money that they don't really pay any
federal income taxes but what's paying for the schools is the property taxes
and all of them are paying that either directly or indirectly you know like if
you even if you rent an apartment you are paying for the property tax because
that has to be that has to be factored in to the rent price, you know
like if if if somebody is paying, you know
$500 a month and a landlord let's say just to keep the numbers easier say they're paying a thousand dollars a month for
For their mortgage and then another two hundred dollars a month for the property tax
Well, they've got to charge you at least $1,201
to make a profit off that.
It's not a business otherwise.
It's a charity.
And so you're paying for the property tax.
So really, what the government is doing
is stealing your money from you and then coming in,
paying a whole bunch of bureaucrats six-figure salaries,
and then with the crumbs that are remaining giving you these government schools.
And again, if your argument was that, you know, like, well, you know, there are some
people who just can't afford to educate their children, we must have the government come
in and do this.
Ask yourself a follow up question.
How is the government doing at that? You know,
is it like, is it, could you say right now that like, you know, in America we have some
poor neighborhoods, we have some high crime areas, but at least they, they're all getting
a great education in their government schools. No, they can't even read at grade level. They're
graduating illiterate kids. It's just the wildest failure.
It's every bit as much of a failure
as that shitty Soviet car that everyone makes fun of.
I can't remember the name of it.
And so it's just, you know, the whole thing,
when you really think about it,
it's like the task is so doable.
Like, what are we really talking about
when you talk about school?
You're talking about what teaching kids reading writing and arithmetic
Maybe as they get older a little bit of English and history, you know what I mean? Like what?
This is totally doable
Communities can come together and do this
This does not need to come from Washington DC and have orders., and have orders barked at, you know, like
from bureaucrats in D.C. And we've had an experiment in this. It's been, the Department
of Education has not been around that long. I mean, you know, I say that, maybe that's
my age speaking. But it's been, I think it was under Jimmy Carter, I want to say it's
in the 70s, I think the late 70s is when the Department of Education was created. And so we've been running an experiment. We've done this for about 50 years. Does anybody here? Does anyone think the country's gotten smarter over these 50 years? Does anyone think the country is better educated now than they were back then? I mean, I, you know, I ever see like where they'll have like those old like high school tests from like
1920 and you're like, whoa, this is what they were asking the kids back then
We were a much smarter country before we went to this bullshit socialist indoctrination model
And so this is a great step in that direction. And again, just another signal that Donald Trump
that direction. And again, just another signal that Donald Trump might actually mean business this time and kind of want to do some big, bold things.
And again, between Doge and this move and the USAID stuff and like, it's like it's
not just that he wants to do big legacy building things, but it's like he wants to
do big legacy building things.
legacy building things, but it's like he wants to do big legacy building things. And he sees the way to do that as like draining the swamp, cutting the government, exposing
the corruption.
Every president always wants to do big legacy building things.
That's why George W. Bush wanted in 2008 at the Bucharest summit, that's why he wanted
to give Ukraine a full map, a full member action program.
Then he didn't end up getting that. They just made the promise that they bring them in.
But they said that was it. Scott details it in his book provoked very well. But that's
he was just like, well, this is for my legacy. The war in Iraq didn't work out. So I got
to do something big. And there was Angela Merkel who was like, you know, this really might piss off the Russians
You maybe don't want to do this
but anyway
So this is a very I don't know what else to say, but it's a very positive move
Oh, I could say the other thing by the way, which is to me is the compromise position
But like Cory D. Angelos has been the guy who's really pushed this for many, many years now
and had some real success in it.
Now my position would just be abolish government schools.
Let people do it.
You know, like people can, the unbelievable task of like teaching a kid how to read is
something that human beings are actually capable of figuring out and did figure out for thousands
of years before it was done in Washington, D.C.
But his whole school choice thing is it's almost impossible to argue against.
And essentially what the school choice idea is, is that you basically just look at, so
you could look at how much money say and say given in a state
there's a certain amount of money that they spend to educate the kids so there's a certain number
like per student per year it's outrageously high I think in in in New York City I think it was 20
grand per student per year was the cost of of kids. And so Corey DeAngelis and other school choice advocates just say, okay, so you're spending
20 grand per student per year.
Here's what we're going to do.
You're just going to give that as a voucher to the parents.
Okay?
They get this voucher that's worth 20 grand a year, and they can choose which school to
use it at and now
You'd have a situation where you empower the parents rather than empowering the teachers union rather than empowering DC
And you let the parents have the chips and the schools have to compete now
Over getting the parents to give them their voucher because they get 20 grand for each parent who gives them their voucher
And so you immediately would just introduce market forces back into school.
And now at least the schools would have to demonstrate some value.
Now the school goes, hey, everyone in our school is reading at grade level and there's
very little bullying or there's very little violence and there's very, you know what I
mean?
Like they have the same thing that private schools do right now, right?
Which is why wealthy people send their kids to private schools when they have the option
to just introduce those market forces into school for everybody.
And like, there's no reason why if, you know, it's so disgusting when you think about it that it's like the people who you know, okay, like me, you know, the people who are able to send their kids
to like the elite schools that are very expensive, they're able to do that. And yet these people
are forced, they don't have the resources that that some others have. And yet they're
forced to pay this. And that they don't even get control of it.
You know, it's like the fact that New York City
is spending 20 grand per student per year,
why shouldn't you let the, now the parent has like real money
that they can go and be in the same position.
They can be as privileged as the people
who get to send their kids to private school
where they have the chips, they're the one with the money and you have to work for them and you have to work to keep
their to keep their business.
It's such a better model than what we have right now.
So there's just a lot of different things that can be done in education, even short
of the ideal, which would just be to abolish government schools.
But anyway, long, long story short, this is a very good move.
Anything you want to add, Rob?
We'll, we'll wrap up on that.
Uh, prosecute façade.
Prosecute façade.
There we go.
That was a nice, we really bookended this episode.
I like that.
All right, guys.
Thank you guys very much for, for listening.
I am the schedule might be a little wonky over the next couple days. I got to figure it out
I'll bring equipment with me or Rob. I should say I'll bring Rob with me and count on him to bring equipment with him
But we'll get some episodes. I know we still owe a members only for last week
I'll make sure to make that up for you you subscribers
Thank you to everybody who subscribes at part of the problem calm if you love the show
Please consider going over there and subscribing as well. Catch you soon
Look out for a big one coming soon. Peace