PBD Podcast - Glenn Greenwald | PBD Podcast | Ep. 298
Episode Date: August 25, 2023Today on the PBD Podcast, Glenn Greenwald joins the show. Glenn Edward Greenwald is an American journalist, author, and former lawyer. Glenn is most well known for his role in breaking the Edward Snow...den story. Watch Glenn's podcast - "System Update" on Rumble: https://bit.ly/3OP9tZq Listen to Glenn's podcast - "System Update" on Spotify, iTunes and Google: https://bit.ly/3KYhRER Get Your Tickets for The Vault 2023 NOW ⬇️⬇️ The BIGGEST EVENT in VT History! *TOM BRADY, MIKE TYSON & PATRICK BET-DAVID on one stage!* https://www.thevault2023.com/vault-conference-2023?el=YTPODHTEP Subscribe to: Adam Sosnick - @ValuetainmentMoney Vincent Oshana - @ValuetainmentComedy Tom Ellsworth - @bizdocpodcast Want to get clear on your next 5 business moves? https://valuetainment.com/academy/ Join the channel to get exclusive access to perks: https://bit.ly/3Q9rSQL Download the podcasts on all your favorite platforms https://bit.ly/3sFAW4N Text: PODCAST to 310.340.1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller Your Next Five Moves (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I
what I become
No, I like the guy Vincent Oshana for choice words
I think the highest rated program for that show which was it was it was shown Brazil was a highest rated program Then what was the fight all about? I thought I'm like what are they fighting them?
Obviously you guys are not speaking in
Portuguese say what had happened. It was right at the height of this reporting I was doing in Brazil that was extremely
tumultuous.
It was really kind of shaking the country to its foundations.
So it was very polarizing.
And the person with whom I had had this fight had gone on his own show.
I think maybe like six weeks earlier and it said something like, you know, my husband,
um, who was the pastor wave, but at the time he was a member of Congress and I was in the
middle of this, uh, this, that doing this journalism and he said something like, what I want to
know is they have, they adopted two kids, they're raising two kids, who's taking care of these
kids. He's a congressman, he's doing all this bullshit in brazilia, the other ones dealing with stolen documents.
He's raising the kids as though it's uncommon these days for
kids to have two parents who are working. I think we need a judge, a
minor judge to go and investigate whether these kids should be
taken out of the home. So if there's anything that, you know, as
a father, someone can say that is going to make you kind of
angry, it's maybe you should have your kids taken away from you.
And then when I got to this interview, he wasn't supposed to be there.
They told me at the last minute he would be.
I said, fine.
I'm happy to talk to anybody.
They sat him down.
I don't know if you saw the video.
Photo 417.
Trust me.
I saw it.
Inches.
Oh, look at how closely we were.
Oh my god.
They put it on the side.
We were all like sitting on top of each other.
Glenn, you're ready to throw down at this point.
Yeah, you're sizing up as John.
I mean, I was worth, I know they wanted they started off by,
okay, let's talk about the news.
And I said, yeah, before we do that, I'm going to eat an apology.
Oh, there we go.
Glenn, green wall, get it in right there.
You'll see I did not initiate the physical confrontation.
But you did finish it, though. Oh,
glad, glen. Oh, glen. Oh, glen, you got to block your face. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, show, BVD. Yeah, you can see why.
So yeah, that's the kind of thing I'm ready for.
Did you bitch slap him?
Yeah, I mean, it was hard.
You see this gigantic guy.
They was like the Jerry Springer security team on the back.
So there was only so much I could do.
I had never been in a physical conversation on a news program before.
It's not like I go around engaging in physical.
Is this a big show?
No, yeah, it's a gigantic. It's like one of go around engaging in fiscal. Is this a big show? Is this a big show? Okay.
It's like one of the biggest shows in Brazil.
And let's do our best to get along today.
You know, you're very close to Vinnie.
He's an agitator.
I'm going to be cool.
Yeah.
I'm meditated this morning.
I also did some workout.
Vinnie just slapped me on the entire time.
Just so we're just talking about.
Well, for those who don't know,
let me actually properly introduce who is here
because, you know, for
those who know you're here, you know, exactly why you're here.
You want to know what's going on.
This man's got a lot to say, and it's, you know, he broke the news worldwide a few years
ago.
So, Glenn Greenwald is an American journalist, author and former lawyer.
In 1996, he founded a law from concentrating on First Amendment litigation.
He began blogging on national security issues on October of 2005 when he was becoming increasingly
concerned with what he viewed as attacks on civil liberties by the George Bush administration
in the aftermath of the 9-11.
He started contributing to Salon in 2007, then to Guardian in 2012.
In June 2013, while at the Guardian, he began publishing a series of reports,
detailing previously unknown information
about American and British global surveillance programs
based on classified documents provided by Edward Snowden.
If you've seen the movie Snowden
and there's a man interviewing Snowden,
it's Glenn Greenwald.
Okay, if you've seen the documentary,
is it Citizen Four?
Yep, oh yeah.
Which is by the way incredible. Which I really, I think I think is the film that was done about Snowden was by Oliver
Stone. I think you did a good job. The documentary was filmed in real time. I won the Oscar.
I think it's a better film for those who I know.
I know. I'm, yeah, he's has to get night and day. I agree. And then his work contributed to Guardians
2014. Paul had surprised when and he was a monk, a group of three reporters who won the 2013 George Polka Award
through his inter-Sept Brazil in June 2019.
Clank Greenwall published league conversations
between senior officials involved in Operation Car Wash,
a corrupt case in Brazil regarding Lula
and a bunch of different things happened there.
Four time New York Times bestseller.
But by far the best title you wrote of all your books
is the one, I think think is the one in 2006
How would a patriot act?
What a great title right? I can't take credit for that
But when I heard that title I knew that was a winning title
I had I was at the time writing for six months
No one knew who I was and that title really captured a lot of attention
especially given the era so
Credit to whoever came up with that title, I forget who that was, no.
So, from the time of you doing Citizen 4, sitting down with him, you know, to now, how much progress
have we made, or how much progress has CIA, FBI, NSA made on being able to control what we're doing?
You know, it's one of the things we saw, you know, at the time we did this reporting and you know, it's kind of assumed now
that the CIA and the FBI and the NSA
spy on everybody at the time,
some people had suspicions of it,
but there was no evidence to prove it.
A lot of those of us who were saying
that it was happening were called conspiracy theorists,
precisely because it was all done in the dark
with no evidence, that's what made Edwards note
in heroic as he came forward with the evidence to prove it.
So there was a huge movement in the year,
18 months following these revelations
for bipartisan raining in of the NSA,
the idea that the US security state
was never supposed to be turned inward
onto the United States, onto American citizens.
It was supposed to be directed outward.
There was legislation that was co-introduced by Justin Amash, who at the time was considered
the far right tea party conservative from Michigan who co-sponsored it with John Connures,
who was like the liberal lion of the house.
So it was very bipartisan.
It was on its way to passing.
It would have been the first ever piece of legislation to rein in the powers of the security
state after 9-11 as opposed to expand them.
The White House, the Obama White House, was adamantly opposed, got Nancy Pelosi to whip
enough votes just at the last second to defeat it narrowly.
There's a foreign affairs article that says how Nancy Pelosi saved the NSA, which is
exactly what happened.
And then ever since then, the U.S. security state, which is very adapted in venting new
enemies, started a kind of a kite at that point, was sort of tired.
People weren't that scared anymore by al-Qaeda.
It had been 12 years since the 9-11 attack.
Suddenly it was ISIS for a year and a half or two that got people scared enough to want
more security.
And then into 2016, Russia arrived and has become the pre-enemies.
And I mean, now that makes all American liberals practically by pulling data.
Love the NSA.
Love the SCIN.
So a lot of this has gone backward, actually, because they're very good at propaganda.
Keeping Americans afraid enough to wanting those sorts of authorities to grow in the name of keeping them safe.
And it's funny you say that because what's the lasting he says in one of the last things he says in the interview,
Snowden says in a month ahead, the years ahead, it's only going to get worse until eventually there will be a time where politics,
policies will change because the only thing that resists the activities of the surveillance state or policy, even our agreements with other sovereign governments, we consider
that to be a stipulation of policy rather than a stipulation of law.
And because of that, a new leader will be elected.
Last part of this short clip, they will find a switch, say that because of the crisis, because of the dangers we face in the world,
some new and unpredictable threat,
we need more authority, we need more power,
and there will be nothing the people can do
at that point to oppose it,
and it will be turnkey tyranny.
Do you think that's already happened
with COVID and Biden?
I think we're very close to that point. This is, I think that the quick history, if I can
just give it to you, because it's so fascinating and relevant, which was in the 1970s, after
Watergate, that was the first time Congress ever began investigating, like, hey, what did
these agencies actually do? These agencies created after World War II with the National Security
Act in 1947. There was no CIA, you know, in the 1920s. It was all created in the 1940s and
50s. And it was all so secret. The joke was the NSA stood for no such agency. So they
had this church committee that was a group of bipartisan members of the Senate that investigated
what these agencies were doing and then covered things that shocked them.
The idea that we now have the capacity to spy on every American citizen.
And the head of the committee was this guy named Frank Churchill.
He was like this liberal Democrat from Idaho, but he was one of those, you know, because
he was from Idaho, he was a civil libertarian.
And what he said was, this system is so ubiquitous and so omnipotent
that if it's ever turned inward on the American people
because at the time the idea was still,
it was a taboo to turn it inward.
Mestically, the American people will have no place to hide.
There will be no possibility
off the resisting the government
because there will be nowhere to go to be monitored.
He obviously didn't envision the internet,
the surveillance capabilities
that produces, which is in a whole different universe. Every whistleblower after 9-11 became
a whistleblower precisely because these instruments now are turned inward. We know that Homeland
Security and the CIA considers not ISIS or al-Qaeda or Russia, but the American people, what
they call domestic extremists, to be the number one political threat and the number one threat to our national.
So the whole thing is now directed
and we're directed internally.
That's where censorship comes from.
That's where surveillance comes from.
We're absolutely very close to the point
where we have a system in place
where you cannot cross certain lines
in terms of opinions you expressed
or dissidents that you want to organize
without being called extremist and being criminalized.
And that kind of turned tinkety-carrony that really came from the 1970s that snote and
warned about us being closer and closer to, I do think we're now rapidly approximating.
And it's the reason why the only cause I really care about at this point is doing anything
possible to preserve independent media, to preserve spaces on the internet where independence and
true descent can actually thrive.
For you who's in it,
do you see that as the biggest threat?
Like, you know how somebody goes to sleep,
they're like, well, I think the biggest threat is,
you know, whatever.
Climate change.
Climate change.
Or the biggest threat is the economy collapse in with the debt
that we have and what's going to happen if deflation, stackflation, hyperinflation, all these things.
You put surveillance as number one for you, or is that just your cause?
Surveillance combined with censorship.
Those are because the internet obviously is the most powerful and innovative evolution
of our lifetime without question.
And if you go back and read the triumphalist literature
of the 1990s about why the internet was going to be so revolutionary,
it was supposed to be a tool of liberation.
We can communicate with each other.
We can organize without the mediation of a state,
centralized state, and corporate authority.
What it can also be though is the most potent tool ever invented
for monitoring and surveilling
and then also controlling the thoughts of the domestic population.
And that is the turn that it has taken.
Look, I spent two and a half years of my life reading through hundreds of thousands of not
millions of the most sensitive documents produced by the most secretive agency of the world's
most powerful government. That's what I did when I got that archive by Edward Snowden.
I know what their aspirations are.
I know the things they say when they thought nobody would be ever listening and watching
and then I went about publishing them and their goal is that kind of total and complete
control.
That is not a sort of dystopian fantasy.
It's not a conspiracy that requires.
I published the documents demonstrating that that's the thing for which they're aiming. And so it's not just my cause, if we lose the ability to dissent from establishment
parties, which we know our false, we just sat through COVID for two years, where the pronouncements
that came down one after the next, we now know our false. The same is true about the war in Ukraine,
the same is true about the financial collapse of 2008,
obviously about the war in terror.
It's true about every one of our important debates.
If we lose the ability to descend from that meaningfully,
meaning not just standing on a street corner on a box,
but with the ability to reach people
and to organize without being criminalized and monitored,
what other political causes even possible?
What's an appropriate middle ground?
Like what's an appropriate happy medium?
So for example, like you have national security,
pretty, you know, especially during 9-11.
This whole thing, I appreciate what you're saying
during Watergate in the 70s,
but there's a lot of people that are Gen Z
that basically don't remember anything
from that even millennials.
It's all kind of catapulted right after 9-11.
George W. Bush, everything with the Patriot Act,
government overreach, executive powers,
everything with that.
So how do you grapple national security,
genuinely like trying to save the country
from any terrorist attacks or any homegrown terrorist,
whatever that is, versus the surveillance state
and the intelligence community.
There needs to be a happy medium, I would assume.
Yeah, these agencies have a function, and there's a legitimate function in surveillance.
Of course, we want our governments surveilling people who mean harm to this country.
That's one of their top priorities is keeping people physically safe.
There was a balance reached during the Cold War.
The Cold War was infinitely more dangerous than the war on terror and it's obviously infinitely
more dangerous than whatever, you know, fears are being cooked
up all the time about Russia or even China.
You had the United States and the Soviet Union going around the world in multiple proxy
wars with tens of thousands of intercontinental ballistic missiles that are nuclear-tipped,
aimed at one another cities.
You can't get more dangerous than that.
And during Ronald Reagan's presidency, when Dwight Eisenhower was overseeing the Cold
War, the kind of two bookends, they managed to have a system that preserved that balance,
which was if we want to spy on somebody, we go to a court, we get a warrant, not as high
of a warrant as you need for a criminal court, because you're spying on foreign nationals,
where you essentially say there's a legitimate reason to be spying on these particular groups. You do it in secret if necessary
and the spying is directed, which Snowden's archive revealed is that there's nothing directed about it.
It's mass, indiscriminate suspicion, list of surveillance, and entire populations.
Yeah, and just to add on to that, it's kind of almost like validate your case. Like part of the surveillance state Patriot Act, there was something called the Section 215.
This is where they said the sneak and peak provision. How familiar with that. Yeah, well,
so look at the Patriot Act. That is the perfect example. In the weeks and months after
9-11 was probably like the most traumatizing time for the country
and its history with the exception of,
say, the Civil War and the attack on Pearl Harbor.
But it was certainly one of the top three.
And people were pretty much willing to give the government
anything it wanted.
And then the people of keeping people safe,
3,000 people had just died.
The Pentagon was attacked.
The world is pretty amazing.
What fear will do to allow you to basically
get infringed on your right.
Yeah, and that fear was, was, I loved him, I loved him Manhattan.
I found that traumatizing like watching those two buildings collapse under on top of
3,000 of my fellow citizens.
But even in that climate, the Patriot Act was considered so radical that there was a lot
of voices in the sense saying, wait a minute,
this seems pretty un-American, this legislation.
And in order to justify it, there was a provision that was put into it that said, with all of
these powers, don't worry, it's only temporary.
It will expire after four years.
In order for it to be renewed, Congress has to come back and declare a sufficient emergency
in order to renew it.
People said, okay, we'll accept it only because it's sort of this byproduct of an
avert.
Okay, here we are 22 years later.
No one ever talks about the Patriot Act anymore.
Every four years it gets renewed without debate.
It just falls into the woodwork because it's become normalized.
No one thinks the Patriot Act is radical anymore because exactly what you said, more and
more every year, more and more Americans don't know a world prior to 9.11.
Don't know a world in which those liberties existed.
They just accept and assume that the way things are are the way they've always been in
the way that they have to be.
And that's the same now with the censorship regime over the internet.
More and more people are being born into a world in which, in actual, that a tiny number
of corporations work in conjunction with the government,
the US security state, to determine what Ken and Kempi said.
On the internet and poll show that a lot of people want that,
in fact, want more of it.
And that's what's really alarming is to see
how effective that propaganda is.
Well, you said earlier, they, they want surveillance,
they want control, they want this.
They is a lot of different things, but who is they? Who's at the head of the day? earlier they, they want surveillance, they want control, they want this.
They is a lot of different thing, but who is they?
Who's at the head of the day?
I think what, if you look at every society, it's not a conspiratorial theory that there's
always a power center, there's an establishment, there's a, whatever you want to call it,
the people for whom the society functions most profitably, the people who want most
and preserve the status quo.
And I think what has happened is, if you look in the past,
you know, we're a capitalist society,
that means there's gonna be a lot of wealth and equality,
and when there's wealth and equality,
there's always the chance that lots of people
on the bottom end of that wealth and equality
are gonna be angry, they're gonna start to get agitated,
they're gonna be rebellious, there's lots of ways
to deal with that, you can appease them, you can introduce social programs,
you can keep them just placated enough, not to rebel on the street. I think what the choice
that our current elite has made instead is, let them be as angry as they want, we'll just paramilitarize
the society enough with surveillance with paramilitarizing our police force, so that any kind of protest effort will be instantly
crushed. And the day is nothing more than the people who wield the greatest amount of
power in society, the people who are in control of the mechanisms of surveillance, of the
security state, of the financial industry, the people who wield power and watch.
So you're like you're not putting it, the, the, the, the, the director of CIA, the director of
FBI, you know, you're, you're putting all of those guys as part of they, is that, is
that kind of what you're saying?
Yeah.
There's not an individual at the top that every, all those days call.
Yeah.
It's a, it's a confluence of power centers that work in conjunction with one another.
You know, I when I was interviewing
Vivek as I did yesterday right after that debate the morning after the debate one of the things he said and he didn't have time to
elaborate on the debate, but he was saying the only way I want to wage is on the fourth branch of government We're only supposed to have three and I asked him what is the fourth branch of government?
He said the fourth branch of government is the
And I asked him, what is the fourth branch of government? He said the fourth branch of government is the permanent power
of action in Washington that exists completely outside
Democratic accountability, the three-letter agencies,
the administrative state.
Those people are not there because they've consolidated control.
They're serving a part of a broader elite,
you know, the people who have an interest in ensuring
that the population is kind of tamped down that the country
is sort of controlled, that stability is maintained, that it's impossible to organize in a meaningful
way if you're a dissonant. And so it's not, I mean, it's not some, you don't need to imagine
a conspiratorial council that meets in some underground layer somewhere. It's not out of a science
fiction film, it's just based on how society's function.
And that is it that there isn't a lead in society,
especially one that's unequal.
And in those unequal societies,
you can have a power that starts to get more and more centralized
and then more and more abuse.
Yeah, but the way I'm thinking about it,
like for example, you watch the other day,
Drake did a concert and he came out of the concert
with LeBron and his son, Bronnie.
There is a lion says being built there, right?
Because one of Drake's first songs was about, you know, last name ever, first name, you
know, was it last name, greatest first name ever, something like that, right?
And okay, so he made that song about LeBron.
So there's an alliance there.
No problem.
You watch it in movies and you'll see, you know, Mel Gibson talking to whoever,
you'll see Brad Pitt talking to whoever,
there's a line since there, right?
Do these guys kind of just watch and say,
ooh, that guys become powerful.
Let me get a hold of them.
Can we go out to dinner together?
Hey, what do you think about us doing this together?
You think that's what it is?
Or do you think it's more the money guys
like a Larry Fink or a Soros or the ESG crowd or
you know, the state street or, you know, the Black Rock and the Vanguard?
Or is it more the big media guys?
Well, all of this is controlled by Robert Murdock and you know, all these are...
Or now it's more the powerful people of the Zuckerbergs and the Sergei and the Bezos and
who is the people at the top that truly are able to move it?
Is it more political power?
Is it more spying power?
Is it more money?
Which one of those is the most powerful in your eyes?
I think the US government is a government that exists in servitude to economic power.
You know, you servitude towards economic power.
Two economic power.
So you go and talk to any member of Congress who's honest and they will tell you that most
of their time is spent either raising money from big donors or having their lobbyists
for big donors write the bills.
That is the reality of how bills, most bills in Congress simply come from well paid lobbyists
who work for corporations.
Now again, it's not a totalitarian society
where you can identify just one single power center.
Right now, look at China, for example.
You have different power centers
that want different things with regard to China.
Wall Street's in bed with China.
They don't want antagonism with China.
They love having a relationship with China
where they put their low paid workers in China
producing their sneakers and producing workers in China producing their sneakers
and producing their computers and producing their cars.
Whereas parts of the military industrial complex
seek a Cold War with China and more antagonism toward China.
It's an example where there's a kind of conflicting agenda.
So you get those often, but in reality,
the government itself is a government that is run
by the people with the most amount of money, which is essentially oligarchy. And everyone who works, the government itself is a government that is run by the people with the most amount of money,
which is essentially oligarchy and everyone who works inside the government will tell who's honest will tell you that.
Okay, but does it at all interest you to want to know who the guy at the top is?
Maybe this is just because something that I'm curious about. You know the movie again,
American Gangster. I'll never forget the scene where to keep thinking the main drug dealer selling blue magic
is this Italian guy.
And then all of a sudden they're like, no, it's Frank Lucas and it changes the game, right?
With the so blue magic.
Do you have any interest as one of the greatest investigative journalists of our time?
Some would put you on the top five.
Some would say the best during our time for what you broke and what you had to tell
this or that guy felt he trusted you more than anybody else to go out and sit with them. some would put you on the top five, some would say the best during our time for what you broke and what you had to tell the story.
That guy felt he trusted you more than anybody else
to go out and sit with them and that came with a lot of risk
for you, which you did at a time like that.
Does it interest you to find out
who is the Frank Lucas of power?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, in general, I think the people
who are the most powerful are the people
who are not very visible.
So in the cheapest, most anti-intellectual,
crudest form of punditry, they'll refer to Joe Biden as the most powerful person on
Earth, right, which is a gigantic joke. And not just because he doesn't know his name
or where he is, but because a president is answerable to an enormous number of actual power
centers out in whose lines he has to remain. He's not the one setting those lines,
he's the one observing those lines,
he's a servant to that power.
So yeah, of course it interests me.
I don't know, think there's a kind of,
I don't think it's like a pyramid where
one person is sitting at the top.
You don't think? I think that there's a set of power centers,
a set of power centers.
You know, with this Republican debate,
I'm sure we'll talk about it,
but one of the things that fascinated me was,
so you have, you know, pretty much everybody on that stage
with the exception of Ron DeSantis sort of
and Vivek completely, but every single other person
who's saying, we wanna keep,
we wanna support Joe Biden's policy of sending
billions and billions and billions and billions of dollars to Ukraine indefinitely to keep that
we're going. They're saying this notwithstanding the fact that they see the same polling data that
I see and that you see which is that not just Americans as a whole, but conservatives and Republicans, in particular, overwhelmingly
opposed to that policy, they want no more money going to Ukraine.
So the question becomes, why do very competent smart politicians who rely on public opinion
to win, nonetheless espouse in public a policy they know most of their voters oppose?
And the reason is because the people who are their donors,
the people who actually control their candidacy
without which their candidacy cannot exist,
favor that policy.
And so that's who they're serving.
And I think in general that,
so then the question becomes,
well, who is the top donor?
Who is like the single guy?
I mean, I think there's like a handful of institutions.
It's always BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan.
These are the institutions that are, by far,
the most powerful economic organs they need
and rely on the government.
They're constantly working with the government.
You have the arms industry, of course,
that also wields a lot of that power.
So I think it's a small number of power centers
that in general have an aligned interest.
Got it.
So the way you put it, this is how it makes sense to me
on how you're perceiving what's going on.
There's kind of like the Italian mafia many years
going when he came out with the commission.
I don't know if you know the whole commission
with the five Gambino Colombo.
I'll be about to come in and say, guys,
let's control the whole thing together.
We're gonna have to share some of it.
And so one of the families, maybe the Black Rock State Street,
those of you know, one of the families
is gonna be more the CIA and the say FBI. One of the families is gonna be more Rock State Street, you know, those are going to, one of the families is going to be more the CIA and a say, FBI,
one of the families is going to be more
the political power, all those guys.
That's kind of how you see that, that happened.
Because we all benefit more
when we're kind of working in confluence
as opposed to in conflict.
Then my question, or you becomes with that,
and my question, then my question with that becomes,
I'm sorry, you were gonna say,
it's not a definition of an oligarchy.
It is.
I think people at the very top running the whole thing.
If you asked me to describe the United States
in terms of how it functions with one word,
I would pick oligarchy.
So yeah, that's sorry Pat.
But here's where I'm going with that.
So as good as they may be at
protecting how they communicate with each other,
I'm convinced the best hackers are the ones
that don't work for the government.
How are the best hackers in the world
not hacking into seeing how they communicate with each other
to release it to the rest of the world
to know what they're saying to each other?
The technology exists for them to realize
these days when they communicate to decide
what's going to happen to the world in the next 10, 20, 40, 50 years
shouldn't we know about it? Why don't hackers target that?
Because once you know how the WikiLeaks and Formation League were like, wait, what?
Wow, I'm glad I know. Holy shit, so Hillary paid 35 million, so this is this, so that happened
over here. That's crazy. Why is in a certain, certain group of, you know, individuals who are
hackers come together and say, look, let's kind, you know, individuals who are hackers come together
and say, look, let's kind of find out what these guys are doing.
Let's get to the truth of it.
We can figure it out.
Why don't they do that?
Well, first of all, there has been an amazing recruitment effort, especially in the wake
of Snowden to recruit the top scientific hacking talent into the government.
With all, and I mean, when we talk about the government so much of what the government is is actually
the private sector.
You know, Snowden worked at the NSA, but his employer was Booz Allen Hamilton.
So these companies recruit on behalf of the government with massive private sector pay.
So a lot of them have been recruited successfully onto their side and they also have an unlimited
budget because they have the American taxpayer budget and we spend $75 billion at least
that's what it was.
The last secret budget that I saw is probably $110, $120 billion a year now and a huge amount
goes into defensive hacking skills as well. But you have had hacking into power centers
when you've had the Pandora papers
and the Panama papers showing how the extremely wealthy
keep their money in a vague taxes,
you've had obviously hacks into the Democratic National
Committee and Hillary Clinton's campaign.
So I don't think there's some secret counsel where the head of J.P. Morgan and the head
of BlackRock and the head of Raytheon meet at some sort of table sitting around like this
and have minutes to the meetings and then keep them secret.
The question is, why don't they leak?
It is a good question to ask, why do we not know more about those kinds of power centers?
And I think the reason is is because the people
whose responsibility would be to do that kind of digging
is not the US government who's working
for those institutions.
It would be media corporations.
People like me, investigative journalists are supposed to
be aimed at those power centers.
And we have instead as a media
that is not aimed at power centers but is aimed at working for those power centers. And we have instead as a media that is not aimed at power centers,
but is aimed at working for those power centers as well.
So who is it that's going to kind of do that sort of digging?
We do know enough, we have gotten enough of a glimpse
into how a lot of this works.
But we have a media that's designed to obscure it,
to distract from it, that's not interested in it,
to minimize it, to disparage it. that's not interested in it, to minimize it, to disparage
it.
Look at what they did with the Twitter files.
You know, we got this because of Elon Musk opening up the corporate files of Twitter,
we got this extraordinary insight into this channel between the CIA FBI, DHS on the one
hand and Big Tech on the other.
And then immediately, the employees of the largest media corporation
swooped in like they were programmed
and reading from the same script and they all said,
this is a nothing burger, ignore this,
there's nothing here of any interest.
And when you have the media,
that corralled and that controlled,
even when you do get those glimpses,
you can minimize and neutralize them quickly.
So go with that, go with Twitter files.
I do wanna come back to ESG, but since you said Twitter files,
I think there's a perfect transition
to one of the questions that for you.
Do you think there's a concern with guys
like Vivek or a Trump getting back in there?
I'm not quite sure about the status
what he would do this or not, because I think
the status would still play within the rules.
Do you think A Vivek or a Trump getting in there?
There's a possibility just like there's Twitter files
for there to be CIA files, for there to be FBI files,
for there to be where they're sharing,
here's what the FBI did, here's what the CIA did,
holy shit, dropped a bomb.
Or do you think these guys gonna get in
and they're gonna say, I'm gonna do this
and I'm gonna do that and then they get in,
they say, listen man, look, you canI. files if you want. No problem. You do F.B.I.
files. For the rest of history, U.S. will not have credibility with the world.
You will be known as the president that destroyed America. Do you want that as a
legacy? So one, do you think there is that fear too? Do you think even if that
happens, the people of power like listen, we know exactly what to tell that guy.
We know the script to make sure he doesn't continue and pursue the CINFBI files.
You know what I'm asking?
Yeah, absolutely.
Like, here's for me the biggest dilemma, which is, if you have a career politician, people
have been around watching and forever.
It's almost certain they're corrupted.
Like you cannot trust anything that they say.
They're going to go in and they're going to serve the establishment.
They've been doing that for decades to the point they've internalized the ideology no matter
what it is they're saying.
So then you have, okay, well, let's get outsiders.
So that was the appeal of Trump, right?
That was Trump's appeal was I've never worked inside of this, this, this inside government
before they cannot control me.
It was even part of Obama's appeal.
He had been Washington for like six seconds.
You know, he'd been a senator for two years when he announced that he was running for president. I watched Obama
who I genuinely believe was had convictions and the things he was saying about uprooting
the more extreme elements of the war on terror, the parts that were actually infringing the
civil liberties of Americans. And then the minute he gets into office, he starts extending
and protecting
and even expanding a lot of those very same powers he promised to uproot. Because these
guys in the security state, they, they're around, you vote for whoever you want, that those
politicians come and leave, they leave the white house. They're there, they're always there.
They know how to control presidents, they know how to control the political process. And
so, the same thing happened with Trump. So often, the things that Trump was saying,
the things he really meant,
had no translation into Trump administration policy.
Trump was saying it's idiotic to have troops in Syria.
Trump never got troops out of Syria,
even though we often ordered them out.
There were articles celebrating this in the Wall Street Journal
that people in the military would find ways
to fort is order.
Same thing.
I'm not going to arm Ukraine and risk provocations with Russia.
I want to work with Russia.
I'm not going to arm Ukraine.
2017, the Washington Post headline, Trump administration starts sending lethal arms to Russia.
They knew how to run circles around Trump in part because he didn't have a good sense
of how Washington works.
And I think the same thing would be with that.
The other thing is they come in,
the guys with the medals on their chest
and they say, okay, look, I know these are the things
you were thinking and saying before you got here,
but now I'm gonna show you the blood
that you're gonna have on your hands
if you actually start doing these things.
So go be an advisor for Trump or Vivek.
You're an advisor for Trump or Vivek, okay?
And it's a real advisor, not just like,
hey, let's go find a way to win the election
and then listen, I'm a president,
I hope he cares, we're gonna do what we're gonna do.
You're an advisor and you say,
hey, President Trump, look what they did behind your back
in 2017.
Look what they did behind your back with Ukraine.
You look what they did behind your back with this.
They don't respect you.
They did whatever, they just kind of looked at you
and said, this guy's nobody.
Yeah, they can be gone for years anyway.
And you laid it in them in so many ways.
So now if you truly, President Trump,
if you truly, Vivek, if you truly whoever it is, RFK,
if you truly wanna do this,
here's the five things you need to do.
What would be those five things you would say they need to do
for that not to happen, where they're not undermining and overlapping their leadership?
I mean, I think the reason why what I mentioned earlier that Vivek said that appealed to me so much
when he said, like, look, the only way I'm interested in waging is a war on that fourth
branch of government is precisely because he's not saying, I'm not going to listen to them.
He's not saying, I think they need to be neutralized.
He's saying a war needs to be waged on them.
And the question becomes, you know,
my, the clip that I think is,
if I had to show one clip of a television interview
to say a civic student to teach them
about how the United States actually works,
it was that time when Chuck Schumer went on with Rachel Maddow shortly before Trump was
inaugurated when he was having that Twitter war with the CIA and accidentally spilled the
truth, which was, you know, Schumer said, Trump's being incredibly stupid.
Everyone in Washington knows that if you mess with the CIA, they have six different
ways to Sunday to get back at you.
How was that not an instant scandal that the CIA has the power to destroy
an elected president?
That is the reality though.
And so it isn't enough just to rhetorically say
the CIA is a bad organization.
The CIA is something that you need an actual plan
to neutralize them.
John Kennedy had his head blown off
by who knows who, but it certainly came at the time that he was saying things like I'm withdrawing all advisors from Vietnam after he fired the
most powerful person in all of Washington, which was, which was Dulles who had run the
CIA after the failed Bay of Pigs invasion,
he never forgot that.
And that became a lesson to a lot of people
that if you wanna challenge the CIA,
if you wanna start resisting even minimally,
that's the lesson that you should learn.
I have a Trump question for you.
So are we going to the Trump topic?
No, no, I'm gonna stay on topic right here with this.
So I think we can all agree if Joe Biden gets reelected.
This status quo, nothing changes.
It's just everything that we talk about.
Even Vivek who you said you just interviewed and Pat recently did a town hall with who I
think is an absolute beast.
He's called for a revolution.
He's going after the Ford state.
I think the likelihood of Vivek being the candidate is very slim.
I think he's great.
He's a beast.
I just don't see it happening, especially
while Trump is the guy.
So let's go to Trump for a second.
Right.
In 2016, Trump would always say,
I'll hire the best.
I know the best.
I have the best words.
I have the best ideas.
He's the best, the best, the best.
I'm going to drain the swamp,
I'm going to drain the swamp, everything with that.
But what we realized was that there's
all these people in power that were basically essentially what you said,
not so fast, President Trump.
Now, if you do this, you do this.
Now that he knows exactly how the swamp works
and all these agencies work.
And now that's a different,
there's a different Trump coming in.
He's coming in with actual experience
and basically like, you guys screwed me the first time.
Well, I'm like, I'm coming in.
I'm coming in, President, right?
Yeah, but Jimmably, he's like, that's the whole thing. Yes, I'm like a prominent president, right? So, but Jimmably he's like,
that's the whole, that's the whole, that's the guy.
Yes, yeah.
Let's say he gets reelected.
Let's say he's the guy now.
And people are like, well, you know, Mr. President,
here's what you need to do.
He's gonna be like, not so fast.
What do you think Trump will do differently this time?
That's the $10 million question for me that I have
because what actually happened was,
I mean, Trump came in spitting scorn
for neoconservatism and for the bushingy operatives who ran the country
into the ground with these wars.
Even with Steve Bannon's vision of what the Trump presence
who was going to look like at the beginning and imagine if it had happened was,
he wanted him to come in, do a bipartisan infrastructure deal with the Democrats
where you renew and
Rejuvenate America's infrastructure create jobs. Do that as a bipartisan president shoot up your popularity
Even raise taxes on on the wealthy symbolically and then you could say you're we're using that money to build the wall
So you combine this sort of you know putting America back to work, domestic priorities, combined with the
security at the border that people wanted. Instead, Jared Kushner went out of that power
battle. Steve Bannon was gone in six months. Jared Kushner had a much different ideology
than Steve Bannon did. And that ended up governing the Trump presidency. Trump now says he
understands the mistakes he made. The problem I have, the question that I have is the reason
those mistakes happened, and that was by far Trump's worst flaw was, you know, Mike Pompeo, who is a classic
Neocon first in charge of the CIA and then letting him run the state department. So many
other Nikki Haley, we just heard Nikki Haley espousing, you know, Mitt Romney foreign policy
from 2010. He had her as you in John Bolton. Yeah, John, at least John with John Bolton,
you know, Trump's excuses I wanted a maniac at my side
as a credible threat to people.
But okay, the problem is is that everyone knows
that Trump has a very fragile ego
and that he's easily manipulated by flattering him
and whoever flatters him is somebody he believes is on their side.
So you get smart people like Mark Pompeo's very smart
and he comes in as a president.
You've convinced me this ideology has gone wrong.
I'm now more of an America firster.
I think you're the one to be the leader and suddenly he's running the CA.
The question I have is, is Trump still vulnerable to that kind of manipulation?
What I saw in Brazil, you know, where the reporting that I did that you guys started off
with, that fun little clip of
What my my my restrained right hook, which would have been much better had enough in restrained was
Was you know, we did reporting that had originally put, you know, the corruption probe had originally put the two term president Louis de Silva in prison
One of the most popular political figures, a giant on the international stage,
they put him in prison for 18 months and are reporting our proof that the process was
filled with corruption.
He got out of prison, was able to run again, and now he's the president, and he's filled
with vengeance and anger.
He wants to destroy the people.
Imagine you're actually at a prison cell.
When someone's trying to put you in prison, that makes a big difference in terms of how you're starting to think about your political
enemies.
So they're trying to pump Trump in prison.
My hope is that, that really makes them understand that you cannot have enemies inside of your
government.
That, that character flaw that they so successfully manipulated has to be overwhelmed by the
anger that he has to feel over this kind of persecution.
Whether he really learned that lesson, whether he's capable of it, whether he's going to be
surrounded by people who help him, I have a lot of doubts about it. All I can have is hope.
Because I do think that chances that anyone besides Trump will be the GOP nominee is small.
How are you going to wrench those people away from Trump especially with this persecution that they continue to
to
impose and drive Republican voters closer to Trump?
So if he's the only chance to remove Biden the question really becomes can Trump this time not just talk about that vision
but implement it and that question you're asking is the only one that matters and I don't know the answer to that and
Glenn so you're literally fearless reporting 2013 with Snowden and everything.
You risked everything.
Your name, your career, you know, people in your life were getting detained for tear
is all that, all that stuff.
You knew it, you risked it, you took the challenge, and you did it to wake everybody up to
what the system was doing to us, right?
And I thank you for it.
And regards to Trump, do you feel his motives
to be the president are rooted in the same ideology
that you had like meaning?
He said, which he says all the time,
he's been saying it since the 90s,
I love America, I love the people I'm trying to help us.
Do you think that's like, did he know
that he was gonna get into this?
Or was it like a surprise to him?
Like, how really bad it was
and how they were gonna come after him?
I mean, it's never happened before in history
that a president has gotten out of office
and then been prosecuted for anything.
I don't think he could possibly have anticipated
the level of persecution to which he would be subjected.
I think it's come as a surprise.
But I also think that, and I know from my own experience,
having gone through it, you it, I couldn't leave Brazil
for a year, Eric Alder's Justice Department
was telling my lawyers, and we got, you know,
the Guardian got the best possible lawyers,
the kind who can pick up the phone
and get Eric Alder on the phone.
If he leaves Brazil, there's a good chance
he's going to be arrested.
We're not giving him any guarantees.
As you say, my husband got detained in the United Kingdom
with threats of a terrorism prosecution,
simply because of his association with me.
They were doing a lot of stuff.
And when you see the willingness,
their willingness to just cross every line,
the minute they get a little bit threatened,
your resolve increases.
You know, you understand they need even more confrontation
than you originally began by believing they did.
If you listen to Trump's rhetoric,
it's escalating in terms of its tone, in terms of its aggression against globalists, against
neocons, against the people he understands are his enemies. And I know again, I hope that that
is going to have the kind of effect that I see it having on, for example, President,
who is now taking vengeance one after the next kind of like that character see it having on, for example, President, who is now taking vengeance, one after the next kind of like, that character in the Game of Thrones, who had her list of
all of that.
A lot of the small ones.
Yeah, the small daughter who had her list of, you know, I hope Trump has that kind of a list
because that would do the country a lot of good. If he did, those are the people that need to
be destroyed. There needs to be this very,
I wanna say violent in a metaphorical sense conflict
between these power centers on the one hand
and Trump who actually threatened them
for the first time in decades on the other.
And it was I or Stark, the little one.
I and Stark, exactly.
And then I thought about it,
and this is just a, it's not even a question,
is I could see how these Trump supporters, these magas that they, like, how pissed off and out, because
they see it and they know what he's doing to actually help.
And he's just vilified, he's, he's getting mug shots.
And the history of our life, you never would have thought, you turn on the news and you
see the, a president of the United States getting a mug shot.
Yeah, look, I actually wrote a book in 2011 arguing that this idea that former presidents
or high ranking political officials are exempt from the rule of law is a huge mistake.
I thought the pardon of President Nixon by Gerald Ford is the thing that set this framework
in place that the country can't handle prosecuting former presidents, I think.
And so if this were the case where we're finally abandoning this idea, as a principle, I'd
be cheering it.
That's not what's going on.
Right?
It's a one time only exemption for Trump, whose real crime is that he wandered way outside
of the boundaries of what has been set for political leaders. He questioned the most taboo subjects
of the U.S. security state from,
why do we still need NATO?
To why are we doing regime change wars?
So why do we have to tree Russia as an enemy?
And when you start doing that,
really messing with their core piety,
they're showing now what they're willing to do.
Big time. Glenn, so let's, while we're on this topic before we go into the
mug shot
there's a there's a lot of people you know new york times twenty seven i don't
know when it was twenty seventeen new york times came out and did an article
saying
or no twenty twenty they came out u.s.a. today was twenty seventeen about
you know obama surveillance on trump and they were kind of monitoring what he
was doing and you know obama administration secretly launched a surveillance operation on Trump
campaign.
This is New York Times and they say, well, it's misleading, not necessarily happened,
they're kind of trying to protect Obama.
But then USA Today in 2017, if you type in the same thing, Rob, you'll see an article about
USA Today in 2017, way before New York Times did it, the article for USA Today says
was Obama administration illegal spying worse than watergate. Okay, so this is 2017 May 30th.
From your investigation into stuff like this, I mean, this is right up your alley.
What was the biggest difference between what Nixon did versus what Obama did?
biggest difference between what Nixon did versus what Obama did? They're not comparable in the sense that the...
So in such an example of the extent to which we're talking about what establishment power
centers are doing to Trump, what the media has been willing to do in the name of stopping
Trump is the thing that sickens and offends me the most maybe because I actually...
It's a profession I thought it was joining and, you know, really still do believe in the virtues of it when it's done correctly.
But the idea that the Obama administration was first spying on the Trump campaign and people
associated with him. And then secondly, abusing the powers of the FBI and the Justice Department
in order to help Hillary Clinton win was widely mock and
vilified by almost the entire media as some sort of obvious lie in conspiracy.
Turns out all you have to do is look at the facts.
The FBI got caught spying on Carter Page who was a foreign policy advisor to the Trump campaign in 2016 and they didn't just get
caught spying on him in order to spy on him.
They went to the Pfizer court and they filled out affidavits filled with lies to justify
the spying to the point where the FBI lawyer who did it played guilty to crimes because
lying to the Pfizer court is a crime.
That alone, the fact that the FBI under Obama got caught spying on an American citizen who
was an advisor to the Trump campaign based on the lies that the FBI told to justify that
spying auto have been one of the biggest political scandals in our nation's history.
But then you add on to that the fact that we absolutely
now know that the entire Roshigate scandal, obviously using scare quotes for it, we just got a report
from the Jerm report that lays it out in 350 pages. They never had anywhere near a sufficient
predicate even to open that investigation.
The investigation that dominated our politics from the mid 2016 when Hillary Clinton first
did a McCarthy a nefarious campaign ad who is what what is this secret dark relationship
between Trump and Moscow all the way through 2018 when the Mueller investigation closed
while arresting and convicting not a single American
on the core crime of colluding with the Trump campaign and with the Russians and explicitly
saying there's no evidence to support the conspiracy theory that the media pushed as the
top political story for three years.
There was never any legal predicate for the FBI even to open that investigation said one
of the most respected prosecutors, federal prosecutors in the country.
Again, this is what I was saying earlier with their ability to just minimize and dismiss
stories away.
Of course, that's bigger than Watergate.
Watergate was a low-level break-in of the Democratic Party headquarters that produced very little
of value.
We're talking here about the abuse at the highest levels of FBI
with agents who are saying in text to one another,
we have to do everything to stop Donald Trump.
And then having those exact same agents
open an investigation for which there was never
any legal basis and it didn't just have,
it wasn't just an investigation that would know where,
it dominated our politics for three years.
Rushingate was the number one story
used to sabotage first the Trump campaign
and then the Trump presidency.
That came from the US security state
that saw Donald Trump as an enemy
and decided to abuse its core powers
in order to sabotage a candidate
that they overtly disliked.
Why is that not a scandal of the highest proportion?
Why isn't it? Because we have
a media, the media, first of all, was an act of participant in it. The way that it happened was
CIA and the FBI every day would call the New York Times and the Washington Post and feed them
the leaks, the anonymous evidence-free leaks that became the foundational assertions of reshagate. So the media participate, they gave themselves pollizers for it.
There are New York Times and Washington Post reporters with shelves like these with
pollizers sitting on them for a story that turned out to be a complete fraud.
It came from the bowels of the U.S. security state.
And so the media, it's the same thing as right before the 2020 election, the entire media united to say that the documents from which the reporting was done based on the 100
Biden laptop was Russian disinformation.
Everyone in the world knows now that this is a lie.
Every media outlet with Biden safely elected was able to verify the authenticity of those
documents.
There's no question about the provenance of those documents.
Those came from 100 Biden's laptop.
Russia had nothing to do with it.
And not a single media outlet, not one that spread those lies.
This is Russian disinformation over and over in the days and weeks before people went
to vote, went back and retracted it, apologized for it, let alone acknowledge the scope of
that scandal.
So how can the media active participants in the Roshigate fraud possibly do anything other
than try and bury and obscure the fact that this happened?
It's like asking bank robbers who planned the bank robbery and then went and implemented
to expose it to the world and talk about how how threatening it was.
Of course, they're not going to do that.
They're doing the opposite.
And that to me is the most dangerous aspect of this is in the minds
of American elites, including the ones who work at the largest media corporations, in
their minds. And they really do believe this. The fact that Donald Trump to them is a Hitler
like figure who is an existential threat to all things decent in American democracy means
that everything and anything they do is justifiable
morally, including lying, including censoring, they, including abandoning the journalistic
cause.
That has, that's an explicit mindset that they have.
I want to stay on this, but I want to say what Rachel Maddo said about you.
This is what Rachel Maddo from MSNBC said about you, this trial.
Why don't we all go?
Hang on a second.
Describe in you during your salon tenure. The American left's most fearless political commentator.
Again, for somebody watching this, they're going to say, well, this guy's a pro-Trump guy,
he's a Republican, he's a conservative, he's probably hardcore this.
Again, let me say this, folks, Rachel Maddow, if you know who she is, MSNBC.
The American left's most fearless political commentator.
So you're saying what Obama did to go after Trump is way worse than Obama gave what they
did, right?
Don't watergate.
Here's a question for you.
For the audience, maybe that doesn't closely follow everything in opinions that you have.
What do you think about President Donald Trump? I think if you look it, I think Donald Trump is probably the most transformational political figure in the last, let's say, six or seven decades of American political life.
Maybe you can compare it to Ronald Reagan in terms of the transformational effect and to FDR.
I just mean that neutrally, transformational effect and to FDR.
I just mean that neutrally,
transformational can be good or for bad.
Sure.
What, what, if, and it was so,
that's fascinating to me so much about that presidential
debate without Trump is you kind of got a glimpse,
a reminder of what the Republican Party was,
prior to Donald Trump, this kind of tired,
stale, elite serving orthodoxy that that's why all these people are
three. They're all very smart people. They all have on paper the perfect record to run for
president and in their own party, nobody likes them. They have three because they espoused
an ideology, the Republican party in 2009 believed in and in 2013 believed in and now in 2023
don't believe in it all. And that's because Donald Trump gave them that space to start
to understand why that ideology was so misguided against their interest.
Unpacked that please.
So I don't want to, I want to say that if you go back and look what Trump did is not go
into a party and completely change a party on his own, the signs were there.
The signs to me first started appearing with the ability of Ron Paul to run a presidential
campaign in 2008 and 2012.
Ron Paul probably, to me, is the single most honest politician in a long time someone of that
stature meaning just he says what he believes and won't change a word of it for a political
gain. He went into places like Iowa and South Carolina, the reddest districts within those
states. With a message that was heretical for a Republican party politics, which was the war in Iraq was a moral mistake
that we shouldn't have military bases all over the world,
dominating the world through military force is something that is
not in your interests, it's serving the interests of a tiny elite. These are people who were, you know, kind of
bred on the idea that the war on terror and the war in
Iraq were the most patriotic things possible.
And he found this huge part of the Republican electorate for which those sorts of things
resonated.
And it wasn't only that he had a lot of other kind of anti-orthodox views on economic policy as well, that obviously there was a sense that he was
tapping into, which made his presidential campaign infinitely more successful than people
thought. I think he came in second in the Iowa caucus, I remember correctly in 2008 or 2012.
So the stirrings were already there, that there was this kind of pop and Neocons as well
before Trump started seeing it as well.
They were already planning to back Hillary Clinton knowing that the best vessel for Neoconservative
Foreign Policy was Hillary Clinton and not whoever the Republican Party was about to
nominate well before Trump ever happened.
Trump saw that.
He understood that.
He gave voice to it,
and he did two things.
One is because he's such a talented,
just kind of communicator, right?
Like a communicator to the ordinary person.
It's what he's been doing his whole life.
He was a TV star.
I remember, you know, when I lived in New York in the 90s,
he prided himself on the fact that his fame came not
from the Manhattan elite,
but from sort of the construction workers
who built his buildings.
That was always something he prided himself on.
He had that kind of out-of-brear over resentment.
So he's always been a great communicator.
He was able to take that message
that Ron Paul, who was not a great communicator,
had already proven there was a base for and expand it.
But then what happened as well is once Trump started attacking the CIA and attacking the FBI and laying it, but then what happened as well is once Trump started attacking the CIA
and attacking the FBI and laying bare how politics actually works.
He went to those debates and I saw this.
I'm sure you saw that entire middle section behind which the right behind the Fox microphones
are reserved for the Republican National Committee and they're big donors.
That's what that section is for. That's the reaction you're hearing. Trump would get boot attacking Jeb Bush.
And it's the best thing.
Yeah.
These are all the lobbyists. This is the swan. Right? He gave, like he's shined a light on
the things you're not supposed to shine a light on in terms of how politics actually works.
And so once Republican voters started seeing, wow, the CIA is really corrupt,
the FBI is willing to abuse their power.
These agencies that Republican voters
have long been taught to revere,
they began seeing them in a different light.
And now, if you wanna go into Republican politics
like Nikki Haley does or Chris Chrissy does
or Tim Scott or whomever, Mike Pence,
and say, we need to back the Pentagon and its arming of Ukraine.
We need to go and give the CIA greater authorities or the FBI greater authorities.
You're going to provoke a revulsion among Republican voters.
And that's because Trump took what had been kind of the percolating seeds of the sentiment
and turned it into the dominant governing orthodoxy
of the Republican Party, which is why I haven't changed a single view of mine since Rachel
Mattel said that.
What has changed is the nature of the two political parties.
So there's a reason Bill Crystal is a Democrat and other neo-conservatives are Democrats and
why Democrats overwhelmingly now revere those security state agencies,
it's because the Democratic Party has transformed into the party of militarism and imperialism
and corporatism.
And the only resistance that you get to any of this is in the populist wing, the populist
right wing of the Republican Party.
That's not my fault.
I didn't cause that.
I'm just observing it.
That's pretty wild. So to think, you know, by the way, this happens politically when
sometimes they shift. And you're seeing that now more people where they say, you know,
I, you know, I, I didn't change how I view things. You change, right? Bill Mars talked
about a lot of other people are talking about it, but let's go into the muck shot, Rob.
If you want to put the picture up. So yesterday, 730 gets rained.
You know, he goes through and he gets this picture
to muck shot, which I'm sure he thought about this
on how he was going to pose for the picture.
Yeah.
He probably in front of mirror pose.
How do I want the muck shot to be?
Oh, this?
By the way, you have to think about it.
This is going to last hundreds of years.
This is permanent, right?
When you think about Adam send a list
of the greatest muck shots of all time, Rob, if you
want to pull this up.
Yeah, this is at the top now.
This is, there's a lot of them if you go through these.
I think they have Bill Gates as number one.
If you go on this one, keep going down, keep going down, keep going down.
There's a right there.
You got Bill Gates.
You got Frank Sinatra.
I keep going.
You got Jay-Z.
You got M&M.
You got Nick Nolte to the left, you got Jeremy
Meeks who women went crazy over you got David Bowie, you got Kiana Reeves, keep going,
keep going, keep going. Anybody else? James Brown. Oh James Brown, that's not a good.
Robert Downey Jr. Looks like Nick Nolte.
Elvis is going to be on this list. No doubt. Yeah, so when you look at this, when you look
at these people, Pucc, Elvis, MLK.
Yeah, there's a MLK thing.
Yeah.
He's gotta be at the top of the list.
I mean, this is, listen,
this is marketing at its highest level.
Remember when we went to Rogan's set?
Yeah.
And he had all the pictures of famous mugshots.
Just insert Trump's mugshot right into the top three.
At the top, by the door.
And Glenn, do you see, and path for all you guys look
it like okay yeah his hair he probably had a style is there
look at that face of a look at who oh yeah who do you think he's
think like you know what's going on in that head I'm going to
kill everybody I'm gonna go after like now that that phase and the
way he spoke after it's a first that we his first tweets
and getting suspended.
Yeah.
Go on Twitter and post a picture.
His first, it's almost as if he wanted, he wanted that mug shot.
Oh my God.
He said, give me the mug shot.
This is going to help me get elected.
And the left is thinking, we're going to destroy with his mug shot.
I wouldn't be surprised if his next book is going to be that mug shot.
Oh, no, no, no.
And didn't Elon retweet this?
He did.
When he said, he already launched it.
Go to Elon real quick when he retweeted it.
And Glenn, while he's looking, dude,
so Glenn, do you think the left is always up to something
and just going back really fast?
There's no accountability.
Everything that you said was spot on about the spying
and Obama and Hillary, no accountability.
So that makes one think that the left runs all of,
you know, all the DOJ and everything, which I feel like there's one or two Republicans in there. He, like,
this, this type of, this, this, is this their ploy to get them? It's obviously not working.
What, is this it? Or do they have something else up their sleeves for 2024?
Well, I think, well, first of all, it is interesting the choice he made because there have been
now people who have been taking mug shots where they're famous and they know it's going
to be public and they smile, they try to make it like any other, he had that option.
I think he very purposely wanted to convey, this is not something to laugh at, this is
not something that's cute, this is not something that's fun, this is something that is a grave
attack, not just on me, but on all of you.
And this requires defiance and anger and rage, which I think it does.
This is an extraordinary attempt to take the oppositional leader in the United States.
Imagine we looked at any other country doing this.
And we said, oh, here's the person leading all public opinion polls by far the most likely
person to challenge the current government, leading in poll and many polls to become the
next president.
And now that same government is prosecuting that person.
And not for traditional crimes of murder or kidnapping or extortion or bribery, but
for crimes that require this kind of very dubious
interpretation, this pioneering use of the law. So I think that anger that he's conveying
there was the right choice because it isn't something to be frivolous about. I think that that was
something that he wants his supporters to understand. But yeah, I think, you know, you look at the way in which these legal processes are being
abused, they're, and even just the cynicism of it.
So the first case was brought by a liberal district attorney where they want to put him on
trial in Manhattan, a place that 90 to 10 voted for Joe Biden.
This one will be in Atlanta, presumably, unless he moves it to federal
court, and then there's just the Fulton County, but it's still a very democratic place. And
then obviously the one in Washington as well with the January 6nd indictment under tax
Smith, which is filled with Democrats as well. The only exception is the Mar-a-Lago one.
That's a little bit more balanced, but they're not even pretending that they want this to be a fair
process.
You know, there is this theory, and I think it's very conspiratorial, and I don't think
it's true, that Democrats want to run against Trump.
They know that these kinds of indictments will solidify his ability to get the nomination
more easily, driving Republican voters into his arms.
That's certainly the effect of it.
I'm not sure that's the intent.
I don't think it's the intent.
I think the intent is they want blood.
And the reason they want blood is because basically Donald Trump
vandalized everything they regard as secret
about American politics.
And every power center views it that way,
liberal Democrats view it that way.
They, it's a bloodthirsty movement.
You know how often liberal politics now is about very little other than demanding the censorship
of your political enemies or the imprisonment of your political enemies.
Just saying that.
Like, very, it's almost, there's nothing, there's no positive policy constructive aspect to it.
They want everybody silencing the platform or in prison.
They label you and you race it once they say you're racist.
That's it.
Well, it's all your racist.
It's all emotion at this point.
Yeah.
Like logic is out the window, being stoic is out the window.
And he's sort of like, hey, this is how things go.
It's people on the right are frickin pissed
because they see what the hell is going on here.
And in many cases, rightfully so.
Especially with you highlighted with the Russia,
collusion and all that and everything
that you did with the reporting.
People are pissed.
This is why they're coalescing around Trump
and they're basically just anointing him as that.
But on the left, they just, as you said, they want blood.
It's just an emotional Trump derangement syndrome,
everything with that.
I think what began as a cynical, political script
turned into a true belief on the part of
most of American liberalism, which is the idea that Trump really is a Hitler figure that
his movement is this fascist, white nationalist dictatorship he's seeking to impose.
If you begin with that premise, a lot of what follows then makes sense.
But the way it's so dangerous is if you look even now with the war in Ukraine,
over the last poll is 55 to 45 Americans want no more money going to Ukraine.
The only reason it's that close is because 75%, 75% by far the biggest
demographic group of self identified liberal Democrats want there to be endless and infinite support
for the Ukrainian cause by the United States.
Why are they suddenly so pro-war?
No, it's because even there, they've been feeding on this anti-Russian hatred.
The idea, the most cataclysmic event in the life of American liberals was the 2016 election
where Donald Trump won in Hillary Clinton lost.
It was psychologically cataclysmic.
There were all sorts of reports by psychologists
about mental health episodes and neuroses
and anxiety disorders that came from it.
And the reason they want that war
is because they wanted to destroy Russia.
That's the level of kind of visceral hatred
politically on which they're feeding
that they want a war to continue for no reason
other than they wanted to destroy a country
for no reason other than the fact
that they blamed that country for Donald Trump's election.
Isn't it all just come down to vindication and vindictiveness
whether it's people in the left being like,
we gotta get back for the Russia thing?
Or even this, you talked about the Lula Jair Bolsonaro
about your concern about him being vindictive, which he sort
of is, you know, that's not the face of someone who's ready to go lightly.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a dangerous, it's a pretty dangerous political climate where people are operating
on their most primal, tribal, and visceral impulses.
And those have been deliberately stoked and cultivated,
primarily by the media for a lot of self-interested reasons.
And when you put that kind of cauldron
of just human intensity and emotion,
pitted one another against the other,
only bad things can happen from that.
So let's talk about the debate.
Let's go through the debate.
If you don't mind,
just take the leading run us through what you thought
the debate was, how was it who performed? You know, I know you kind of commented on Nikki Haley and
Vivek and all this stuff. You had Vivek on your show right after the debate. How did you
think the debate went? The numbers, just to kind of give the numbers for people that are
watching this. The numbers came in on how many views it got. Debate ratings, only 12.8
million people watched it. 13 million less than Donald Trump's debut in 2015,
of many will say big part of that is because Trump and Tucker
took a lot of views away when they did that Twitter
X show together, Tucker X show together.
But what was your feeling about the debate?
We were right next to each other,
so we saw the same thing.
Yeah, so if you look at all the punitive heading into that
debate, the conventional assertion was that everybody
was going to attack Governor DeSantis for the obvious reason that he's been depicted and held
up forever as the only alternative to Trump. So if you're looking to move up in the polls
and you believe the notion that DeSantis is the real viable alternative to Trump, you obviously
want to take DeSantis down in order to replace him.
None of that happened.
I don't think the Santas got attacked a single time.
Not one person attacked, he was essentially ignored.
He did a perfectly fine job.
He's very, I think he's a very skilled speaker.
He has a good message.
All of that.
Somehow when you put it all together,
the sum is less than its parts,
but I found it so notable that all of
the attention instead got devoted to Vivek.
Oh, yeah.
Why?
Why did they all go up there and decide to attack Vivek?
Part of it, I think, is a genuine resentment.
I still like to imagine, you know, you spent your career, you're like the governor, you've
got elected to the Senate, you're the ambassador to the UN, you're the vice president
of the United States.
And some guy comes along that four months ago, no Americans have heard of.
No one knew who he was.
He's incredibly self confident.
Let's just use the positive sense of that term.
You can call him kind of arrogant.
He probably comes off that way to people who just like him.
He has an enormous amount of self belief. And he's ahead of them all in the polls. That's why he was in that
center.
Right next to the Santa's mom, Nikki Haley and you know, you know,
Scott and Chris Christie are all the pants.
And the pants is off.
Yeah. So a lot of it is obviously just like genuine personal resentment and anger like
there was toward Trump.
And they also have no relationship with him whatsoever.
Exactly. Like he's new on the scene.
And for that reason, he has no, he has no interest in carrying any kind of personal
favor. He loved the fact that they were attacking him. But I don't think it's just that.
These are very professional politicians. They spend a lot of money on consultants. They're
looking to go up onto that stage and perform strategically.
They're not just there to vent whoever,
you know, whatever negative motions they have.
Obviously, there are things going on
and inside the polls, we see them a little bit publicly,
but internally, and I've definitely heard this
from lots of different people connected
to various different campaigns,
is that he is rising in the ways that matter
much more precipitously
than even his evident invisible in these polls.
In the sense that people who are more politically engaged are starting to like him, which is
one of the key metrics because that then filters down to the people who are less engaged.
They see him obviously as a greater threat to be the alternative to Trump than they even see governor de-Santis
as being.
And that is amazing.
And I think that what that shows is the transformational aspect we were talking about with Donald Trump
by far the person most closely aligned with Donald Trump ideologically is Vivek.
And de-Santis is trying.
He, I mean, a de-Santis understands that there's no way to get that nomination.
If he's gonna alienate the ideology that Trump has made
the predominant ideology in the Republican Party.
But Vivek is not even deluding it at all.
So the fact that the only people who Republican voters
seem to be willing to consider
are the ones standing up and saying,
I am an American first, American first,
populist, nationalist.
And all of that, that comes with that.
I'm going to wage a war on the CIA and the FBI.
I want to defund the FBI, the FBI.
I want to deconstruct the permanent administrative in Republican politics 10 years ago.
That would have gotten you destroyed if you had uttered that unintentionally.
Now the only way to succeed is by making it a centerpiece of your campaign, which he
has done.
And the fact that kind of the one that even is most closely aligned with Trump ideologically
is clearly starting to become the alternative to Trump shows how dominant that Trump ideology
is within Republican Party politics.
But it doesn't come down to essentially what Pat's been talking about for months and months and months
And months now is that the establishment versus the anti establishment like just to give a
Matter for I just thought of this let's say there was a debate
But it was all the legacy media guys right you got Anderson Cooper there
You got Brett bear there. You've got David Mure
You've just got Lester Holt typical legacy media of a sudden, center stage is Patrick Bet David,
host of the top rated B-B-D podcast.
And they're like, who the hell is this guy?
They're going after some tall, skinny brown guy,
whatever, with a weird last name.
Not exactly, but they're all like, who the fuck?
And he's winning because he's telling it like it is.
He's not exactly establishment.
And he's just giving it to you wrong, real.
And that's essentially what Vivek is doing.
But that is the key.
I've heard you say this before.
I completely agree with you.
Even like that Rachel Maddo quote about, you know, my being, the, the left, whatever, left
and right.
I'm not saying it doesn't matter.
It does matter.
There's still issues where it's a reliable indicator of where somebody falls. But by far the more important metric is, do you regard American establishment institutions
of authority as fundamentally trustworthy, reliable, and benevolent?
Or do you see them as deceitful, malignant, and entities that need to be destroyed, that anti-pro-establishment dichotomy
is by far the most important political framework
for understanding where someone's politics is.
And both Vivek and Trump are clearly
on the anti-establishment side of that.
And I don't think any of the other candidates
on that stage, including Governor DeSantis,
even though he makes gestures toward it
because he has to, is not really a credible anti-establishment figure. And I think the Republican polling is starting
to reflect that. The same reason why Bernie was a fan favorite of even people on the right
in 2016 because he was not establishment. So the public destruction is the
and why the a by millions and millions of Americans twice voted for President Obama and then voted
for Donald Trump, which makes no sense if you see the world through an left-right person,
obviously, but makes complete sense if you see it through an anti-establishment versus
because Obama's appeal fraudulent though it was was on the skinny guy with this weird last
name who hasn't been in Washington and has no, and I'm not a push has no and I'm not a push. I'm not a push. I'm not a button.
But he turned out to be one big one.
Right, no, he was. It was fraudulent, of course, that was, but at least he had a
credible claim to present himself that as that. And you go back to Obama's 2008
campaign and it was all about we're gonna radically change Washington.
So Glenn, break it all down. If it's if it's the Obama change narrative, it's the
Bernie, the million has a billionaires, if it's the Trump, it's the Vivek, all that put
together, where is America at? Where is the American populist movement at? Because
there's stuff on the left, there's stuff on the right, people are just angry at
what the hell's going on with the establishment. What's the common denominator?
Well, there was that time magazine article that I'm sure you guys have seen that was very
long and unintentionally revealing that essentially said that there was the most extraordinary unified
campaign on the part of establishment power centers to unite and coalesce in every
single way imaginable to ensure that Biden beat Trump in 2020. And obviously,
the entire media was against Donald Trump. He had every anti-income and obstacle starting with
COVID in the way that it destroyed businesses and shut down the United States. And he still came
extremely close to winning even by the certified results, right? Like even if you take the certified results, at its face value, he was, you know,
44,000 votes away from changing three states.
And that shows you two things.
One, establishment power centers still do have a lot of power.
There are still a lot of people who trust the media,
even though it's far less than it was even 10 years ago.
But when you add on to that,
the financial power of Wall Street,
that backed Biden overwhelmingly, Silicon Valley, that, the financial power of Wall Street that backed Biden
overwhelmingly, Silicon Valley, that did the same.
They still wield a lot of power, which is why they're the establishment.
And that's how they kind of pushed an adult Joe Biden over the finish line barely, though.
And I think the reason why all these prosecutions are happening is because nobody is confident
that Joe Biden is going to be Donald Trump.
How can you?
Yeah.
So let's look at this here because I wonder to see what everybody was going to say who the winner was.
Trump said Vivek was the winner of the debate for obvious reasons.
The Hill said Glenn Youngkin, which is kind of interesting for them to say Glenn Youngkin would,
you know, they, hey, let's go get Glenn and Murdoch wants to go find him.
From the No Labels situation.
The Guardian said Trump,
Wapu said the Santas was the winner.
Wapu chose the Santas as the winner.
If we're looking at, you know,
with everything that's going on today,
you think he's gonna show up to the next debate September 27th
and at the Ronald Reagan Library,
you think Trump's gonna show up to that one?
We think he still doesn't have a reason to show up.
I think it's going to depend on how the point,
you know, to see if anyone actually gets a real boost
from this debate if the scientists start.
I mean, I think there was a 538 poll that quickly pulled
who was the winner.
29% said to Santas, 28% said VECH.
There was that focus group assembled
when CNN gets those regular people.
It's like kind of people going on like some sort of excursion to go on a field trip to
look at how the ordinary people live and they talk to them. VECH was the winner of that
focus group. I think 11 votes for VECH and I think seven or something for Haley. So I think
it's going to depend. I mean, if Trump continues to maintain a 45 to 50 point lead,
notwithstanding the fact that he's not showing up,
my guess is he'll continue to not show up.
Why would he show up?
On the other hand, Trump likes that kind of debate.
He's extremely good at it.
And it's possible he'll do one or two just to do them.
But I just don't see anything happening at that debate
that changes the fundamentals of the race.
I think all it's gonna do is give it a much bigger boost
than probably anybody else.
If you look at the point, Republicans like the Santas.
It's not like they hate the Santas.
They like the Santas primarily because of the credit
they give him for COVID and opening up Florida,
but they're just not going to abandon Trump
for anybody.
Can I show you this poll,
or since you brought up to Santhus,
I mean, like Trump has only risen in the last six months, right?
He went from 50 to essentially 60.
Look at where toSantis was.
This is an earlier this year, February,
neck and neck with Trump.
Dude, he's about to go below Ramaswami.
He's at 14% Vivek's at 10%.
To say that it's a disaster what's going on
in the DeSantis campaign would be an understatement.
He was neck and neck with Trump
and now it's happening.
That's why you hear the expert.
Clearly it's been a fail marketing agenda.
I think one of them is that the the the Magga, the fan base, the Trump supporters, they're
literally pissed off like the majority of us are and they're like, you know what?
It's vengeance time and it's payback and he deserves it because at the end of the day
kind of I was thinking about thinking about you because I was talking with Tom Ellsworth,
who's under the weather. We were talking about sometimes God picks people to step up
and sometimes people answer to call some people don't. You were called upon
to wake up the world and you risked everything as I mentioned earlier. Trump did as well.
He risked it all. He didn't need to. He's a billionaire. He could sit in the middle.
He could be on a yacht for the rest of his life.
He picked it, the real supporters,
the real people behind Trump are like,
you know what, look at all the shit that came out.
He was cheated like to the entire time.
Nobody's gonna be held accountable.
We want him back in and we want him to serve these four years
and go after everybody.
That's why I think, and like you said, I like the Santas.
He's cool, he's one of the Pat,
Pat, the whole team moved here. I moved here because of obviously Pat.
And then great guy. I would like to hang out with that. That's fine. I'll have a beer
with him. But that's just showing you that decline is the, the people, especially with all
the indictments and all this garbage. They're like, no, no, no, I want the guy that was
supposed to be in their glen and I want him back and I want him to go after every.
Yeah. I think people are seeing that if they don't vote for Trump,
if they abandon Trump, what they're essentially doing
is rewarding the maneuvering and the scheming
of the people they most hate.
Yes.
And on top of that, I do think,
and it's hard for me to get a sense of this
because honestly, it has never mattered to me,
but I know it does matter in some sort of political sense.
The reality is, the Sanctus is just not comfortable
in those sort of settings where you're supposed to go
and meet regular people.
And Trump is the best at that.
And I think also that Trump,
to Sanctus is just kind of awkward in those situations.
Big time.
And I think once people kind of took a look at that,
they either lost confidence in his ability to win
or they themselves got a little bit uncomfortable with him. they either lost confidence in his ability to win
or they themselves got a little bit uncomfortable with him.
You know, Trump's ability to just seem
like this kind of a regular guy,
which again comes from the fact that he has
his outer burrow resentment,
just spiked growing up with a lot of wealth
and obviously living his whole life as a billionaire.
He just always maintained that same,
I mean Richard Nixon had that too.
Actually, he hated the Eastern elite. He always felt like they were looking down their nose at him.
Trump very much has that. DeSantis doesn't. He spent his career at his, he started off his life
at Harvard and Yale. He was in the house. He had a very kind of pro-establishment voting record while
in the house. And so I think people, the more they kind of get a sense for him, they do like him, but
they're just, like I said, the sum is somehow less than the parts.
It just doesn't all add up into something that is exciting anybody.
And I think that's a big part of that drop.
Exactly.
Can you go to that poll real quick?
Yeah, and the fact that Glenn, that Trump, his personality, that type of stage presence,
now that's why people are resonating with Vivekk because you saw the San Thets, it was
the same thing, it was the, everything was written.
Vivek is out there talking trash and that energy Trump opened up the roof to now.
People are like, we want that.
We don't want that same point.
The back wrapped, you know.
Yeah, he's wrapped.
And he looked like reasonably uncrongy doing exactly.
And I sat next to him like, you know, as much closest we're sending.
He looks you in the eye, he like has this,
also, I don't know if you've seen,
but like he has a wife and kids.
Those kids are insanely adorable.
I love him.
His wife is very charming.
Like the whole thing just comes together
and the way he speaks to you,
he looks you right in the eye.
He's very comfortable on his own skin.
People really sense that.
That's like an authenticity that can't really be trained or taught.
He's got that skill, but it's just unfortunately he's a skinny brown kid with a weird last name
and it's just not going to happen.
Well, not this year.
Not this year, not this year, but this future look right.
How much do you put into these national polls,
especially from 538?
So if you just look at the popularity or unpopularity
or favorable ratings for Biden and Trump, pretty similar.
So the disapprove is what,
a bunch of it on that 53% and approve is 41.
So the net disapproval rating is 12%.
Right?
And if you go to Trump, I think it's bad too.
It's even worse.
Go to that.
So it's 12, Rob, if you scroll down,
you can probably find the Trump or just go to the top.
Not a big pole, Leica.
Anyway, it's very similar to Trump.
I think Trump is actually even worse.
Rob, if you just go to the top, buddy, you'll find the,
there it is.
There it is, to the right.
Trump.
So, all right, so just go to the very end.
All right, so it's what?
17?
I don't believe that, Paul.
So 56, point is this, there's about a 60 or a split.
It's like an aggregation of Paul.
Yeah, exactly.
How much stock do you put into this?
Because ultimately, what's his telling me is, just like I've said before,
October of 2024, it's gonna be like,
breaking news, neck and neck, Biden Trump,
it's gonna be anybody's race.
You know, it's gonna come down to 50,000 votes
in, you know, Fulton County and in Pennsylvania
and in certain parts of Detroit, what have you?
Where does this break?
And how much do you put into stock into these polls?
Well, I mean, the 20, it was very similar in 2016. I mean, Trump and Hillary in this kind of
question were two of the most unpopular political figures to run for the presidency in the modern era.
And yet Trump ended up winning by a pretty comfortable margin in terms of the
lastro college and the way that the states broke down, and obviously not in the popular vote.
So a lot of this matters in a very kind of limited sense, who cares if 90% of people in
California and New York hate Trump, he's going to lose those states and it doesn't matter
by what margin. Also, if you have two unpopular candidates at the end of the day, He's going to lose those states and it doesn't matter by what margin. Also,
if you have two unpopular candidates at the end of the day, people are going to want
to know when did that, how did my life, what was my life better under one or the other?
And it is just the case that prior to COVID, the Trump economy was doing extremely well.
The other issue is Trump was the first American president
in decades not to involve the U.S. in a new war. I know people don't want to hear that. I
know people, but that is an amazing fact to me that there has, you have to go back, I mean,
not even Jimmy Carter, you have to like have a very broad definition in order to find one.
No new wars under Donald Trump. and the economy was doing very well.
And I think at the end of the day, that's what people care about the most.
And that's what they should care about the most is their own self-interest and which of
these presidents are going to make their lives better.
And I think, you know, they don't have to like Trump.
They have to like how the country was and how their lives were under Trump's presidency.
The matter has to a very specific question,
as since your Rachel Maddell's most fearless political
commentator from the left,
why wouldn't you vote for Trump in 2024?
I mean, I just don't vote because I don't like
attaching myself to a particular candidate
because I feel like it clouds my ability to do my job
as being a journalist.
I think it's important.
It's a kind of old traditional way of looking at things,
but I think for me it matters.
I think once you vote for a candidate,
you feel a responsibility to vindicate that even subconsciously.
You know, I live in Brazil as well.
I look at that distance that I can maintain,
you know, not just geographic,
but just kind of like emotional and psychological.
I think it's a very important one
to maintain my independence.
Well, the last time you voted.
I haven't voted since I became a journalist,
for exactly that reason.
Do you think most journalists should just not vote
and sit these things out and just be a journalist?
I mean, I think what most journalists should do
is maintain a spirit of independence.
And like whether these people vote or not because of that old, they're obviously Democrats. And what am journalists should do is maintain a spirit of independence. And like whether these people vote or not
because of that old, they're obviously Democrats.
And what amazes me is that there used to be a requirement
that they pretend more.
Now they don't pretend any longer.
I don't mean the op-ed page people.
I mean like the actual reporters sit on Twitter all day,
explicitly endorsing Democratic National Committee
talking points in a way that surprises
me because it seems like these media outlets have an interest in maintaining that fraudulent
appearance of neutrality.
They've given up on that.
That doesn't even exist anymore.
So I think more important than whether you vote is whether you work and always to maintain
that kind of sense of independence.
Let's transition.
Let's transition into a couple of the topics. So both Vivek and RFK have said,
they'll pardon Julian Assange or pardon Snowden,
and that's resonating with an audience.
Even Elon Musk, I think, did a poll should Assange
and Snowden be pardoned?
I think he did that last shot.
I don't know the exact results on how many,
what the numbers were.
Rob, if you've seen the poll that Musk,
there you go, 80.5%,
3.3 million votes.
80.5% said yes, 19.5% said no.
Do you think they should pardon them?
And two, do you think that's really a big deal
if one of those candidates does that?
I think it would have been,
I think it was, is incredibly disappointing to me,
personally that Trump didn't.
He got way closer to part of things,
not in the Nassange.
I thought it was a huge failure
on the part of Trump not to do it.
The reason he didn't do it,
and this is what the second impeachment was about
without question like, why were they impeaching a president
days away from leaving the White House?
The reason was because Republican senators were hanging over Trump's head.
There were several things they were fearful that he would do.
One was declassified a bunch of old CIA files, including the JFK assassination.
The other was pardoning Snowden and Assange and Mitch McConnell and Marco Rubio and a bunch
of them made very clear that if Trump did any of that, they were going to vote to impeach
him, which would have rendered him ineligible and or rather to convict him.
And this that second impeachment trial was about keeping Trump under control on his way
out.
I was extremely involved in the effort to try and get a pardon for bold.
I knew how close he was to Snowden.
I knew he wanted to do it.
And I believe that's the reason he didn't.
That doesn't exonerate Trump for me, but it, I think explains it. But the, I don't think there's a huge, this is not a
huge issue for the majority of voters. What symbolically that would do though, what is to
say, we are not going to allow the secret part of the government to continue to commit
crimes and to continue to hide the most important things they're doing from the public. We're not supposed to
have a part of the government that operates in secret. We're the only people who get
punished are the ones who reveal the crimes and the people who commit the crimes are
the ones who get shielded. These two cases are different. Snowden was somebody who actually worked inside the government.
He had an oath to maintain the secret of the documents he ended up revealing.
Juliana Sange is not even an American citizen.
He has no obligations to the US government of any kind.
He didn't take any secrets.
He was in the role of journalists.
He did something the New York Times and their Washington Post do every day, which is he
got secrets from someone who worked inside the government, which is Chelsea Manning,
and he published them.
And the fear of the Obama administration,
they wanted to prosecute a Sange,
was that how do we justify prosecuting a Sange?
While we don't prosecute the editors
of the New York Times in the Guardian,
that worked with him to publish exactly the same documents.
The case, and the problem with the Sange prosecution,
aside from the fact that it's a huge travesty in terms of press freedom is that the United States has no ability
to go around the world and give its lectures about press freedom in Russia and Iran and
North Korea anywhere you go to any of those countries in American journalists and you say
why is it that you're imprisoning journalists who are dissidents in your country, who criticize your government? They will immediately say, are you kidding? Who are you to give us that
lecture? You have arguably the most innovative and important journalist of his generation sitting
in a prison cell going on a decade now, if you count the asylum he needed from Ecuador,
who has done nothing wrong, other than reveal war crimes on the part of the United States government.
So more important than the personal outcome of these two,
people in Snowden has an okay life in Russia.
He's doing well, he has an American wife,
who was his girlfriend from way before he became Edward Snowden.
They have two small children,
they have a beautiful family,
he's doing well economically.
He can't leave Russia, but he's free within Russia.
Assange is in a prison cell in a high security prison cell.
So beyond the kind of personal stake,
which I care about a lot because of the role of my friends
and poll people, I admire a lot,
is the symbolic importance of saying
the US security state is not going to continue to have the power to destroy the lives of people who reveal their crimes that really is ultimately what
it's about it would be an active incredible courage for a president to stand up to the
US security state and say we know you want these people destroyed and we're going to
pardon them and that's going to show that transparency is now the new rule of how you're
going to function so do you thinkgoshan was killed by Putin?
I don't know for sure. I mean, obviously.
I mean, it's split.
80, 20, 70, 30, yes.
70, 30?
Yes.
70, 30, yes.
Perfect.
So 70, 30, yes.
If the number with Putin is 12, you know,
I think is at 11 or 12 kill list, whatever he's got,
that people he's taken out and coupled them
jumped off buildings pretty intense 65 million
billionaires just killing themselves you know. So one of them at a party in India or something like
that right. So when you think about some of these things with him and for a a the average skeptical
person who's paranoid would would I think it'd be a fair question to ask knowing how Putin is
I think it'd be a fair question to ask, knowing how Putin is.
And for Snowden to live in Russia feeling safe, why would he be safe?
Does Putin follow the guidance of whistleblower protection,
whatever, whatever, or is he keeping him safe
because Snowden is giving him information?
You know, these are very honest questions
that some people are wondering why is Snowden safe in Russia led by Guy like Putin?
So let me explain this. So, first of all, the idea that Snowden would give information
that would help another country surveil on its citizens in order to be kept out of prison
or worse is inconsistent with everything that Snowden did in his life when we were working
with Snowden in Hong Kong.
We, I would say the percentage stands that we assigned to the fact that at the end of
that process, he was going to end up in American custody in an orange dump suit and we were
never going to hear from him again because he would be disappeared to a super max prison
for the next 40 years.
We had a probability of 90 to 95%.
That was, it was a miracle that he escaped
the clutches of the American government
that happened through a series of very improbable acts.
So Snowden already proved he would be willing to go to prison,
give up his liberty for the rest of his life
in order to make it much more difficult
for states to surveil, having shown that he's willing to go to prison to prevent surveillance.
Why would he then turn around weeks later and make the exact opposite calculation that
I'm willing to help the Russians surveil in order to stay out of prison?
That makes no sense.
That's the first thing. The second thing is, when there was a time,
and I know this is a long-go history,
but when Snowden picked Hong Kong
because it was kind of a city of resistance to him,
of resistance to Chinese tyranny,
but it was also a place he knew
that the US government would have a hard time getting us.
So it was kind of a, he put a lot of thought into the place that he wanted us to work with
him.
And at the time, people were saying he was a Chinese spy because he had gone to Hong Kong.
When he ended up leaving Hong Kong, his intention was to go to South America where he was getting
a asylum, either in Bolivia or in Ecuador.
He was going to fly through Moscow on his way to Havana and then
on to South, onto Latin America and the Biden administration or rather the Biden administration
and they boasted about this, bullied the Cubans and said, if you want a deal to get rid of
that embargo, no chance if you allow us to note in Safe Passage through, which they had
already given him.
They withdrew that Safe Passage and that's why he got trapped in the Moscow airport.
He spent 48 days trapped in the Moscow airport in this international zone before they would let him into Moscow.
And the whole time I was certain that the US would be able to offer the Russians whatever they wanted because they were desperate to get their hands on snow.
I don't know if you remember, but they thought that he was on the plane of the
Bolivian president, Eva Morales.
They had a hunch when he was coming back from Russia.
They forced down the plane of a sovereign president, Eva Morales, on the hunch that he had
Snowden on that plane with him when he was coming back.
That's how badly they wanted Snowden.
So I thought, okay, they're going to offer the Russians.
We have, you know, 12 Russian prisoners that you want back. We're willing to give them to you.
We're willing to make this concession, that concession. I thought for sure that was gonna happen, and it didn't happen.
I went to Moscow the next year. I met with Snowden. I did a panel with some Russian media and Russian government officials.
And I asked that, I was asking everybody that why couldn't that deal be reached? Why didn't they make a deal for Snowden?
And what they told me were two things.
Number one, the US and the Russian political class
hate each other so much going back for decades
that they would rather avoid deals in their interests,
then make deals in their interests.
But the real reason is, is that Putin could not give Snowden
back to the US, it would be considered a deeply un-Russian thing to do because one of Russia's kind of national
attributes is they have always been a refuge for dissidents from the West.
You know, you do something against the West, you get refuge in in Russia.
That's something that's crucial politically to Russians, to their sense of their identity.
And there was just no way Putin politically,
I know he's considered a tallitarian.
He's not a tallitarian in the sense of North Korea
or Saudi Arabia.
He answers to political classes.
There are dissidents in Russia.
There are oppositional parties.
And it's his two contrary to how Russia functions
and operates.
Finally, Snowden wasn't traveling with the archive.
He knew not to travel internationally with the archive.
He not only didn't have the archive, but the passwords that he had were scattered around
the world because he wanted to avoid, even if someone tried to torture him, being able
to give access to that information, because he had already proven he was willing to have
the worst possible outcome happen to him,
rather than give up information.
Why are you skeptical of that?
I don't know.
I, so for me, okay.
So let's just say my daughter is 22 years old, okay?
And one of my guys have known who is 40 years old, okay, who is a full blown playboy.
Okay, and my daughter says, Dad, he's just a friend, you know, and I'm like, baby, I trust
you.
I don't trust him.
He's going to flirt with you.
And he's very good at getting you to flip and, you know, fall in love with them for a night or whatever.
Let's just say that guy's not a friend. He's a colleague, but I know who his DNA is, right?
Okay, even worse, if he's not an ally and he's an enemy and he wants to find a way to do something to you
and he's going to figure out any ways to go do that to you. Okay, in this situation,
okay, let's just say I trust Snowden.
I don't trust Putin.
And if we were to give an asset,
if America, Joe Biden, got Brittany Griner for Victor,
what's his last name, Bout, or Victor,
how would we say his last name?
But killer.
Right, you mean to tell me a,
Putin couldn't have said, you give me Victor,
I'll give you a Snowden.
Yeah, I mean, Victor's pretty powerful to have that well why didn't that happen
they had snowed in their clutches
in that international report
why didn't they reach in a a deal with the
the american to say give us everything and will give you snowing back
tell you why wouldn't do it if you're putin
snouting is way more powerful to have been victor bout
so in your in your exact hey, let's trade cards.
I'll give you a Mickey Mallow rookie card
for a frickin' John Canjolosi rookie card.
You're gonna say, who the hell is John Canjolosi?
I'm gonna say, well, go look him up.
He was a second baseman who was 230 or whatever he was, right?
Okay.
So yeah, you're not gonna give Mickey for John Canjolosi.
This is Mickey Mantle, Snowden.
You need Snowden.
You need that. Because of his secret. Are you kidding Mantle, Snowden. You need Snowden. You need that.
Because of his secret.
Are you kidding me?
Okay, so let me ask you this.
So.
This is your world.
I wanna know your art,
because you're the right guy to talk to him.
Absolutely, I know Snowden extremely well.
So why do we know the name of Edward Snowden?
Why do people around the world
consider what Snowden did to be heroic?
The reason is is because what he did was extremely likely to result in the imprisonment for the
rest of his life at the age of 29.
Not very many people are killed.
Or death.
Or death.
Exactly.
100%.
That's like you.
The best case scenario, right?
They were threatening to imprison me and Laura Poiters, the reporter with whom I was working. So imagine what they would have done to Snowden. The sky was
the limit, looking what they're doing to Julian Assange. Snowden knew that. Snowden took
that risk. When I first talked to Snowden, I said to him, look, I didn't know how much
he knew. I didn't know how sophisticated it was. I didn't know he's age, but I felt like
it was my responsibility as a journalist. I think he may be I'm dealing with somebody
with mental health issues with some kind of skewed vision.
I made very clear to him, I said, look,
you're committing multiple serious felonies.
This is the greatest national security leak
in the history of the United States.
You understand you're almost definitely going to end up
in an American prison and not a nice American prison
for the rest of your life.
He said, that's the risk I've already decided
that I'm willing to take.
So already Snowden is somebody operating,
would they completely different moral framework
than the vast majority of people,
including most of us, I'm not somebody who's saying
I'm willing to, I mean, I did take risk,
but my risk wasn't anywhere near the risk that Snowden took
at, I was the role, the journalist
at First amendment protections
Lots of other different considerations. So he had just proven
He's willing to go to prison for the rest of his life in pursuit of this cause this cause being
preventing the internet from becoming
this zone of master mail. Why a month later
of master mail. Why a month later Putin comes to him or whoever the F.S. becomes to him and says, you give us this information or we're moving that asylum
and we're going to let the Americans take you to prison. Why does he then a
month later make exactly the opposite moral calculation and say, you know what?
Actually, I don't want to go to prison enough to give you this information. I'd
rather give you this information and avoid prison. He just proved he was willing to go
to prison for the rest of his life in order not to, in order to not help a state for be able
to further surveil. So this idea that he would have helped, he would have given this information
to Putin to stay out of an American prison or a Russian prison is totally, again, the fact that he didn't end up at American prison was the biggest flu possible.
The government of Hong Kong stuck its middle finger up at the United States when the United
States demanded that he not be able to leave for its own reasons.
No one had proven that the US was spying on Hong Kong.
His moral framework, the one under which he was operating, the reason it's heroic is because
it's so radically different than the one under which he was operating, the reason it's heroic is because it's so radically
different than the one that we rationally.
So why would the United States government's threats not deter snowden from leaking that
information, but the Russian government's threats would make him give up information
to help the Russians spy better on their own.
Because Russians didn't destroy his life.
American American government did because Russia didn't destroy his life.
America did.
So to me look
I'm just a naturally curious guy that's yeah, I'm a guy. It's the that's the you know, you're the expert in this
You're the one that knows more about this than anybody else because you were the guy that broke the story
So I'm talking to the story yeah, no for me
I think it's a healthy level of skepticism to have with that by the way
I am thankful for snow and I'm thankful for what he did.
I'm grateful for what he did.
I'm in a, and levels that words can't even describe.
God knows what he did.
He ruined his life many would say, at 29 years old.
There's a level of patriotism that goes with that,
but it's complicated as well, right?
You always, it's always the whistleblower
from the other side you hate.
You know, you always like the whistleblower from your side.
Right, right, right. So it's easy to be like, well, you know,
can't believe what he's doing. He saw everybody on the media. This is not something he should
be doing. If you love America, you should not be supporting what's known. I don't know
if you remember that. CNN was in there. Everybody was saying that. Of course, I remember
the call. Yeah. Yeah. All I'm saying is, why is he there? with a Putin's camp approach and say, for the rest of your life, you're
protected as if you're a president, we're going to give you that kind of protection for
the rest of your life. And if you're not going to give us any intel that's already public,
maybe teach us mechanisms on how they were investigating on the people for us to know
how to investigate and maybe his moral compass doesn't hurt him to say, well, I'm not really doing anything.
I'm just going to show you how they did it and then you do whatever you want to do with
it, but this is how the government was investigating on its people.
Maybe that's something where he's like, I don't feel bad about doing something like this.
I don't know.
I totally got this.
This is a different from the distance.
I've likely have the same questions.
The issue of course is I can't prove the negative.
Sure, so I can't prove to you, Snowden didn't do it.
All I can tell you is I have, you know, I spent a lot of time, like very intense immersive
time with Snowden.
In all of those days, we were in Hong Kong doing this work.
I've maintained a very close friendship with him since.
I talked to him, you know, with a great amount of regularity.
And that's not a particularly persuasive thing
to say take my word for it.
I understand this known as ethical code.
I think the only thing I can ask people to do
is look at the actual evidence of what his conduct has been.
And the other thing is there is that Russian code that I know that I didn't understand
until I went and talked to a bunch of people.
But if you look at the Cold War, whenever there were people who felt persecuted by Western
governments or who became spies, they always were given refuge in Russia from the West.
For as long as they wanted to until the day that they died. It's a part of the Russian moral code.
I talked to the head of RT on whom I was with a panel and I asked her that question.
I interrogated her about that because I genuinely didn't understand why the US and Russia didn't
reach a deal to turn soon and over.
And that was what she was trying to get me to understand was,
it would be a very un-russian thing to do
to take a political dissident who wants refuge in Russia
and turn them over to the United States.
I, it's not something that you can understand
if that's not part of the code.
You ever been to cross stations in Beverly Hills,
the restaurant?
Probably not.
Okay, would love to take you.
It's incredible.
Unbelievable food.
They have two kitchens there.
One of them is the kitchen for the on family, okay?
The recipes that they've created,
like their garlic noodles, which when you eat,
you age backwards.
It's like a pension and butt.
Ha, ha.
Ha, ha.
The other kitchen is for the average people to go in.
People like you and I, if we work there.
You cannot go in the kitchen unless if you're parted
on family, okay.
So what does this mean?
Yeah, I mean, I'm sure Russia is thankful for it,
but listen, you ain't Russian, bro, you know,
you're a Snowdon, so.
There's a level of skepticism, I think,
a president or any prime minister would have for anyone
that's a whistleblower because in the back of the might
of that prime minister president is,
scares the whistleblower.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, great job for what you did, but shit.
You could whistleblow on anybody
because so we gotta be also protective of your abilities
to whistleblow.
I don't know if you understand, like,
if I'm communicating my thoughts properly or not. You don't trust them. Yeah, I mean, you know, that's an important
way. Yeah. Like, you know how a guy that like, you know, a guy that says something like this.
Okay. He'll say, look, just between us. Bap, bap, bap, bap, bap. Okay. Just between us. And then
you test them three times and you leak him information, inaccurate information. And then
he tells three other people,
guess what he just said?
He just validated to you.
He can't keep information.
And it's not hard to test stuff like this with people.
It's very easy.
If I do it on a small level with a company
or a sales organization or family or friends,
like anytime I wanted to know,
which one of my friends that I went to high school with,
I just would talk to them,
I would tell them certain private things
and I would say,
just please keep it between us.
If I got three people that I called me,
I already knew who that guy was.
Right.
So either I intentionally leak information
that I want to be leaked
or I just realized you can't fully trust that person.
You can not.
No, and that's interesting.
You know, when, first of all,
I think the starting point for all of this discussion should always be,
why is it that Edward Snowden
having not only leaked information,
but done so in the most responsible way, right?
Like he could have sold the information
to a foreign government and gotten millions and millions
of dollars that archive was extremely valuable.
He could have dumped it all over the internet.
Instead, he came to us and when he came to us,
he was adamant that we agreed to conditions
that I even found repressive about how he didn't want
any information published that could ever even potentially
put a single person in harm's way.
He was a very conservative whistleblower.
He was, he imposed on us a lot of restrictions
about things that I thought we should have been able
to publish, that he didn't want published.
There were things the New York Times ended up publishing from that archive that he was
indignant about, that he thought should never have been published about how we spy on China.
So he was somebody who did this in the most responsible way possible, didn't dump it
on the internet, didn't sell it to a foreign adversary, came to journalists, asked us to
curate it in a very responsible way, which we did.
There was no suggestion that anything we ever published harmed anybody, put anybody in
harm's way.
The question, the first question should be, why is somebody like that forced to live
their life in exile in Russia because the minute they come back to the United States,
they're going to be put in prison for the rest of the life?
Having said that, I understand your question.
Again, I can't prove the negative. I guess what I, all I can tell you is that, um, even the information that I'm going to be put in prison for the rest of the way. Having said that, I understand your question. Again, I can't prove the negative.
I guess what I can tell you is that
even the information that Snowden would have to give,
Snowden was not the deputy director of the NSA.
Snowden was a somewhat low-level contractor
who worked at Booz Allen.
What he had that was valuable was access to the archive
where the documents and not so much what Snowden had to say.
Most of our reporting was based on the document.
If you don't have access to that archive,
there's not much that Snowden can even give you
that's a value.
And he wasn't carrying with him the archive
and thumb drives with a piece of paper
that contained the password.
It would have, he purposely made it extremely difficult because he didn't want to be put in
the position where somebody could force him to turn over that information.
Look, I will tell you on this topic and we can transition to the next topic.
Sure.
But I appreciate you, you know, having this exchange with me on this topic.
This isn't about Snowden.
I'm not putting this on Snowden.
Right, you're on Putin.
I'm putting this on how Putin views an American.
Dude, you're not priority to me.
You're not Russian.
This is not your motherland.
You don't love this place.
Like I love it.
Gorbachev's Yeltsin.
You know, this is like the greatest country in the world.
He views that.
I mean, Putin is a true, a Russian nationalist.
So for him, he's gonna, all the way,
the best leaders ever are typically more paranoid
and skeptical than the average leader.
If I can come and betray you once and kind of do it again
and again and again, you're weak.
But if I can come and betray you once
and you still are able to entertain a relationship,
but you know there's filters
that you can't go through certain rails, you know certain things you can't enter anymore.
I respect that leader and I put Putin as a formidable leader.
Uh-huh.
I don't put Putin as a lightweight.
Uh-huh.
I don't put Putin as he wants to be complimented and you can win him over with flatter.
He's not weak.
He's a true G who he is.
So, but I trust my enemies
way more than I trust my allies. And here's what I mean by that.
I know my competitors anytime I build any businesses
whether it was insurance or whatever I did,
I knew my enemy woke up every morning
wanting to put me out of business.
I respect that.
I knew my enemy woke up every day
wanting to make sure I went bankrupt.
I respect that.
I'm not upset at it.
I actually totally get it.
You know, if you play, you know,
you're fighting somebody in the streets,
guess what the guy is gonna do?
You have to assume the guy wants to beat the living crap
out of you, right?
So that's not a naive or place coming from where it's like,
well, I'm trying to be antagonistic.
No, I just think this is the enemy.
Here's how you view it.
Let me go to another topic with this
and transition out from this.
Brazil, you've lived, are you still in Brazil?
Or are you living with it?
Yeah, so Brazil.
I have an affinity with Brazil.
I name my daughter, Irton Senna,
how they view Senna over there,
Senna's a race car driver.
1994, all the stories with him,
what he did, beloved with the day he died.
I don't know if you've seen his document
or if you haven't, you must know.
Yeah, no, no, I know.
Emotion, right?
Who's, I related to God and how he's wide.
I related how he wanted to, you know,
do what he did with the, you know,
corners he was taking and how he said,
you guys move the tire.
That's why I crashed.
You guys move the, we never moved the tire.
And he found that they moved the tire two inches.
Is why he hit the tire?
You know what stored that is when he went through
one of the corners,
you guys scoot up and they have to apologize to him.
He says, because the tires I was going on practice
was not the same.
You moved the two inches.
That kind of a guy on highwood.
Fucking maniacal.
I love and how much he loved this country.
So you live in Brazil, you know, Operation Car Wash
has been documented on God knows how much, you know, what he's done.
And, you know, the $600 million, the one guy that was a super billionaire and goes from being a
super billionaire to all of us, losing everything. And he goes to jail and I've studied this whole thing,
you know, in the past. And then Bolsonaro, who he was and then Lula, who he was, whose Lula's ties are
and who, how they viewed Lula and you kind of came in,
did something kind of, you know,
you did some kind of interview with Lula,
he came down sat down and talked to you
for about an hour and 20 minutes or so, and like that.
What is your impression of Lula and Bolsonaro?
And the reason why, you know, assume Americans like, you know,
who is Lula in America?
Is Lula a Bernie Sanders? uh... americans like you know who is lula in america is lula
a
uh... bernie sanders
is bolson error a trump is lula more than obama or biden is lute who is
lula because there's a lot sky went to jail he did a lot of stuff to still
money from the government based on stuff that's been documented
in your eyes
is lula a good guy is your bad guy bolson error is your good guys your bad guy
what do you think about these two characters?
so
when first of all who was
Life story you just have to acknowledge no matter what your ideology is is an inspirational life story
He was born into the deepest and most extreme form of poverty in a country where
Poverty means something different than it means
in the United States.
He was one of nine children.
He was a literate until the age of 10.
He got a job in a factory.
He lost one of his fingers in a factory.
He became a union leader.
So he emerged from both poverty, union activism, and then became a hardcore political leftist. It was never really the kind of political leftist of, say, Castro or Hugo Chavez.
In fact, he always tried to distance himself from that.
He ran for president three times, Brazil came out of this dictatorship.
That was the result of the CIA helping right wing generals in 1964 overthrow a
democratically elected government.
They imposed a dictatorship for 21 years. That was brutal. And when it re-demoptized in 1985, we will became a national figure.
He ran for president three times, lost all three times because the perception that he was
too leftist for Brazil, the elite was aligned against him in 2002. He understood that in order
for him to win, he needed to become a more moderated figure. Not just a kind of pretend moderated figure, but an actually moderated figure.
He chose his vice president, this highly respected entrepreneur and banker, who was a billionaire
or something close to it. And when he got into office, he began essentially accommodating
the financial elite in the financial sector. Under Brazil's first two terms from 2002 to 2010,
Brazil's economic growth was explosive. It went from something like the 15th largest economy
in the world to the sixth largest economy in the world. It surpassed the UK. Everybody got richer.
The rich got richer. He was able to take a lot of that national wealth, distribute it to
richer, he was able to take a lot of that national wealth, distribute it to programs that gave a guaranteed monthly payment to people who couldn't feed their children, that level
of poverty.
He created opportunities for poor people to go to college for the first time.
There were good things that his government did.
Brazil at the same time never got out of the systemic corruption.
That was the result of that dictatorship. So the way that you get votes is you have to pay people off.
The way that you get anything done politically is you move money around.
All the Brazilian politicians have huge amounts of Swiss bank accounts that have been hidden
and finally discovered.
And Lula and his party, PT, were very much a part of that because they were running the
political system.
So Lula himself will tell you when I asked, I've done several interviews with him, including when he was in prison. And he will tell you
that his party has always been one of grave corruption. What happened was in, by the way,
he's probably the most talented politician of, there's no person who can move crowds
by looking at me. Yeah. Yeah since one of the best politicians out there.
Yeah, when he left office,
2000 shun, and he had an 86% approval rating.
You're talking about, you know,
for holistic democracy,
because everybody got richer.
And not, you know, obviously a lot of that is locked,
a lot of it has to do with international commodity prices,
things the president does in control,
but the president gets credit when the economy does well.
The economy did very well, and he left office with that kind of popularity.
When the, his chosen successor, who was Dilma Rusef, who was actually a communist gorilla,
she picked up arms, she went to prison to fight the Brazilian, the dictatorship.
When commodity crisis, prices collapsed,
the economy and Brazil collapse,
they saw an opportunity to get rid of that party finally.
They impeached her in 2016,
and then in 2017, this anti-corruption probe,
car wash, the biggest anti-corruption probe
in Brazil's history, one of the biggest in the world,
started putting into prison billionaires and some of the biggest in the world, started putting
into prison billionaires and some of the country's most powerful politicians.
And I was a supporter of it at the start.
Like a lot of people were, it started to become clearly politically motivated.
They were aimed at certain figures and certain parties and kind of protecting the center
right parties with which they had an ideology.
They started to become put under suspicion.
In 2019, I had a source who hacked into the phones of the leading judges and prosecutors,
including the ones who presided over Louis conviction.
He was leading all public opinion polls in 2017.
Twenty points ahead of Bolsonaro.
Twenty five points ahead of Bolsonaro into the 2018 race.
They took him, they put him into prison, they convicted him on these corruption charges,
rendered him ineligible.
Bolsonaro ran without having to get past Lula and he got elected.
In 2018, right at the start of the Bolsonaro presidency, I got this gigantic archive that
proved the whole time the judge was potting with political actors, with the prosecutors,
essentially using corrupt
methods in order to fight corruption.
When we exposed it, it required a nullification of Louis conviction.
He was able to leave prison as a result of the reporting we were doing.
That's the reason why there was so much anger and hostility toward me from the Bolsonaro
movement because they funny got Louis and jail and are reporting forced his release. Lua runs for president in 2022, defeats Bolsonaro by a tiny margin, same issue with Trump.
The whole establishment united against Bolsonaro had all the challenges of COVID. He's still almost
one. They have their own January six moment as well. Their own January six moment exactly because
Bolsonaro claimed that his loss was due to fraud. Bolsonaro, over the years, you know, he was his backbencher.
He's made a lot of, he had made a lot of statements like,
I don't really believe in democracy.
I think Pinochet was a great guy.
I wonder, the only thing Pinochet did wrong
was he didn't kill more communists in the country.
I mean, a lot of statements that were very disturbing.
I've viewed Bolsonaro as a real threat.
When he got into the presidency, the entire establishment aligned against him like they
did with Trump and began using anti-democratic methods to defeat the Bolsonaro movement, censoring,
imprisoning political enemies just like they were doing with Trump.
I became an outspoken opponent of the things that were being done against Bolsonaro and
against his movement,
obviously change where I stood politically suddenly the Bolsonaro movement saw me a lot more
favorably. The left began to turn on me and view me as an enemy. Bolsonaro ended up as a very
weak president. Lula is a very weak president because Brazil is run by this kind of very corrupt
centrist class that's transactional in nature.
There's not a lot that presidents can do.
One of the things I like about Ula is he's a very outspoken defender of Juliana Sange.
He is constantly demanding the persecution of a son stop.
He refuses to get Brazil involved in the war in Ukraine saying,
we don't have a war with Russia, we have a war with poverty and inequality.
And we're going to use our resources not to feed a NATO war, but to try and help Brazil.
If you ask me, is Lula corrupt?
My answer would be, I want to see a fair trial, not a trial filled with corruption.
There's certainly evidence to suggest that he was part of the systemic corruption.
Bolsonaro, though, too, by the way, everyone in Bolsonaro's sons is a
political elected official. They all ran for Senate and Congress and won in the Bolsonaro
name, and they all have $6 million mansions and huge amounts of personal wealth that
is very difficult to account for. I think Bolsonaro and his family also have a lot of evidence
that they too are involved in in corruption. To me, neither Bolsonaro nor Lula is the relevant problem in Brazil.
The problem in Brazil is that you have a court that has seized all power.
The censorship regime in Brazil makes the United States look like this bastion of liberty
and freedom.
And at the same time, you have these corrupt factions in Brazil that continue to run Brazil to
the detriment
of 90% of the population.
And so I've seen Bolsonaro, Norrula, neither as villains
or heroes.
They're almost ancillary figures,
more than they are central figures to Brazilian politics.
You know, when I talk to some friends there,
the way they describe Lula is like criminal
at the highest level corrupt politician,
stealing money from the people,
he had a meeting with Castro,
he didn't name Castro, I have a meeting,
I like 83 years old Castro
was an emotional meeting with Bolsonaro.
No, he was like 13 years ago.
Who maintained positive relations
with Hugo Chavez, with Maduro, with Castro,
but at the same time,
it's kind of weird, don't you think? I don't think it's weird to have relations with some of the most important
leaders of the most, I mean, Venice, Waila is a country with enormous oil reserves. Totally
yet. Yeah. You know, I mean, Joe Biden meets with the head of Saudi Arabia, who is as repressive
as anything that Hugo Chavez ever did or that Fidel Castro
did.
We have a long history of supporting tyrannical governments.
I'm not trying to defend Lula or I'm not trying to defend Bolsonaro.
There's huge political polarization.
The Brazilian right sees Lula the way the American left sees Trump.
And at the same time, the Brazilian left wants Bolsonaro in prison and is well on their
way to putting Bolsonaro in prison.
They've already made him ineligibleble to run without even convecting him.
I think a lot of those methods are anti-democratic as well.
I'm, you know, for me, when I see stuff like that happen and, you know, Brazil being the
great people that they have there and you saw a similar thing.
We're not Bolsonaro.
I can't go there.
They have a guy at the top.
Who's the, the one that everybody fears? Is he the attorney general who looks
like a bat? You know, he just looks like a guy that's the president. He's the judge.
He's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's are more on Lula than he is with the same thing is in 2017 when he was nominated for the
Supreme Court. The less hated that guy. Look, he looks like a sell-in from a backman.
This guy is done. This guy is scary. There are very few people willing to criticize
Alechandri Marej. I've been using my platform non-stop to warn about the dangers that he poses
to Brazilian Liberty.
You feel safe with this guy there?
No, no, I don't.
I'm surprised he hasn't come after you yet.
The reason he wants to, believe me, the reason he can't is I took, I accepted a contract
with Brazil's largest newspaper, which is like the New York Times of Brazil, to kind of
insulate myself further.
Obviously, I have an international platform when Brazilian prosecutors tried to indict me
and prosecute me for the work I did.
You know, they became an international scandal.
No, this guy is a, this guy is a, okay.
No, I just kind of wanted to see where you are.
No, this is, this is the guy who is responsible for a, he runs Brazil.
He runs Brazil even though he's a single member of the court,
no one has elected him.
And he is a despot and a fanatic and the purest sense of,
what he will do is he issues orders when he wakes up in the morning,
ordering people banned off the internet.
There was this guy, he's currently in Miami now,
you should talk to him actually if you haven't met him.
He was like the Joe Rogan of Brazil.
He modeled his, Constantine or Raphael?
Monarchy was his name.
Okay.
He modeled his show after Joe Rogan.
He like has four hour shows.
He drinks, he smokes weed during this show.
He became the most popular podcaster in Brazil.
Every politician left and right was begging to get on the show.
He went on one his show.
He was a little bit drunk.
He was asked is when he said he was an absolutist, free speech absolutist.
If that means even that the government should allow the Nazi party to exist.
And he said, yeah, of course, even the Nazi party should be able to exist, like a thousand
United States.
They turned, they called them a Nazi, YouTube kicked them off, YouTube, his career was destroyed. He went to Rumble, he has a show on Rumble, and now that
judge, that fanatic that you just put on the screen, has ordered Monoc are for off Rumble,
has find him, has opened a criminal investigation. He's, that's why he's in, he's in the United
States because he fears being arrested. The only thing that he has done
is question the integrity of the 2022 election,
question a lot of the orthodoxies of COVID.
Without any trial, that judge has silenced
what had been the most popular.
It would be like saying Joe Rogan
is not permitted to use the internet.
But to me, this is why I'm very curious,
because some would say you helped Lula,
when you talk to him,
so I go, okay, maybe this,
because the guy that people trust, they trust you.
So when you're doing something,
you say something good about a guy.
But a lot of people in Brazil say,
this is the guy why Lula got,
he was able to drop the charges,
so Lula could run against Bolsonaro,
because they felt like he was the guy
that was the most formidable guy to beat Bolsonaro
and he did.
So I'll tell you what actually happened.
And it's an interesting story
because it's repeating itself in the United States
and in the EU.
When they put Lula in prison in 2017,
the reason they did it, the establishment did it,
was because they always wanted a center-right
kind of like a Mitch McConnell Paul Ryan type. That's their dream to be to to to to run Brazil. And the
only way they thought they could do that was by destroying Lula and his party. What they
got instead was Bolsonaro. So they kind of got the monster that they feared most. And
when Bolsonaro got into office, they realized they feared Bolsonaro way more than they feared Wula because he was a much
bigger enemy of the establishment. Exactly. So this guy here was an enemy of the left. The left hated
him. They called him a racist and a fascist and all the things the left calls people when they
disliked him. And then what happened was the Supreme Court, the establishment realized there was only
one person who had any chance to be Bolsonaro and that was Lula.
They used our reporting as the pretext to let Lula out of prison and to render him eligible
to run again.
Look, my reporting was truthful.
I can't help the fact that the Brazilian, the judge and the prosecutors who oversaw Lula's
conviction did corrupt and illegal things.
That's my job to reveal it and not to hide it.
It's not my fault that that will end up winning. They let a little out of prison because
they knew only will could defeat Bolsonaro. Dangerous guy, right? That guy is, let me tell you
something. He's a very dangerous guy. I've been a journalist for 20 years. I obviously
have done a lot of journalism that has been risky, has been dangerous, whatever. There's
never been a time, not ever in my life when I thought to myself, I'm just a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit of a bit He has no limits on what he will do. He has to come after you yet.
Not yet, but there have been. Are you gonna stay in Brazil?
I'm gonna stay in Brazil,
and I'm gonna continue to be the leading voice against
Aosha Nadeemaraj, because I'm the one who has the,
the, the, the, the, the, the,
he's gonna come after you, though.
He kicked a bunch of guys out.
He kicked the former president's son out,
so you can't come back to Brazil anymore.
Look, my, my kids are Brazilian.
Like, kids are, like, kids are, like funny. You go to, yeah, Paul, Paul,
Paul, I figured, there's a big difference
between doing that to Brazilian activists
and doing it to me.
And so I feel like I have the obligation
with this platform to use it
because if I don't, who's going to?
He's safe out there, bro.
Respect.
Pat, what are the chances that you're gonna invite
to our friend Glenn and this guy,
Marias, to a crustacean in LA.
Funny.
Yeah.
You know what it is when you're saying this,
like, I would love to go to Russia
and sit down with Snowden, have a conversation with them.
And I would love to go have a conversation
with Putin as well, obviously.
I'd love to talk to him.
But we approached Maduro to go to Venezuela
to interview him because I wanted to talk to Maduro at the peak.
Uh-huh.
Maduro and who was a guy that was going up against him that's now in Colombia, one guy though.
One Guaido.
Yeah, just to learn what's the reasons behind this stuff that's going on.
But anyways, you know, it is what it is. Glenn, it's great to have you on.
I wish we could go a couple more hours here with you.
I'll do the last topic.
I just want to kind of see what your thoughts are on this year
with the last topic.
ESG, how concerned are you with ESG?
Does anything with ESG is going on?
Story recently came out about ESG
on how these guys were making all this momentum
with Fink, State Street, BlackRock, all these guys.
And then next thing, BlackRock ditches ESG,
shareholder proposals as public pressure crowns, BlackRock, the world guys, and then next thing, you know, BlackRock ditches ESG shareholder proposals
as public pressure crowns.
BlackRock, the world's largest asset managers,
reportedly scaling back support for ESG,
related shareholders' proposals supporting only 7%
and nearly 400 such proposals last year,
significant drop from the historical 25% to 47%
because so many proposals were overreaching
lacking economic merit or simply redundant.
They were unlikely to help promote long-term shareholder value and receive less support
from shareholders, including BlackRock and recent years as his company's annual review
revealed.
Despite the shift BlackRock's commitment to ESG goals and in front of banking and investment
persists, the ESG property agenda is a $66 trillion weapon aimed directly at corporate America,
meaning this battle is far from over, over.
So, is it still around, is it a concern,
is it something that?
I think the back, I mean, I think everything
that happened in 2020 and the excesses that that produced
because the fear that everybody had of speaking out
created enormous amounts of backlash.
And I think what you're now seeing is a kind of reaction to it.
I'm sure you saw that story in the Wall Street Journal about how corporations are getting rid
of their diversity managers because they do nothing but create problems and impede the performance
of a corporation and produce nothing of actual real value because these kinds of notions of equality
and diversity are completely artificial.
They're offensive.
They themselves are often steeped in the very stereotypes
that they purport to combat.
And I think there's now a space
that has been created for these companies
to start to move away from this.
I think there's a public demand for it.
There's a shareholder demand for it,
and I think that at least has had a right direction.
Okay, I'm glad the fact that we,
the people still have power, you know,
and the routier we are, the louder we are,
people are paying attention to it.
Glenn, you don't do a lot of face-to-face podcasts,
it's good to have you, we're honored to have you.
I know when you and I met for the first time,
two days ago, we were chatting it up and Chris was like,
hey guys, can we reschedule that podcast
and both of you guys come to the debate
and we made the project.
Which kind of worked out.
Yeah.
So you're great to be here.
We're honored to have you.
Trust me, we are way more honored to have you.
We've been looking forward to this for a moment.
Your podcast, folks, we're gonna put the link below,
System Update, okay, podcast that he runs, System system update available on rumble, Spotify, Apple podcast, Google
podcast and pocket cast.
Rob, let's put the link below both in chat as well as in the description.
If you enjoyed today's show with him, trust me, you want to go subscribe to his podcast
because you get it there regularly.
Once again, thanks for coming on. take everybody, have a great weekend.
Bye-bye-bye. around the world come together to spend three and a half days together from August, 30th to September, 2nd at the diplomat resort in Miami.
Tolon have to scale their business.
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Fire?
All of those things and much more.
And we do that over a span of three and a half days.
And reason why it's a very important season to attend a conference like this to follow
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Today there's three different types of people.
They're scared.
They're those that are content and the obsessed.
To scared, they don't want to do anything because they're worried about what's going to
happen to the economy.
They're going to take a big hit.
The content, they're walking on saying, life is pretty okay.
I don't need to do anything else.
And then there's the obsessed because they see a massive opportunity today.
So imagine spending three and a half days with three thousand obsessed people
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So look, if you've not registered, yeah,
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I never went to conferences when I was coming up by myself.
I always went with a spouse,
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every night afterwards we would sit there and say,
what was your biggest takeaway?
So get yourself your spouse, your partner,
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I will see you there. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ you