Part Of The Problem - Trump's Inauguration
Episode Date: January 21, 2025Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave talks about Biden's last minute pardons, Trumps inauguration speech, and more. Support Our Sponsors:...Kalshi - https://kalshi.com/daveTax Network USA - 1-800-958-1000 or go to TNUSA.COM/SMITHPart Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up? What's up? What's up? Good people. Happy inauguration day. Welcome to a brand
new episode of part of the problem. Just me today. Rob is still on his way back from the
West coast. Thank you to everyone who came out to Bozeman. The show there was just a lot of fun
and it was a beautiful city
and a lot of great people who came out.
So thank you very much for everyone who came out there.
It was my first time in Montana and it was a lot of fun.
I will definitely go back
and I'll definitely stay for a little bit longer
next time I'm there.
Anyway, it is inauguration day. I just finished watching
Donald Trump's speech moments after he was sworn in as the 47th president.
A lot to talk about. It was pretty wild. It was just hard to kind of escape some of the,
the just like the, how historical of an event it was watching the culmination of the
greatest, um, political comeback in American history. I think by far,
I don't, I don't think there's anything that honestly,
that's even very close, um,
to Donald Trump coming back from where he was, uh, four years ago, to,
to this moment. Um, I'll. I'll talk about some of this
stuff and if we have time, perhaps I'll take some questions from the live chat, a couple
things to promote before we get into all of that.
Number one, we have a lot more shows on the road. Me and Robbie the fire Bernstein. The
next stop is Louisville, Kentucky
on January 30th. That's one night only. And then the 31st, February 1st, the 31st and
February 1st, we will be in Fort Wayne, Indiana comic, davesmith.com for those ticket links.
And then we're coming to a bunch of other places. Key West is next after that. Then
Buffalo, Boston, Chicago will be on the road quite a bit. To a bunch of other places Key West is next after that then Buffalo Boston
Chicago will be on the road quite a bit the other quick thing that I did want to announce I believe this has been posted and it is official. I
Will be debating Josh Hammer in an Oxford style debate at
Princeton University. So this should be a fun one. It's an Oxford style
debate. The resolution is the US Israel alliance, a strategic asset for American foreign policy.
So a little bit different than previous Israel Palestine debates that I've done. It's not so
much about like, who's the aggressor in the conflict or the Israeli treatment of the Palestinians?
This is more about American foreign policy and whether Israel is an asset or not.
Obviously, I'll be taking the negative and Josh Hammer will be taking the affirmative.
So come on out for that. I will tweet that link out after I'm done recording this show.
So looking forward to that. Hope to see some of you guys there.
And we'll see. I have no idea what to expect in terms of an audience at Princeton University.
We'll see. I don't know who's going to be in the crowd or what, but it's an Oxford style debate. So it's not, you know,
it's not necessarily advantageous to have the crowd on your side.
So we'll see anyway. Okay. So today was the inauguration.
I want to go through a couple of things that happened before the inauguration
and then talk a little bit about Donald Trump's speech that he gave his first
speech in his second term
I mean, what can you really say about the inauguration itself? It was a very interesting moment
It's always you know, like the first time Donald Trump won
of course a lot of people had fun watching the inauguration watching the the
Of course, a lot of people had fun watching the inauguration, watching the, the, um,
compilations of people in the corporate media melting down over it.
But I just don't, you know, it may have seemed like at the time in 2016, there's no way there could be like a bigger freak out and a bigger victory for Donald Trump.
But it's hard to deny that this just surpasses that by every
metric. And the fact that he was not, you know,
not just all the January 6th stuff. Um, he, you know, he, uh,
I mean, since the last time he won the presidency,
he's been impeached twice. Um, he's been labeled, uh,
domestic terrorists, the end of democracy.
He's had, uh, the justice department weaponized against him.
He's had multiple assassination attempts.
So to watch him back there and to watch like Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris,
uh, have to be in the audience there, it was,
it really was like something, it seems like something out of a scripted drama
or something like that.
It was just kind of surreal.
Also you had a lot of obviously the Trump influence.
So you have this weird mix of a crowd
where you have, you know, George W. Bush and Laura Bush and Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton and
Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, not there. No, no word from big Mike.
But so you have all those people,
but then you also have like Dana white and Tucker Carlson and it's just very
interesting to watch. By the way, I was,
I think I mentioned on the members only show, I was planning on going. I got
invited to the inauguration. It's when between them moving everything inside
and the, just the, I was traveling back from Montana the other day and didn't get
until till late yesterday. It was just a little bit too much. So I didn't end up
doing it, but it was, it was quite a little bit too much. So I didn't end up doing it, but it was,
it was quite a historical moment to watch it. Um,
it was kind of surreal to me. Uh, and you know, as,
as is typically the case with Donald Trump, it's,
from my perspective, Trump leaves a lot to be desired.
Let's just say, but man, is it great watching.
His enemies have to just be humiliated by him because Trump's enemies really
are just some of the worst people in the world. All right.
So speaking of that earlier in the day,
and this was really like, this was something that a lot of us expected.
We've talked about this quite a bit on the show, but seeing it happen was still
totally surreal. This morning, um, in his final act as president of the United
States of America, Joe Biden, um, who of course was also, uh, at the
inauguration today and looked very Joe Biden ish, but Joe Biden earlier today
pardoned Dr. Foushee, General Mark Milley and the January 6th
committee is truly extraordinary.
This just does the I don't know what you could compare this to, but this just doesn't happen.
And just some thoughts on this. I mean, look, first of all,
obviously it's like so blatantly corrupt and just,
I mean, I don't know, it just demonstrates everything. And of course,
they can hide behind this ridiculous
rationalization, which goes something like,
we're just so scared that Donald Trump is going to be a tyrant and weaponize the
justice system that we have to preemptively pardon these innocent people who Donald
Trump maybe would go after. But this is just, I mean, I don't know what to say. This just number one, it just doesn't pass the basic smell test.
Like Donald Trump, uh, look, the last time he was in, he was following the Obama administration.
Okay.
Like Barack Obama, the amount of crimes that were committed by the Obama administration.
I mean, we've talked about all of them over the years, but not just, I mean, the guy kept a secret kill list,
which included American citizens,
American citizens who had not been charged with a crime.
And by the way, didn't just have it on a list,
ended up killing American citizens
who hadn't been charged with a crime.
No trial, no due process, I mean, just blatantly illegal.
He also violated his war powers.
He violated not only the president's authority on war,
but he even violated the amended extra authority that presidents are given
Barack Obama
Launched wars. I mean at least George W
Bush kind of pretended to get like he never got full declarations of war from the Congress
But he got those like, you know votes on the authorization of the use of force against Iraq and Afghanistan
Obama when he did his war in Libya in Syria or Yemen, just didn't even ask.
Just straight up told them, like, I don't care what you think.
So anyway, my point is just there were these blatant crimes committed in the Obama administration
and Donald Trump ran on this kind of lock her up chant of Hillary Clinton and he never
made moves to go after any of them
criminally, so
It just seems pretty
Ridiculous to be like well our concern was that he could go after these guys who from your perspective have not committed crimes, right?
It just doesn't make any sense. The argument is so incredibly weak
If you made this argument about anything else everyone be like look you're grasping at straws here. What's going on is
pretty obvious. Donald Trump has brought in with him a small handful, a small handful
of outsiders, but particularly in the health world. Bobby Kennedy, Jay Bhattacharya, guys like this.
And they're concerned that in this process, they're going to find many of the crimes that
were committed by people like Anthony Fauci.
And there's, you know, look, Fauci, we've there's pretty obvious crimes that you could
point to, like the most obvious one being lying to Congress He was he testified before Congress many times made claims that straight-up turned out to not be true
things about
Like he denied that they were funding gain-of-function research in the Wuhan lab
Which is absolutely what they were doing as a blatant lie and then his his backtrack on it was that like
we're doing is a blatant lie. And then his, his backtrack on it was that like,
he didn't consider that to be true gain of function, but this would never hold up like in a perjury case or something like that,
it would just never hold up. So there's that, but you know,
for everything, it's like when you see, when you see one roach on top of the carpet,
you know, you lift that carpet up, there's going to be thousands more underneath. Um,
that's just what we know about. And I'm, I'm sure the crimes, I mean, you know,
keep in mind Foushee was the one who actually signed off on authorization to
continue funding the Wuhan lab. Um, these, you know, his,
his hands are in the cookie jar when it comes to the very creation of the
virus that
he was then tasked with, you know, um, responding to.
So all of this stuff, and of course it was just recently, you know,
Rob was talking about this a couple of weeks ago on the show, but it's,
there's been all this recent reporting about Liz Cheney, um,
coaching witnesses on the January 6th committee and you know, look,
it's pretty blatant. Like they,
these people committed some very serious crimes and people,
obviously not Joe Biden, but whoever the hell is, is running things.
They wanted to get these pardons done so that these people can't be held
accountable for that. Now I will say this,
as blatantly corrupt as these pardons are, and as transparently
criminal as the government in DC is, I actually think this is kind of great. I think it's
kind of great. I don't, you know, the reality is that the odds of us ever seeing charges brought to Anthony Fauci and him going on trial and, you know,
being prosecuted, convicted for some of this stuff he's done, the odds of that happening were always
very low. You know, look, Donald Trump has some good qualities, but the idea that any of us would
be coming into this with that expectation
that he was going to be that good and that serious and that, uh,
crafty with how to wield power. I just,
I don't think that was ever a realistic hope.
And so if that wasn't going to happen anyway, then all,
what this is is essentially a tacit admission by the Biden administration that crimes were
committed.
And that might be exactly what we need as a
shot in the arm to actually get someone to look into these.
And to me, it doesn't really matter. You know, like none of these people,
it's not like, Oh, if you get Fauci, that would really be the end of the problem.
Or if you get Liz Cheney or something like that, I don't get me wrong.
I would love to see these guys, you know,
prosecuted and convicted of crimes that they did commit. But that wasn't,
that wasn't going to happen anyway. And I, and the truth is Fauci's old.
I mean, I don't know exactly how old Fauci is, but I think he's in his eighties. I mean, he's not,
he doesn't have whatever Joe Biden has, but he's not young.
He's older than Joe Biden, I believe. And so it's not like
justice being served against that one guy is great. And that's what we want.
But even if that can't happen,
the truth is that what we want are these crimes to be
exposed to as many people as possible.
And the fact that he has a pardon doesn't stop anyone from exposing what he did.
And so I hope that this actually, um, this could, you know, potentially backfire, have
like a little bit of a Streisand effect or something like that, right?
Where you're going, I mean,
you're preemptively trying to protect these guys for crimes that I would think,
if anything just leads people to ask the question, well,
what crimes exactly do they need protection from? I mean, this is, um,
this is something. And look again, just to be clear here, it's not,
obviously we want justice and then we want people who committed just to be clear here. It's not obviously we want justice
And then we want people who committed crimes to be prosecuted for them
I'm just saying it was already such a long shot that we were gonna get that that I'm fine with the regime
Kind of revealing itself in the sense. I mean like that there's something about that where once you need a presidential pardon
there's something about that where once you need a presidential pardon,
okay, that that is at least in effect to the layman.
That's an admission of guilt. That's how it seems to me at least. All right, guys, let's take a moment and thank our sponsor for today's show,
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Let's get back into the show. Um, all right, let's, uh, I,
like I said, I will try to get to, um, a couple, uh, questions in the chat. If we have time,
if you have a question that you want to ask, go ahead and throw it in there.
By the way, if you want to be a part of the live chat,
you gotta sign up at partoftheproblem.com. That's how you help out the show.
That's how you get the members only episode. And that's how you get in our, uh,
in our nice live chat here, be a part of the community. All right.
So the other thing that I guess I we should spend a
Minute talking about even though it doesn't technically have to do with the inauguration day
Although I guess it does have a little something to do with Donald Trump
But it looks like
Donald Trump saved tick-tock
Yesterday and
It's unclear to me exactly what's going to happen. Um,
but it is interesting that Donald Trump, uh,
essentially came in and said he was going to, uh,
sign an executive order to like give Tik Tok another six months or
something like that. Like he can't undo the bill that was passed in Congress, but he can, you know,
use his executive powers to like give them a little bit more time.
We'll see what's going to happen.
If there's going to be a forced sale or if tick tock is going to shut down or
what. But one of the things that's interesting is that there's a lot of people
who have, um, you could say flip flopped on this issue,
or you could say they've evolved on it depending on
how charitable you feel like being but Trump and many, um, uh, people in the MAGA world
were like the harshest critics of TikTok and to some degree for good reason. Um, but of course,
it's mostly because they were trying to position themselves as the
China Hawks. They, and you know,
Tik Tok is kind of owned by China a little bit,
you know, it's not like it's not exactly owned by China,
but the parent company does I think have some Chinese shareholders and there's
for a long time there was, you know,
the, the view was that, Oh, well,
because China's so involved in Tik TOK and it's poisoning our children's minds or
something like that. And so that's why we need to ban it.
That's why we need to shut it down.
That was always very in the background and no moves wherever it never really came close to being bound.
It wasn't until, you know,
another foreign country got involved.
And that's really what led to this bill being passed.
And you could listen to the head of the ADL and his own words, uh,
talking about this. What's, what really happened here with tick tock.
And I think it's important for people to kind of, uh,
keep their eyes open about this and understand what's going on.
It is not that, um, China owns tech talk.
That is not the problem. There have been members of Congress, you know,
Bill Clinton sold secrets to the Chinese members of Congress have been having
affairs with Chinese spies. There's never this type of snapback reaction.
Okay. However you feel about the CCP or their influence in America or any of
that, that's not what got it done.
What got it done was that as Israel has been conducting this war against Gaza,
got it done was that as Israel has been conducting this war against Gaza,
Tik Tok has been like the number one news source for young people in this country.
And it is dominated by the pro Palestinian side,
by the critical of Israel side.
That's what got the thing shut down. And you know, Tik Tok,
I was going to say quietly, maybe quietly isn't exactly the right term.
That might be my own bias,
but I was going to say tick tock quietly became like the news source for young
people. And as somebody who's not a young person,
I mean I'm not exactly old, but I'm not young.
And I've never on TikTok.
I don't use the thing.
And it's just like this totally was off my radar.
But man, I mean, if you had seen the reaction over just like the last few days,
I mean, this is the social media app for young people.
And essentially the establishment had no control over this thing.
You know, they could say like, Oh, the problem is that China has control over it or something
like that. But I don't really think that's the issue. The issue is that the corporate media and
the political class and all of these guys, the old institutions have,
you know, this is something very scary to them. I mean, it's very, first of all,
it's already, as we talk about all the time with all social media,
it's already scary to them that they've lost their monopoly on the flow of
information. But now you've got the,
the young people, the gen Z, you know,
22 year old kids who are not only
Today it's not like us like like 41 year olds like myself or anyone like around my age
We kind of like remember a time when the corporate media was dominant
We're still very aware of the corporate media and then then we go to like these other, now we have the alternative, you know,
shows on the internet, but these young kids, these 22 year olds,
they never even like they know there was never even a time when they knew about
the corporate media. They are just completely removed from that world.
You know, you saw this, um,
back last year when Osama bin Laden's letter to America, uh, went viral and all, and it was all driven on Tik TOK.
I mean, some of it spilled over into other platforms,
but that's the main engine for it was Tik TOK.
So imagine not only has the establishment lost their
monopoly on the flow of information,
but the new thing that's coming in that is the dominant force in that scene is undermining the current war effort.
Well, that's the type of thing that'll get a reaction out of Washington,
DC. And that's what it got. And for Donald Trump to come in,
look, you know, I, I want to be clear about this. And I think I'll,
I'll get into this a little bit, uh, in the rest of the show, but
I'm not,
my role here is never going to be to be a Donald Trump cheerleader. I mean,
I certainly will give him credit when he does the right things.
And I'm going to be very critical of him when he does the wrong things,
just like I was in his first term. I,
I expect particularly on the issue of Israel for Donald Trump to do some bad
things. I look at who's in his cabinet, look at the people around him, look at who's given
him money, look at his own rhetoric. I expect bad policy to come. It can't be ignored though
that he already got a ceasefire deal and that he has, you know, very subtly
kept that tick tock engine alive, which is what, look, they are not quiet about this.
This is not what it's not what the ADL wanted. It's not what APAC wanted. And so if you already see him very early on,
kind of going against that powerful,
that that power source, there's at least something encouraging about that.
And you know, the, um,
the, the Tik TOK thing is interesting. I think also, I don't know if you saw it,
what is that? There's like the straight up, Chinese version of the app, I think.
And like a whole bunch of people were signing up for that.
One of the things that's interesting about all of this is that this is going to
be, you know, assuming that in another six months,
they still haven't sold or something like that,
and they're going to try to shut it down again.
This is going to be an interesting experiment. You know, there's never,
there, there, we've never really seen anything quite like this.
I mean, what was the one I'm blanking on it, but what was the one,
was it parlor? The one that they like shut down. They essentially,
ah, red note. Yes. That's the, that's the one I was looking for.
Thank you, Natalie. Um, the, the, um,
parlor I think was like crushing it. Like it came out, it might be,
it was either parlor or one other one. I might be confusing them,
but it was crushing it. They came out and they were like, Hey,
we're going to be the free speech alternative to Twitter.
This was like at the height of, um, of Twitter, you know,
being the most sensorious, uh, that they've ever been.
And people wanted that there was a lot of demand for it.
And then they got it taken off the app store.
And once you're taken off the app store, I mean, that's basically it as an app,
like you're totally screwed.
And if people have to go to your website and download, it's just not going to
work. Um, so there was,
but this is totally different because this is not something that's like building that has potential that a lot of people want to sign up for.
This is an already established,
like this is the go to social media site for an
entire generation. And so what happens when you try to remove that? I mean,
like, what do they think? They think these 20 year olds are going to go, all right,
TikTok's gone. I guess I got to turn on CNN or read the Washington
post. I mean, that's not going to happen. There's going to be some other app.
There's going to be some other, you know what I mean?
Like there'll be somewhere else where they all go.
And so there's something just kind of interesting about that. Like trying,
like there is so much toothpaste out of this tube.
There is no way you're putting it all back. And so anyway,
I'm just kind of interested to see what that means and where people go from here.
Uh,
I don't think it's going to work out the way that, uh,
some of the people in the establishment, uh, wanted to, okay, here, let me, um,
let me take a couple questions here. I got a David strong name.
It says Dave in light of the pre pardons,
this means the fifth amendment no longer applies and they are, uh,
and they are compelled to testify. Uh,
should they bring up all the pre pardons and force them, uh,
to admit and expose their criminal actions?
That's an interesting question. Uh,
and if they lie, uh,
then they committed perjury and can be charged with that regardless. Well,
I don't know exactly how you're even going to get them in the trial.
Is that right though? That's an interesting, uh, so like I don't, you know,
I'm no lawyer and I'm not sure. So is that right?
That do you lose the fifth amendment if you already have a pardon, right?
Cause you're not technically incriminating yourself because you can't be charged
for it. Okay. But then how the hell do you even get them on the witness stand?
I have to be somebody else involved, I guess,
who's charged them they're testifying at their trial. It's an interesting question.
I really, uh, I really don't know. Uh, I think,
you know,
we gotta be somewhat realistic with our expectations.
And this is one of the things that's interesting about the dynamic of Donald
Trump winning again, is that there is Liz,
there's this feeling of like revolution.
Um, there's this feeling like the regime has been defeated
because Donald Trump's been put back in there. Now that's not true.
It's just simply not true. There has been no revolution in our system of government.
The regime has not even kind of been defeated yet. Um,
and you know that they're going to have some tricks up their sleeves and you know, that'll be interesting to see,
but there is something interesting about it does seem like that's what so much
of the Trump base wants this to be and believes it is the
reality. I think for people who pay attention to this is that like, I mean,
you see what's up there. It's not, you know, Donald Trump is, um, he's not a revolutionary figure.
He has a handful, a small handful of outsiders with him.
It'll be interesting to see what they can get done, but there's far more
establishment type picks than there are outsiders there.
And Donald Trump already had four years and there was no even attempt at any type of like revolution in any, you know, sector of this country.
And so that's not exactly happening. So in other words, my point is just that we don't have the revolution.
I'm not expecting to see mass trials of all these people. I'd love to, but I don't think that's going to happen. Um, what I'm interested in is how much of this stuff can be reversed and how much of
it can be exposed that that actually might be interesting.
And like I will say that with,
like if you're looking for a revolution out of this, uh,
presidency,
Bobby Kennedy and Jay Bhattacharya are probably the closest to it. We'll see.
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe cash Patel is really going to be that guy. Maybe Tulsi is going
to come in and be great. Maybe Pete Heseth will be great. I don't know, but there's,
you know, let's just say like if we were, if we really, if the hope really is that Fauci
is going to be charged and prosecuted,
we're already at,
we're already like 10 levels beyond what we can reasonably expect here.
So at the very least I hope this stuff is exposed.
And if it could be done that way through getting them to testify, then yes,
I'd be all for it. All for it.
Okay. So I guess we could move to, All for it. Um, okay.
So I guess we could move to, um, to Donald Trump's speech, um, because he did give his speech or here.
Let me, um, let me actually answer this.
Jason asks, what do you think about the rumor of a vague being kicked from Doge?
Yeah, that is the rumor.
I do not have anything to confirm or deny that.
But I'll say it like this.
I know that obviously the rumor,
what they saw, they said something about like tension
with staff or something like that.
I don't even understand how this is possible. Like what, what staff?
This you guys just invented a department and made two people the head of it.
Who was he having a problem with the staff? Don't they work for him or so?
I don't exactly get it.
But obviously in the background of all of this is that the vague,
um,
really pissed off a lot of the MAGA base with his,
that whole post about American culture and you know,
he went after saved by the bell and boy meets world and that kind of backfired
on them. Um, I,
I understand why so many people were upset about that
tweet.
I do not think that the reaction by some is justified at all.
And I think that, um,
I think the vague Rama Swami was a real asset to MAGA and
the, you know,
it'd be very foolish and short sighted of them to try to boot this guy over
like over something that I just don't think warrants that
here's from what I've seen as somebody who's watched this movie a time or two,
as I've said before, and watch,
this is what's going to happen over the next few weeks and few months.
There is going to be an attempt to remove all of the good people around Donald
Trump.
So all of the people who are a threat to power,
they are going, they are going to systematically try to remove all of them.
And this is what happened in Trump's first administration.
You know, it's like he came in there with some guys who were outsiders,
or at least to some degree, or at least maybe some of them were insiders,
but they at least departed from the, the,
the establishment, you know, someone like a general, Michael Flynn,
Steve Bannon, a true outsider. Okay. And what happened?
These guys were systematically removed from the Trump administration.
And that's what they're going to try to do.
They're going to try to get the people who are a threat to power out of there.
And I will say that Vivek Ramaswamy being one of the absolute best people
who Donald Trump's got in his orbit, him being removed so quickly is a really bad sign.
These rumors that you're talking about, these started before he was sworn in.
So I just, that's something I'm very concerned of. And I think that it might be a little short sighted for some of the MAGA people who are like pissed off that he insulted,
saved by the bell or something like that to not see the bigger picture here.
But there's going to be efforts to get Elon Musk out.
There's going to be efforts to get Bobby Kennedy out and Tulsi and,
you know, everyone who's good.
And so that is, uh, that is something that we should be paying attention to.
All right. Adam, uh, writes, Dave, will you still get a chance to meet Trump through
Rogan, even if Trump's not likely to do more long
form podcasts.
Who knows, man?
Who knows?
I, uh, if I do, I'll make sure to let you guys know.
But uh, anyway, we'll, uh, we will, we'll see what happens.
You know, I really don't I don't know and of course, you know everything
Everything changes once you're once your president again, so I'd imagine that
you know the way these things typically work is like
The presidents get insulated and a lot of people get kept away from them
So I'm not holding my breath for anything like that to happen
Honestly, though as I've as I've told you guys before my attitude has always been and a lot of people get kept away from them. So I'm not holding my breath for anything like that to happen.
Honestly though, as I've, as I've told you guys before,
my attitude has always been that I don't really need to meet Donald Trump or me.
Like, like Joe's idea of us all doing a podcast together, that would be really cool. You know, I would love to do something like that. But it's like when I was,
uh, when I was on Tucker's show and everyone was like, Oh, we got to get everyone on social
media is like, Oh, we got to get Dave and Trump to sit down. Dave
should be his, you know, like, advisor or something like that.
It's like, you don't if you really wanted my advice, you
could just listen to any of my shows. I put my feelings are out
there. They're public. So there's not really too much that
I would have that it's like, Oh, I'd say this privately to
Donald Trump, but not publicly. It's the, it's, if he wanted my advice, he can,
he can get it. Um, but anyway, it'll be,
it will be interesting to see what happens. Um, who knows? You know,
I certainly wouldn't turn down the opportunity to, uh,
to meet him or obviously to podcast with him. That'd be pretty cool.
I'd be lying if I. That'd be pretty cool.
I'd be lying if I said that wouldn't be cool. Okay. Um,
all right, all right. Just sorry guys, just looking through the chat here to see, um,
cause it's an interesting day.
Wanted to see what a what other questions might be floating around there.
All right. Um, let's, let's go to, uh, to Donald Trump's speech. Um,
he, he gave what I thought was a pretty
good speech. Had some very good, some very good portions of it had some not so great
portions of it, but you know, that is, we got to, we got to deal with what we have,
not with what we wish we had. So I wanted to, um, here, let me pull up, uh, say,
Sagar and jetty was like, he tweeted a bunch of, uh, he,
he tweeted a bunch of the lines out. So I was just pulling that up to go through
it. Uh, Donald Trump, he, he opened his speech, um,
by, uh, declaring that, um, what was the line?
Sorry guys.
I apologize for that.
He opened his speech declaring that from this moment on America's decline is
over. Um, this was a crowd favorite line.
Um, he, he's,
he said very early on that he's going to declare a national emergency at the
Southern border. All illegal entry will be immediately halted and we will begin the process of removing millions of illegal aliens
This is going to be
very interesting to see
now it's you know, it's like with a lot of policies and
The immigration stuff
is probably the best example of this,
but there can be things that are very popular with the American people that
oftentimes Americans have a blind spot to the actual logistics of how these
policies are going to be implemented.
And this is true in general with government policies. Like, you know, I think that, uh, you know, like for example,
let's say people on the left who like to talk about gun control a lot, right?
The people on the left, um, might, it might be very easy for them to say we should ban all AR 15s. Maybe even some of them who are a little more to the left will say we should ban
all, all handguns or whatever.
And that's one thing. It's one thing to say that.
Um, it's easy in your mind when you say,
I support gun control, even if, even like a really radical version of it,
like I support, you know, making private fire firearms, you say, I support gun control, even if even like a really radical version of it, like I support, you know, making private fire firearms, you know, illegal to own in your mind, you're kind of just
saying, I wish we live in a lived in a world without guns. And that's easy to do. That's,
that's very easy. You wish we lived in a world without guns. That way no one could run into a
classroom and shoot everybody up. It's that makes sense on some superficial level. Um,
and that's very easy to say it's very different and almost no
left-winger who ever talks about gun control is ever actually really
envisioning what it would look like. You know, like, I mean, like,
it's one thing to support in your head, the idea,
I wish we didn't have any guns in this country.
It's a whole nother thing to actually support what it would look like to
implement even just an AR 15 ban,
let alone like actually attempting to go cause cause what's it going to look
like? I mean, it would be a civil war in this country is what it would be.
I mean, there is the bottom line, no matter how you feel about guns. I'm not
even getting into the argument against gun control, which I think there's a very strong argument
against. But the fact is that there are tens of millions of Americans who are not going to give
their guns up. So now what? You know, I mean, like now what? You know, think about Texas. You want
to try to disarm Texas? Do you know how hard that's going to be? I mean, you, the amount
of force and violence that you would have to be comfortable using to go door to door
in Texas to round up all the guns. And what are you gonna do to the people who won't give them up voluntarily? By the way, important detail, they have guns.
By definition, 100% of the people
who won't give their guns up have guns.
And so what are you gonna do?
You're gonna need a lot more guns on your side.
There's gonna be a tremendous amount of violence
that would be necessary.
I mean, it would come to a civil war.
There's no question about it,
which is why even progressive Democrats don't ever actually say we're going
to round up all the guns because they just know they know that's not a possibility. And
so anyway, now immigration is a different topic, but there is something to the fact
that like to do like mass deportations, I mean, you think about it the last time with Donald Trump.
Now, don't get me wrong.
He's got some more juice on this issue than he had last time,
but think about how effectively they were able to weaponize
that family separation stuff.
And don't get me wrong to some degree,
this is, it is the fact that the media weaponizes
the decency of the American people against them. But part of it is also just the decency of the American people against them.
But part of it is also just the decency of the American people.
And that if you if you've got images now, of course,
they would use images where they'd show facilities that were built under Obama.
And they'd have pictures of little kids who hadn't been separated
from their families and they like, yes, they're dishonest liars.
We all know that. But the truth is that any policy where you're going,
where you have federal agents going in and rounding up peaceful people is going
to be very, very difficult to sell. Um, it's going to be very,
very easy for the corporate media to spin as like an outrage.
Um, or maybe even in some places correctly call it an outrage.
And the fact that in abstract,
most of America goes, yeah, illegal immigrants shouldn't be here.
We shouldn't have open borders. We shouldn't have any of this. That's going to,
just like I was saying with the left and the gun control,
that's a different thing than actually watching the policy being implemented and the level
of violence that it might require.
So it, this doesn't mean Donald Trump doesn't have any options.
In fact, he's got a lot of options.
I think that you have, um, there's a certain number of cases of people who have already
been like ordered to be deported, who haven't been deported yet.
There are violent criminals.
There there's groups that you could go after that won't get that type of
backlash, which if the Trump administration is smart,
that's where they would start.
It would start with things like that. Uh, and, and the, the most important thing right now I would say also is to, uh,
is to cut off the flow. I mean, that's the re if you ever want to get your
immigration system under control, well,
then you can't just have people flooding in and you have no idea how many of
them are. So him declaring a state of emergency at the southern border
That does seem to be a good first step toward that
Goal, but it's gonna be very interesting and Donald Trump has to be smart
You know
It's like even when you come in with some degree of a mandate as I think Donald Trump does have in his second term here
That usually it's like okay you get like one or two signature things that you can do.
And if one of those two is unpopular, there goes your mandate. It's all over.
You know, Obama, when he first came in,
had about as much of a mandate as as much as any president in my lifetime has.
And this is, we're talking to Obama in January 20th, 2009,
when he first came in the first time had record high or close to record high approval ratings and
He had a lot of lofty thoughts about
Trying to do a two-state solution with Israel Palestine
You know
if you of course if you remember he went to Cairo and he gave that speech where he
Apologized for some of Americans foreign policy in the past. There were a lot of things he wanted to do
he was convinced to do the stimulus and health care first and the health care the Obamacare thing was
just so unpopular that that was it mandate done and then good luck getting
a two-state solution in fucking Israel when uh when you don't have that mandate
anymore that's it and so Donald Trump's got to be smart about this he does have
a mandate to get the immigration system under control.
I think that's going to have to involve deportations,
but he's got to be smart about what groups he goes after. And there's so many groups. I mean, look, you could start,
you could just start with the violent criminals who are illegal immigrants and
that'll keep you busy for a while. That's not good.
You're not going to be able to generate that much outrage from people who are
opposed to that. It's just going to be very, very difficult to, to do.
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Okay, sorry checking back in on the chat here. Okay
Trump said I will send troops to the Southern border to repel
the disastrous invasion of our country. We will also be designated in the cartels as
foreign terrorist organizations. Okay. The first part of that's good. The second part
really isn't really isn't, and this will be a major mistake by Donald Trump. This look,
that may sound like not that big a deal to people.
It might sound like, oh yeah, I mean, there's fucking,
these people are bringing drugs into our country.
Yeah, call them terrorists, sure.
This is a legal issue.
And post 9-11, what calling these groups,
what designating them as terrorists means
is that the president has unlimited war-making ability
with Mexico.
Listen, I mean, I don't know who thinks this is a good idea, but you have to have your
head examined.
If you think actually having a military confrontation with Mexico is a positive for America, let's
get out of this war business.
I mean, which one of the wars over the last 25 years has made us so, uh, um,
so rich and so free. And,
and that second part is a huge part of it. I mean, like the, one of the,
the biggest reasons to oppose the warfare state is because
it always inevitably leads to a crackdown on the liberty of the American
citizens.
And my God, you think having a war right here on our southern border,
what's that going to look like?
So this is to me the exact wrong way,
the exact wrong way to go about this.
Trump said, today I will declare a national emergency and we will drill baby
drill.
Um, I, I'd expect, I think today is going to be a big day of executive orders.
That's what everything that's being reported on, on our next episode.
We'll probably be going through some of those.
I'd expect a bunch of them to be related to the energy sector deregulation, more drilling,
things like that.
Um, and I think that's just great, just brilliant, well played, very smart, and is going to be good for the economy.
Good for Trump, good for the American people.
Um, so I was, I was happy to see that.
He also said they were going to revoke the electric vehicle
mandate, which is excellent.
Um, it's all.
You know, like I think I've, I've mentioned this before on the show, but there
was one, this is like from a before on the show, but there was one
this is like from a couple of years ago, but there is one of it's got to be up there with
the best interactions I've ever seen in a congressional hearing.
But it was a, when Pete Buttigieg was testifying and you know, is the transportation secretary
and Thomas Massey was grilling him about electric cars. If you've never seen this, just go watch it.
Cause you know, Thomas Massey is, um, is gotta be,
if not the one of the smartest members of Congress. I mean, I think,
what did I think the guy went to MIT or something like that?
And it's just like a really brainy person. And even though he's like,
you know, he's essentially a Ron Paulian, like a libertarian type.
He is like big on green energy and he built his own home and put his own solar
panels in and stuff like that.
So he like really knows what he's talking about and him just tearing Pete
Buttigieg to shreds. And his argument was just, it was so simple,
but it was just that with the whole electric car thing, like,
it's fine as long as only a few people are doing it.
Like it's fine to have electric cars the way we have electric cars right now,
but all this stuff about like banning gas fueled cars and
insisting that people have to have electric cars go,
they have to be charged from the power grid.
And we simply can't support that.
There's that we'd have to completely overhaul our power grids.
Like no one seems to have a plan to do that. Certainly not by 2030.
There's means just goddamn ridiculous. Um,
so that was excellent that Donald Trump said that, um, uh, Trump said,
instead of taxing our citizens to enrich other countries,
we will tariff and tax other countries to enrich our citizens.
He then announced, uh,
that he was going to create an external revenue service to collect all tariff
duties. Um, okay. This I just think is really
bad, bad economics, bad Donald Trump, bad Trump. Look, it kind of sounds nice.
The idea of like, Hey, we're not going to tax our own citizens anymore.
Instead of an internal revenue service, let's have an external revenue service, right?
Let's let all the foreigners pay the taxes
There's a few problems with this number one
Let's
Let's get the first part, right?
So, okay. I mean if Donald Trump was literally gonna say that let's stop taxing our own citizens and start taxing
foreigners. Okay, fine.
But then abolish the IRS and the income tax.
Start with that, start with that. And you know what?
You'll get a lot less argument out of me. But of course,
we all know he's not going to start with that. He's not, see,
this is why, um, you know, people always argue, um, from, you know,
there's an argument in economic circles for many, many decades at this point now,
but, uh,
sometimes people would argue for a consumption tax, uh,
rather than an income tax. And there are, you know,
arguments to be made for why one is preferable to the other.
I'm not so sure that a consumption tax is preferable to the income tax.
I mean, it,
a consumption tax is a lot more regressive than an income tax,
meaning that like a consumption tax hits poor people a lot harder than the
income tax does. I mean, the income tax, it is a big bill for most working people, but if you are really poor,
you're not going to be paying too much income tax, but you got to consume.
You still have to eat. Whereas, you know, um,
the, the rich make much higher incomes and yes,
they consume also, but it's not like they're,
it's just,
you're going to end up getting a lot more of the revenue from poor people.
I don't particularly like that. Um,
but the major argument to me against the consumption tax, like with,
uh, if you remember, um, what's his name, the dude who died from COVID, uh,
Herman Kane, when he ran for president, it was kind of like a novelty thing.
I think he ran like fried chicken chains and then ran for president and then
wrote a book. But yes, it's the, yes, I see someone that Kaz in the chat just
part of that. Yes. I, this is what I'm thinking of 9 9 9.
That was what he kept running on. And his idea was, what was it?
It was like to lower the income tax to nine percent and then add
Consumption tax of nine percent. The reason why a plan like that is such a disaster is
That so you're saying you're not abolishing the income tax
You're just going to lower the rates down to nine percent
And then you're gonna create a whole new tax and that the rates down to nine percent and then you're going to create a whole new tax
And that rate's going to be at nine percent
Well, okay
now you've gotten the American people used to this whole new tax and now of course the next government or the next people and maybe
even your administration by the end of it if
You know if
Enough revenue isn't being raised. Well, let's take that nine, nine,
and make it 11, 11, let's make it 15, 15.
Now we have these two different tax bases and we can just raise both of them,
which by the way is what always happens. This is how the income tax started.
The it, when the income tax started,
they said it'll only ever be like one or 2% of your income. So what do you even,
what are you even fighting about? But of course,
as the great Ron Paul used to always point out when you concede 1%,
you concede a hundred percent of the principle.
And so the principle was the ultimate concession. Like this,
this is how they sold the income tax. They go,
it'll only apply to the rich and only be like one or 2% of their income.
So what's your problem even with it? However, once you pass the income tax,
what's the principle that you've, that you've given up is that the government
owns your income. You know, once there's an income tax,
you've conceded that in principle, the government owns your income.
And they, you get to keep 99% of it.
Like let's say if it's a 1% tax because they, they choose, it's only 1%,
but it's their choice
Then okay. So look this obviously explodes and now we have the income tax that we know today
Likewise, we all know Donald Trump's not actually going to abolish the income tax in the IRS before he starts his tariff policy
And so it's good what we're gonna end up having is what we have right now, plus these tariffs. Okay. And then, I mean,
Donald Trump is just wrong about tariffs. He just really doesn't understand it.
If you think the idea is that we're, we're taxing foreigners, well,
no, we're not. We're not the United States of America's federal government.
Doesn't have the authority to tax foreigners.
What we can do is say, if you want to sell your products here,
we're going to charge you this much.
But like anyone with the most rudimentary understanding of economics should know
that all that does is pass the costs on to the consumers.
That's all the government has the power to do is to make products cost you more money
So now like you in other words, you already have the option of buying american-made products. They're just more expensive
That's why people buy so many products that are made in china or wherever
Um, mostly china
Okay
So all the government can do is take away that option from you take away the option of cheaper goods just in the same
sense that like let's say I went to
Let's say I went to like I I'm a government
I have the power of a government and I went to a store in my neighborhood here and they're selling something for a dollar
They're selling some trinket for a dollar
for a dollar. They're selling some trinket for a dollar. And I said to them,
well, as the government, I say that every time you sell one of these $1 trinkets, you owe me $10. Okay.
Like I'm going to impose a tariff of $10 on these $1 trinkets. Well,
do you think they're going to keep selling them for $1?
Does anybody think that's how economics works? That they'll just go, okay,
well we're going to keep selling them for a dollar and we're going to lose $9
on every sale. No, they will be sold for $11
because they need to get that $10 plus the $1 that they needed to begin with.
And so who have I actually charged money to?
I've charged money to the customers of those stores, to the American people.
So all you're talking about is not removing this tax and adding another tax to
the American people, a disaster. And if he actually implements it,
it will, it will totally,
it will undo all of the positives of all the stuff he's talking about in the energy sector
Wyan
Tustin says tariffs are just used as a negotiating tactic
To get other countries to lower their tariffs on us. Listen if that's the case then fine
So in other words, right, just to be clear for people so that they're following this,
if your argument is that let's say China has a tariff on our goods, as they do on many
of our goods.
So if China has a tariff, and then if Donald Trump's able to go and say, hey, I'm going
to put a tariff on your stuff unless you eliminate the tariff on us. And then the result of it is that we don't implement tariffs and China reduces theirs,
then yes, that would be a win-win and that would be a great strategy. And that, okay, I can't say
anything bad about that if the result overall is less tariffs. But the major problem here, right,
is that that just simply is not what Donald Trump is saying. That is not what he's saying. And it doesn't seem like he's bullshitting.
It seems like he really believes it. Now,
if you're going to make the argument that this is all an act and this is 4D
chess, I just, I'm,
I've heard a lot of arguments about how this is 4D chess from Donald Trump and
usually taken to its logical conclusion,
it leaves people to believe that he was still really president in 2021 and was
about to arrest all the pedophiles or something like that. I don't think it's true.
When Donald Trump talks about tariffs,
he specifically says that tariffs once made us rich and they can make us rich
again. It does not seem clear that his end goal is actually less tariffs.
Now, if that were the case and that's how he's using them,
then you got a whole different story. But I don't think that's,
I don't think that's right. Um, yeah, I just, it's, it's just,
the government cannot make people wealthier by stealing more money from them.
That is just, uh, something that is economically impossible. Okay.
Um, let's see what, uh, what else,
um, he, he mentioned Doge. Uh, he said, I will sign an executive order to end all government censorship and bring back
free speech to America. That would be great.
And I'm hoping that comes today. Uh, we will see. Um,
he threw some red meat to the base, um, said, uh, um, he threw some red meat to the base. Um,
said, uh, um,
the government policy will recognize only male and female genders.
Um, he said, uh, we will, uh, forge a society that is colorblind and merit based.
I certainly think that would be great. Um,
and to whatever extent he's able to do that,
that is the way that any decent society or any decent government ought to treat
its citizens.
He said my proudest legacy will be that of a peacemaker and a unifier.
And that will be, will be interesting if,
if he can pull that off. We will see. Um, you know, look,
obviously a lot of us will be looking for some,
some early signs that he does plan on doing things differently. You know,
he said not today in his speech,
but in a speech yesterday at an event they had last night,
he said that he's going to declassify, um, the JFK files. And I believe he said the nine 11 stuff.
I think he said nine 11 JFK and Martin Luther King that I'll tell you,
um, despite what may or may not be in those files,
that would be a huge signal if he actually does that. Um, obviously, you know,
freeing Ross Ulbricht is one that I care about personally because I, you know, I know his mother Lynn and I've known her for many years. Um, obviously, you know, freeing Ross Ulbrich is one that I care about personally because I, you know,
I know his mother Lynn and I've known her for many years. He,
he very explicitly made these promises over and over again.
I'm hoping that we see that he did say he'd do it on day one. Um,
I'm not going to lose my mind if he doesn't do it the first day,
but I'm expecting it the first month at the very least. Um,
and I will lose my mind if he doesn't do that in the first month. Um,
but I would look, it'll be interesting to see signals even literally today.
I mean like we'll get some more information at the end, but, uh,
it would be very interesting to see signals, uh, pardoning Snowden,
um, even pardoning, uh, Assange, even though he's out,
which these things would be signals that he kind of means business this time or
that he, when I say he means business,
meaning he's actually here to try to drain the swamp and try to shake things up.
That'll be interesting. And so, you know, from my perspective,
I'm sitting here. I never supported Donald Trump until this year.
I never voted for him until this year.
I was pretty highly critical of his first four years,
I think it's fair to say,
and I was pretty critical of him for the most
of the four years of Joe Biden's administration.
I'm gonna try my best to approach this with an open mind, but my obligation is to always
tell you guys the truth.
So as soon as Donald Trump starts fucking up in a big way, my job is going to be, you
know, to be honest ass for that.
All right, that's going to get cut out of context.
I just know it. Um, anyway,
one of the things that it's an exciting time for America. And I,
as I said before, I don't think we really got the revolution that many people envision this to be, but I do love the spirit of that.
And I love the fact that so many people are like America's back and like have
this feeling of positivity. I think it's something we've,
we've really needed in this country for a while and haven't had.
Um, and so that's kind of great. And it's interesting. I mean, look, there's really never been a situation like this before. Uh,
Donald Trump is far from perfect. And I think I, I like to think, I,
I know that about as well as anybody. I think that, um, I've, you know, I, you know,
I think I'd make the case against him about as well as anybody does. Um,
but you gotta,
you gotta acknowledge that there's just never really been a situation like this
before. I mean, Donald Trump for all of his faults in his first term,
he is,
it's quite possible that he had some vision of
being able to work with the system.
And it's very possible.
And I would say likely that he just totally underestimated how vicious they would be with
him.
That doesn't exist anymore.
That's, I mean, this guy has been through everything that could be thrown at somebody.
And he came out at the end of the day, a winner, you know, it's that old,
like if you come at the King, you better miss, you better not miss, you know,
you swat. If you swat a B, you got to kill the B, you know, if there's,
there's a hornet in your yard and you go to swat at it,
you got to kill that thing. Cause otherwise you've just off a hornet.
And maybe there's a chance that that's what Donald Trump is, that all these guys really came for him and he's still one at
the end. Maybe he's going to shake some things up or at least attempt to. I know I'm interested
to watch and I'm sure most of you guys are too. All right. We will be back tomorrow with
a brand new episode. We will, uh, Robbie will be with me. I'm sure we will discuss, um,
any executive orders that were written today
as well as other things going on in the world. Catch you guys then hope to see it some live
shows soon. Hope to see some of you guys at Princeton university for this debate. That's
going to be a, that's going to be a cool one. All right. Catch you next time. Peace. Thanks for watching!