PBD Podcast - Reza Aslan | PBD Podcast | Ep. 222
Episode Date: January 4, 2023In this episode, Patrick Bet-David is joined by Adam Sosnick & Reza Aslan. He is an Iranian-American scholar of sociology of religion, writer, and television host. In this episode they discuss Ame...rica, the constitution & much more TOPICS Why Reza Islan escaped from Iran Did Teddy Roosevelt’s grandson overthrow the prime minister of Iran Reza Aslan Reveals why he Stopped Believing In Christianity What was radical with Jesus’s messaging? Did Mary give birth to Jesus? Reza Aslan explains why he’s not an Atheist If you were to start a new country, what religion would you practice? Reza Aslan on raising his kids Patrick Bet-David and Reza Aslan debate Iran Protect and secure your retirement savings now with this complimentary precious metals guide. Go to http://goldco.com/pbd 855-594-2758 FaceTime or Ask Patrick any questions on https://minnect.com/ Want to get clear on your next 5 business moves? https://valuetainment.com/academy/ PBD Podcast Episode 222. Purchase Reza's book An American Martyr in Persia: https://bit.ly/3VEPYUY For more info, go to RezaAslan.com: https://bit.ly/3VEPYUY 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 added to the distribution list 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)
30 seconds.
Did you ever think you would make it?
I feel I'm supposed to take sweet the theory.
I know this life meant for me.
Yeah, why would you plan on galiah when we got bett David?
Value payment, giving values, contagious,
this world of entrepreneurs, we can't no value that hate it.
Howdy run homie, look what I've become.
I'm the under one.
It's not just a terrible movie set.
Outside of the fact there's terrible movies out.
Avatar's not a date movie, the first date movie.
Anyways, we're struggling here with Adam Adams
trying to go on a date to see what movie to go to.
Kids made some comedy, not comedy,
cartoon recommendations,
but I think you want to stick to a movie.
Anyways, we have a special guest today.
We have a Resa Aslan in the house today.
If you don't know him, you may have heard
his number one New York Times bestselling book,
Zellet, The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth.
He's written a few other books.
I think he's written four books
on the topic of religion.
There's a no God but God.
I can go on and on about the things that he's done multiple new york times best
so a recent book that just came out which will talk about
later on today's well an american margarine perjure
found that he's a press peterian which is fantastic
uh... he he he is not you he is you're definitely not a press peterian
which will get into but uh... he's a raiders fan his His aunt is, I believe, Layla Furohaar,
which in the Iranian community,
if you don't know, that's a very, very big deal.
Yes, it's like saying your aunt is a share.
Yeah, it's like, no, no, no, like literally,
that's what that is.
Do you believe?
Yeah, and how to show on CNN, he's done a lot of stuff.
He loves debates.
Maybe he does, I he loves debates maybe he does
I don't know if he does love debates he seems to like debates he's been on the bill march a multiple
times he's been on all over I mean if you turn on if you go on CNN you if you go on Google you
search his name on YouTube you'll see a ton of different interviews Resa thank you so much
we're coming out of meeting yesterday. Some good stuff some bad stuff. Some good stuff some bad stuff
yes. No it's a pleasure to be here but that's that's the part about, to me, at least for me,
my interest is sitting with people that have some good stuff,
some bad stuff, some controversial stuff,
that's what makes for interesting.
If you're playing it too safe,
it's boring, I don't think that's a route to go.
Well, my primary fields are religion and politics.
That's not exactly very peaceful.
Very peaceful.
The light conversation.
Great kitchen table top.
Yes.
That never causes you guys want to talk about doing things,
giving you listen.
You want to go religion or politics,
what's going on there?
I'm simultaneously the most interesting dinner guest
and the worst dinner guest known for her shortine or guest. Known for her short loud dine.
Yes, that's right.
Well, I mean, one thing I respect about you
is how much you admire the Trump family.
Like your level of, you know, when I see your tweets,
man, it was just like constant admiration, love.
It was like non-stay.
I've lived it too much, honestly, if you.
I am all about making America great again
Okay, so that that should kind of give you an idea if you don't know who he is
We're being hardcore sarcastic for the people that take things little anyways, Resa if you don't mind take a quick moment
Give the audience who doesn't know your background. I was born in Iran. Yep in
1972 which makes me 50, which is insane.
I should.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
My family was like an upper middle class family,
land owning family, big, large tribal family.
My father was a kind of a troublemaker,
communist,
two days, two days, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But like college today,
the way that all college kids are sort of communist.
You know, my family too.
Yeah, so my mother said,
so today, if you wanna share with the audience
what today is.
So today was the primary communist party in Iran in the 1970s.
And it actually had a massive role in the success of the 1979
revolution that got rid of the Shah.
And that eventually, about a little less than a year later,
replaced the Shah with Chomene, whose first act
was to get rid of all the communists.
So, it's just kind of crazy. They thought they were going to make it better for two days,
but it got worse for them. They thought they could control the religious
fanatics. And if there's not a lesson there, then you're not paying attention, right?
I think the Communist Party, they were the intellectuals of the movement, they gave the movement teeth and they helped, I think, you know, less politically minded people understand exactly what was at stake on this revolution.
But in the end, it's the religious leaders who have the ability to bring people out onto the streets, right? Ideas don't go anywhere if there aren't thousands of people
willing to risk their bodies in order to implement those ideas. And so it was this weird marriage
of convenience to begin with, right? These like secularists, mainly atheists, intellectuals and
communists, and the religious pious masses, they married together to get rid of the
Shah, but then as soon as the Shah was gone, the cracks in that relationship very quickly
formed.
And I remember very clearly my father one morning, very, at least for my seven-year-old
perspective, very suddenly saying, it's time to go.
We got to go right now.
What year?
This was 79.
Oh, you left in 79.
Oh, left in 79.
So, after the Shah left, after Khomeini arrived.
Where did you live?
Where did you live?
Where in Iran did you live?
In Tehran.
What part of Tehran?
Oh, we were in the North.
Okay.
Yeah.
Nice area.
Yeah, we're in a nicer area.
We had things.
Yeah. To these. what city would you say?
If you've gone the area, like what area,
do you remember the area or no?
I don't remember the exact area.
It was an area like if you lived in the north,
you're like to say what would be the, you know,
it's like saying you lived in Beverly Hills type of area.
Maybe not Beverly Hills,
but it's like to say you live in a good area.
Yeah, well, I will say that like those people, the very rich people, they got the message
way before anybody else. They all got out with their Swiss bank accounts intact.
Have you been back to Iran since you left in 79?
Just once. I went back in 2005 before I was anyone and when I could just kind of sneak under the radar.
This was right after Ahmad Jinnijad became president.
Good time.
It was a crazy time.
And I went back for about eight, nine weeks
on a research trip, but also to see my family,
to see my home and just to kind of see what the place was like, that's probably the last time I'll get to see my, you know, home and just to kind of see what the place was like.
That's probably the last time I'll get to see Ron.
Well, what happened if you went back now and what do you think would happen if someone
like Pat would go back now?
Because that's a lifelong dream of his.
I just don't know the reality of it.
I think that if I went back now, I would probably be never heard from again.
I'd probably disappear at the airport.
I think if Pat went back now, he would be welcome with open arms.
And then someone would knock on his door a few days later and say, you sent a text,
and that text makes you a spy come with us.
Does there need to be any justification for them, you know,
taking you away, or is it just that the theocrats are just going to come get you, and that's just how it
works? See, here's the the awful truth about Iran, is that there are a lot of ways that we could
label it, that it's a theocratic regime, or that it's a fascist regime, or that it's a theocratic regime or that it's a fascist regime or that it's like a military
regime.
But the truth of the matter is that like most autocratic states, it's impossible to really
know who's in charge of what, right?
The person in charge of your life is the guy on the other side of the desk.
You know, if he's had a nice lunch and you know, had a nice conversation with his wife,
then maybe you're okay.
If he had a fight with his wife, then you're screwed.
And it's not like you can point to the law to say, but that's not how it works, right?
In countries like Iran, the law is whatever the
person in front of you says the law is. And that makes these kinds of situations very
difficult. So when an American citizen of Iranian heritage, which happens quite often, gets
arrested and accused of these sort of very vaguely worded crimes.
It's very hard for the American government to kind of do anything legally to support them
because the law is such an absolute mess over there.
Is there a law in Iran, an established constitutional law that provides for a fair judicial process for anyone committed
of a who is allegedly committed a crime?
Yeah, absolutely.
Does anyone pay any attention to that?
No.
I mean, you could appeal to it, but people just sort of laugh at you.
That's the problem with not just Iran,
but all of these sort of autocratic states.
Please go back to the upbringing.
So I'm tracking all of it.
That today is kind of a rebel like the younger ones.
Like, you know, two days in a movie theater,
you would stand up to kind of give recognition to the Shaw
and two days wouldn't stand up.
Like they would do, they were rebels.
They were like, stop like that.
Yeah, yeah.
And then go ahead, continue, we're listening.
So seven years old, you guys, your dad says,
we gotta get out of here, 79, right before Chomene,
right after Shaw, you guys leave you come to the States.
Yeah, and I think for my dad too,
people don't, people forget that when Chomene,
Chomene, Jesus, when Chomene returned.
Just so you know, two Americans is the same thing.
It is the same guy.
But to us is the same thing. Yes, no, yeah. the old Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio Gio G And possessing the extra five. But there's a big difference. Yes, homani is the OG.
Say it, would you, for the, for us,
Gringo Americans pronounced a different name.
Homani, I, you fucking, yeah.
I got you.
I got you.
Homani was the founder of the Islamic Republic
and, and the guy who invented the very idea
of the Supreme Leader. Hom very idea of the Supreme Leader.
Chamanai is the current Supreme Leader.
So say that two names back to the party.
Chamanai, Chamanai, Chamanai, Chamanai.
Chamanai, Chamanai.
Totally separate words.
It is.
It doesn't sound anything alike.
Anyway, the point is is that, you know, when he came back,
I think people don't remember this.
When he returned from exile in Iran, millions of people came out to welcome him as
the savior of the new Iran. He very publicly announced that he wanted nothing to do with
politics, that he had no interest in government, that he was happy that the show was gone, but
he just wanted to be left alone. He wanted to go back to his home and to his family and to his mosque and to his studies.
And my dad, who never trusted anything, anyone wearing a turban had to say on any subject,
just thought, bullshit, that's, that don't believe that for a minute.
And so just in case, let's grab some things and go. And if it does turn out okay,
we'll come back. You know, let's just leave for a little bit. So that's what it was. It
was really an emergency thing. You know, wake up in the morning, grab some things, put
it in the suitcase. We're going to just leave for a little while. And that was obviously
you would you guys go to straight here or did you go like to Spain? And then you came here, was it like a inner?
We there was a brief stop in London for a lot of Iranians checking out.
Britain London was like stop number one.
But that's for us.
Our destination in the United States was Oklahoma.
Was in it Oklahoma.
And I to this day, I can't tell you exactly why my
My theory is that when my dad was in college. He did like a semester abroad at
At a at a university in Oklahoma. I think in Edmonton. I believe I don't remember Eastern Oklahoma
I'm sorry Oklahoma's that I'm unaware of your geogs just the Roman bus
Um, and I'm unaware of your geogs. Just the Roman, the bus.
And I think he just thought, well, that's America.
Like that's Oklahoma is America.
And so for go to America, then we're going to land in Oklahoma.
By the way, he's right.
And a lot of ways.
But it only took us about a year to realize, oh, there's so much more about America.
And so like so many many Iranians we headed west
and ended up in California, but in Northern California,
not in Southern California, different Iranian diaspora
in the Bay Area.
Okay, yeah.
There's a big community there.
Well, the Bay, it's like two different communities.
So the first Iranians who fled, the wealthy ones,
who like took their money with them,
all settled in Los Angeles.
And so there's a reason we call LA Terangilists, you know.
And but then the sort of intellectuals, the second wave, the post-revolution people who
got out, they all settled in the Bay Area.
So it's a vastly different community in California than Northern California, Iranians and the
Southern California, the Northern California Iranians and the Southern California Iranians.
So, but for two days to leave and escape, that doesn't make sense, though, because I'm assuming
your dad was not a fan of the Shah, right?
No, it was not a fan of Shah.
So how, that is a very strange kudos to your dad, by the way, for making that decision.
But for knowledge, yeah, because that doesn't make sense though.
That doesn't make because the level of hate two days hat for the Shah was so massive.
Yeah.
That they all wanted anything but the Shah because obviously, you know, the holds look
how rich he is.
Look at the 2500 year celebration.
You put together anything is better than the Shah.
I'm surprised that he left.
I think for my dad, the two day politics was married
to a real anti-religious hardcore atheist.
A serialism.
View, yeah.
I always joke that my dad was the kind of atheist
who always had a pocketful of profit,
Muhammad jokes that he would pull out at inappropriate times.
You know what I mean?
Like he was a very kind of virulently anti-religious person.
How old were you the first time you read Communist manifesto?
Really, I'm actually curious.
I mean, honestly, it's probably not until I was like 13, 14.
Okay, so you read it here.
You didn't read it in Iran.
Yeah.
That was like the Bible for today party.
You have to read that to get an understanding about
bourgeoisie and all the other guys.
Anyways, okay, so your religious ideology,
like how religious beliefs, you've kind of gone through
a little bit of, if you don't mind sharing out with the audience.
Well, so, you know, we grew up culturally Muslim, the way that so many people are culturally religious around the world.
It was just kind of part of who we were. It was part of our identity.
And, you know, we would go through the rituals and the holidays and all that stuff.
But when we came to the US, I think my father thought, aha, well, now we don't even
have to pretend anymore.
Like we don't have to pay lip service to any of that.
We'll put the caron away and roll up the prayer rugs,
and that's the end of that.
My mother was raised a little bit differently.
She was raised primarily by her grandmother.
Her parents were famous actors in Iran,
which in Iran is another way of saying prostitute.
And so she basically raised by...
Just so you know he's right.
She was basically raised by her very strict grandmother.
And so, you know, my mother would would pray every once in a while and we would do some of the
holidays. But the more we stayed in Iran, the more I grew up, I'm sorry, in the US, the more I grew
up in the US, the more and more we systematically stripped our lives and our family of any kind of religiosity.
But you have to understand, I was seven
when my country was handed over to religious fanatics.
And I remember it.
I was there on the streets.
I watched it happen.
And I think instilled in me at a very young age, this deep fascination with
religion and the power that religion has to transform a society for good and for bad.
And the way that religion can be used as a way to make change, but to also identify
yourself, to create groups and in groups, out groups.
I got really fascinated by legends and mythologies.
I was just a weird boy.
Like I was a weird boy, I was interested in religion,
but in a family in which there was no place
to really express that in any meaningful way.
What's your dad, and now it may make sense to me,
was you a Mossadeh guy, I'm assuming he was a Mossadeh guy.
Okay, so that makes sense.
Okay, core Mossadeh.
Of course, so so.
What does that mean,
Mossadeh is like the original Bernie Sanders
that the Shah kicked out.
That's never heard of that.
That's not good.
I would say he's the Bernie Sanders.
That's not good.
Mossadeh was Bernie Sanders
and then eventually what they did with him
is with the help of the stories or the help of CIA.
The same way they got rid of the show with the help of CIA
and Kiss and Gin Carter, the same playbook they used
with Mossadeh.
Well, a little more aggressive.
They actually put them in a village and just...
The Mossadeh revolution was in 1953,
where once again, Iranians rose up,
kicked the Shah out of the country.
This is the third time we've done this.
But not the young Shah, the father,
there's a Khan you're talking about.
No, no, no, this was, this was Muhammad Reza Pahlevi, yeah.
53.
That's right, that's right.
50 is Muhammad, yeah, the same Shah that left in 79.
We threw him out and replaced him with this
nationalist government at the head was the prime minister,
Muhammad Mosadek, had very radical democratic, nationalistic ideas,
one of which was to nationalize Iran's oil.
Like, why are we giving away our oil to the British?
In exchange for rent, literally,
that's what it was in exchange for.
Like they rent the land and then extract the oil and keep it.
And so we nationalized the oil.
The British were obviously devastated by that move, but this was post-World War II, and
the British were just this powerless island now, you know, that the empire was gone.
So they asked their good friends, the Americans, for help.
And this was when the CIA had first been created.
It came from the OSS, from World War II, but now the war's gone.
So now we have this intelligence apparatus.
What do we do with this?
Nobody had any idea what to do with the CIA until a very clever, clever agent
by the name of Cermet Roosevelt.
I believe grandson of Teddy Roosevelt, I think,
or Grand nephew of Teddy Roosevelt came up with this great idea
and it was, hey, why don't we put the shop back on the throne?
I can do that, give me four guys in a suitcase
with $100,000 in it.
And that, as absurd and as like oceans 11,
is that sounds?
Economic Hitman.
It's just, that was it.
There were like four guys.
There's a boxer, a communications nerd.
I mean, why isn't this a movie?
Kermit Roosevelt, who's like this 97 pound coke bottle,
glasses wearing nerd.
He looks like Joe Montana.
A couple of other people and...
With a mustache.
No?
Does he now look like Joe Montana?
He looks like an elderly Joe Montana little...
I was skinny right there.
Yeah.
And it took them a couple of months.
And they went to Iran and in a couple of months, they created a fake counter protest,
removed Mosodec from power,
put the shot back on the throne.
And the British said, thank you very much.
We'll take the oil back now and the Americans said, yeah, we did all the work.
I think we're just going to stay.
And that was the birth of the problematic relationship between the US and Iran that then led in 79
to the anti-American revolution?
Do you know the 25-year contract between that?
Do you know the story about the 25-year contract?
Okay.
Can you pull up the 1954 oil Iran contract?
Just type that in.
It'll come up.
This is so interesting, but everything you're saying where all the timing is not making
sense.
There you go.
The consortium agreement of 1954. Zoom in a little bit for us to read this.
They signed a 25-year contract.
So the consortium agreement, 1915, will provide a Western companies with 50%
ownership of Iranian oil production after its ratification.
In 1959, despite the numerous negotiations and offers,
the Shah-Viron refused to extend agreement,
which originally and clearly
Postulated that the consortium he had had the right to prolong at least 15 years three times five years
Anyways, this thing is expiring in 1979
So check this out 53
Mossadeh 54 they signed a contract 25 years the ownership. I think it's through with France
I want to say obviously UK US and there's one other country that I don't know if it's Germany or
Oriol Dutch show. Yeah, so they team it and then there's a meeting which by the way this would be a very
Interesting documentary to watch I watch as I couldn't believe it. There was a meeting in in the south or central America
couldn't believe it. There was a meeting in the South or Central America
by four leaders in 1978 or 77 deciding on how to make the shot
fall and because they knew the shot specifically kept saying,
I'm increasing prices.
I'm increasing prices once this expires.
Obviously, they don't want him to have that kind of power.
Boom, with the help of that that the next economic hitman comes in
We got to replace the shop Iran's been used by people of the west for many many years
Anyways, okay, so interesting background story so from that you go you become a Christian
I think for four years because you you I want to say you were a Christian for four years at 14 years old
Yeah 15 years old so I mean, you know, I was fascinated by religion
and spirituality, no real place to explore that at home.
A friend of mine invited me to a Christian youth group
in high school.
And I was like, all right.
And, you know, it's like singing and games
and like wholesome fun and entertainment and camping trips.
It was awesome.
And also the gospel story, which is a pretty good story.
I'm not sure if you're familiar with the story of Jesus.
I have a Jew, two Christians, and an atheist trying to give back to being a Presbyterian again.
I mean, look, again, whatever your spiritual views are, the story of the God of heaven and earth
coming down in the form of a baby and then dying for everyone's sins and then all you have to do
is believe that story and you'll never die is a great story, right? And when you're 15 and you hear that, you're like, that's a good story.
So I fully 100% converted to this very conservative brand
of evangelical Christianity and then spread that story
to pretty much everyone I knew until I went to college
and decided I'm gonna study this stuff.
Because it's so great, it's so fascinating.
Who was a teacher that messed you up in college?
Who was, I'm actually curious to know
who was it a girlfriend or a teacher?
Who was a teacher?
I went to a Jesuit university
and it was the Catholics that screwed me up.
The Jesuits who were like,
oh yeah, you believe that stuff?
Jesuits, did it.
The Jesuits were sort of the intellectual,
intellectual priesthood in the Catholic church. the Jesuits did it. Yeah. The Jesuits were sort of the inter- Hardcore, yeah.
Intellectual priesthood in the Catholic Church.
How about Santa Clara?
Yeah, Santa Clara.
Yeah, well, modified Jesuits, but yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like liberation theology Jesuits, you know, that, like that,
that hardcore Jesuits.
They're the ones that turned you off from Christianity after being such a hardcore believer.
It's not that they turned me off of Christianity. It's that they taught me the truth of the gospel
message. They told me about Jesus the man instead of Jesus the Christ, right? They told me about the historical person who
walked the earth two thousand years ago and said these things and what the context of
what he said meant at the time and how we should read that today as opposed to the sort of spiritualization,
you know, the metaphysical aspect of the things
that he said, the way that his incredibly radical,
revolutionary words and thoughts were defanged
by the first church and turned into wishy-washy spiritualism
or what we now call Christianity. They gave me an
insight into the original idea of what he was talking about. How different are those two ideas?
Jesus the man and Jesus who became the Messiah. I mean, Jesus the Messiah has no concerns for the cares of this world whatsoever.
His only concern is, you know, the world to come. What does it matter what you eat in this world?
And what does it matter how you dress? The only world that matters is the world to come and
focus all your attention on that world and
not the vagaries of this world.
That's Jesus Christ.
Jesus of Nazareth was a radical revolutionary who saw focus was on the suffering of the people
on this world right now and the power structures that were creating that
suffering.
Jesus Christ is everyone's the same.
We're all equal.
There's nothing between rich and poor.
Everyone's the same.
Jesus the man said, no, the first shall be last and the last shall be first.
The hungry will be fed and those who are fed will go hungry.
Right?
Those who have will have it taken away from them and those who don't have will get it.
That's not where all the same.
That's the reversal of the social order.
Right?
That's the top and the bottom switching places.
Is that more of a socialist component?
Is that like a Robinhood?
Who would he be in a, the Jesus the man in a metaphoric context?
I mean, I think he's got more in common with Che Guevara than Robinhood.
I mean, again, Jesus at no point in any of the gospels
does Jesus talk about everyone is equal,
everyone should have the same.
That's not a Jesus line, right?
That the world that I see is one in which everyone has the same.
That's socialism.
The world that Jesus talked about,
it was quite a violent world.
It was a revolutionary world,
and it was a world in which the first became last,
and the last became first.
Like, that's not a popular viewpoint
amongst the people in the category of first.
It's interesting though,
that the Jesuits in Santa Clara
made you look at Jesus as the Messiah and the individual.
So then you went through the journey there
and then how did that bring you back to Muslim?
Well, so the kind of evangelical Christianity
that I had ascribed to is very rigid. And at its core is this idea
that the Bible is literal and it is inerrant. And it takes 10 minutes of research to discover
that both of those things are total bullshit. Like, the Bible is riddled with errors.
I mean, riddled with the most basic, most obvious contradictions and errors, and that
the idea that it should be read literally makes no sense at all.
And so once you start understanding the chasm between the man Jesus and how he became the Christ of Christianity,
it's really hard to continue to follow the Christ of Christianity any longer. And so...
Would you give some examples of that by the way? Like the most palpable errors that you would just notice immediately.
Yeah, sure.
So Matthew, Mark and Luke say that Jesus was crucified
on Thursday and the Gospel of John says it was like a Sunday.
So in other words, it was before the Passover
and the Gospel of John was before the Passover and the Gospel, John, was after the Passover.
You know, Matthew has Jesus for some strange reason going to Egypt,
whereas Luke says, has the same birth story, says nothing about Jesus. In Matthew,
nothing about Jesus. In Matthew, Jesus is born in what we would now recognize
as probably 10 AD-ish, eight or 10 AD,
and in Luke, Jesus is born in what we now recognize
at about four BC.
So, you know, there's all these contradictions.
It's just very obvious, clear contradictions.
The reason I ask that,
because the obvious question is whether it's the Bible,
whether it's the Torah, whether it's the Quran,
should these books, these relics be taken literally
or metaphorically?
Not only should they be taken metaphorically, they were never, ever,
ever intended to be read literally. Do you think the authors, the author of Luke, who says that,
you know, in the year, you know, I guess it's 6 AD.
There is a census in Rome.
And the census requires everyone in the entire Roman Empire
to stop what they are doing and travel
to their father's homeland so that they could be properly
counted for the taxation purposes.
And so Joseph, who lived in Nazareth,
had to travel to Bethlehem in order to be counted,
because his parents' family was from Bethlehem.
OK, there is no census of the entire Roman Empire in 6 AD.
There's a small census in Syria, but where Jesus lived did not encompass that census.
Census law under the Roman Empire is as clear as it gets.
You get counted where you live.
The purpose of a census is taxation.
So we're here to count your stuff.
How many people are you and where's your stuff?
The idea that every once in a while,
everyone in the largest, greatest, richest empire
of the world had ever known would have to stop
what they were doing and travel for months at a time
to wherever their forefathers were born
in order and also bring their stuff, I guess,
in order to be counted there is patently absurd and unhistorical.
Now, here's the important thing to understand about what I just said.
Not only does it screw up the entire Christmas story that you tell your kids every day,
or every every Christmas, but Luke, who wrote that, knew that that wasn't true. He was living as a citizen
of the Roman Empire. His readers for generations read that and knew that that wasn't true. That's not
how the census works. I've gone through many censuses and that's not how it works. They didn't care
They didn't care. Because the idea, the notion that what was being read
was meant to be read literally would never have even occurred to them.
The idea that Scripture is a thing to be read historically and literally
was born of the 19th century.
It's only been about a couple of hundred years
since the very notion of biblical literalism
has existed, and it's existed as a result of the scientific
revolution, which said that a thing can only be true
if it could be demonstrably proven true,
if it could be historically proven to be true,
that's what true means now.
That definition of true did not exist
in the ancient mind, right?
True had nothing to do with facts.
True had a much deeper meaning.
The truth of the nativity story is that Jesus
was born in the city of Bethlehem because that's
the city of David and Jesus is the new David and he is going to recreate the kingdom of David.
And so therefore he has to be born in Bethlehem.
When everyone knew he was born in Nazareth, his name was the Nazarean.
That's what his name was the Nazarean. That's what his name was.
So, you know, it's only we in the modern world
that have created this kind of fake
and totally unnecessary filter
through which we force all of our scriptures,
the Quran, the Torah, the Gospels, all of our scriptures
to succumb to our particular definition the Quran, the Torah, the gospels, all of our scriptures
to succumb to our particular definition of what is true
without realizing that that definition of true
is barely 200 years old.
And are you saying that the same rules apply to the Torah
and also the Quran?
All gospels.
So it's all metaphorical.
What we call gospels are what we refer to as sacred history, and we use that term sacred
history specifically to differentiate it from actual history.
And by the way, that is not to denigrate sacred history.
It's to understand it for what it actually is, right?
There's a message that is being given to us over thousands of years and that message is
important, but you have to filter out the modern conceptions of how we understand, you know,
facts and truths in order to actually get to the heart of what that message is. Last question on
this, would most religious scholars tend to believe with what you're saying?
Or because I'm sure there's a large sect
of religious scholars and people of faith,
whether it's Muslim, Jewish, Christian,
of every sect that'll say, sorry, Resah,
this is the literal word of God.
And thank you for your opinion,
but I'm sticking to the exactly what the Bible says.
So there's people of faith,
and then there's religious scholars.
How do those two come to terms with what you're saying?
Well, among religious scholars,
what I just said is the most basic element,
like fact number one, the thing you learn on day one, right?
Nothing else that you do can happen until you understand that basic fact.
That it's metaphorical.
Well, that it's sacred history, right?
So you can use figurative language, metaphorical language.
You can extract history from sacred history.
There are ways that we can do that.
Like we can look at the gospels and say,
these are the things that are most likely to be traced
to the actual historical Jesus, and these are the things not.
And there are centuries of methodologies
that we can use to rely on to get a very accurate picture
of the difference between the two.
People of faith, no, no, people of faith do not
think in those terms, right?
For people of faith, the scripture is God breathed.
It's divinely inspired, and if it comes from God,
then it must be perfect in all ways.
And so what does historical contacts have to do with it, right?
Jesus is literally God speaking to all humanity.
So who cares where he lived,
who he was actually speaking to,
what the political and economic situation
of the world in which he lived and how it shaped him.
What does that matter?
He has no context.
God has no context, right?
Okay, so he just, for three decades,
he lived in 1st century Palestine, irrelevant, irrelevant.
He's not talking to his fellow Jews,
he's talking to you and me.
So context has to be stripped from scripture for it to matter.
And scholars say the opposite.
So, I have a direction I wanna go,
but I don't wanna to go off this topic
until everybody here is comfortable moving away
from this topic.
It's within this topic what I want to go to a different place.
Do you have something to say, Tom?
Yeah, I think there's a couple of things here.
And I think you're taking a very...
Academia has done a very good job.
I think of, I don't know, it's a good job.
It's been very effective at, you know, driving down through the elements, the elements of
history and finding what they claim and believe may be their errors of interpretation or
misunderstanding of historical context at the time.
You know, you're talking about the synoptic gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
You have a tax collector, Matthew.
You have an early world physician in Luke.
You have a Jewish student that almost became a rabbi
and John, and then you have just kind of the common
Jewish man, Mark.
And so they all are slightly different.
And what surprised me is you approaching it and say,
well, Jesus, is that there is a Jesus man and Jesus Christ.
And this was where you went from,
I would have supposed a Baptist or Methodist youth group,
at least you were describing evangelical,
evangelical or what non-denominational, non-denominational
community church, American community church, from 1980s, right? Which you're describing.
So it's pre-Megatured, and it's pre-secre-sensitive, and it's the pre-Self-identified Christian
adopting all of the world influences into their now deluded biblical worldview.
Okay, so you commented that Jesus had no concerns
of this world and things about equality.
I think it was very consistent,
even in Roman historical writings,
that his message was, you're equal in that,
you all have one,
you owe this earth one death and you have a soul.
And at that, that was sort of the table stakes for everybody.
And yet there was inequality in classes and cultures
and how people were treated and discriminated against
and things like that.
But I think Jesus was very clear that he started there.
He says, hey, you have one soul, you owe this earth one death.
And then to say there's no concerns in this world, Jesus was very clear that he started there. He says, hey, you have one soul, you have one death.
And then to say there's no concerns in this world,
he was, I think, very, very clear.
He said, listen, religion that God our Father
finds faultless and true is this.
Take care of what is in orphans and their distress.
So there is not a socialist, but there is a charity there.
So I'm kind of curious as to where you go
from a non-denominational upbringing
through the lens of the three universities
that have decidedly different Catholic approaches,
which we're talking about Boston College,
Notre Dame, and Santa Clara.
They're very different.
You have the literalist, you have the Jesuits, right?
And that was your college experience.
But I think somewhere between the two, it kind of feels to me that I'm just trying to
figure out how you bridge from that to the college perspective, and the college perspective
was the Catholic Church, which was an inversion.
The first century Catholic Church, people thought Peter was the first pope, not correct historically,
you're not in yes, found to be.
And then that created a government church.
So the Catholic Church was nothing more than
some Christian tenants applied to basically Rome,
built in the middle of Rome, how odd,
and then enabling the monarchies of the 14, 15, 16 centuries
to do a bunch of things.
And so I just think you've got several islands here you kind of go to, and I was just trying
to find the thread that led you to say, okay, you know what?
I am no longer a Christian by, okay, flawed man needs a path to heaven.
That path is the perfect Christ that gave us sacrifice for me. I was trying to figure
out in your description what that stepping off point.
Well, first I should mention that I went to Santa Clara and then I went to Harvard and
Santa Barbara, not Notre Dame or.
No, no, no, but I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I that happens in academia. And you were a student at Santa Clara, so that's what you were then host off with.
No, absolutely.
Here's, I think, the sort of the most basic way
of answering a very complex question.
The sort of foundational view about Jesus amongst
the most mainstream Christianity
is that he was fully man and fully God, right?
That's the great mystery of the incarnation, that he was 100% man and he was 100% God.
The problem with Christianity, especially the way that it was introduced to me, is that it ignored the man part.
Or when it did focus on the man part,
it was simply to buttress the God part, right?
That's the only reason that you talked about Jesus
being thirsty or Jesus being tortured.
What was the word you just used?
I never heard that before.
It buttressed his divine.
Like it was there just to support his divinity, right?
He was a man, we can talk about him as a man,
but only in so far as talking about him as a man
makes the fact that he's God that much more extraordinary,
right?
Like look at the things that he did.
When in fact he was God, you guys.
What I wanted to do was say, okay, it's fully man, fully God. Let's remove the God
part from the equation for a minute. And let's actually deal with the consequences of what it
means to say he was fully man. Because if he's fully man,
he lived in a very specific time and place. He was, like all human beings, a product of
that time and place. It shaped who he was. It shaped how he spoke. When he spoke, he wasn't speaking into the ether, he was speaking to someone
in front of him. He had an audience in front of him. So who was that audience? And what was that
audience like? And what was that audience expecting? When he used certain words to speak with them,
had other people use those words? What did those words actually mean when Jesus said the kingdom of God is on earth or the
kingdom of God is in you or the kingdom of God is coming?
His audience had heard the the Kingdom of God,
unless you know what his audience meant by the phrase Kingdom of God.
And what his audience meant, what his audience heard, what Jesus meant when he said those words was a new world order. Because right now the
king is Caesar. If I'm to reestablish the kingdom of God, which is the sole function of the Messiah
in the Hebrew Bible, you have one job if you're a Messiah and that's to recreate the kingdom of David,
the kingdom of God. Well, you can't recreate the kingdom of David
when sitting on top of it is the kingdom of Rome.
So, without question, every Jew, every poor, impoverished, village Jew,
because that's all he ever spoke to,
who heard the phrase,
kingdom of God, heard liberation from Rome.
Every single one of them. So when we as scholars look at Jesus
preaching about the kingdom of God, we understand that what he is preaching
is liberation from Rome. When we as religious people 2,000 years
removed from all the history and context and as people who stop even thinking about Jesus as a human being, a product of this time in place,
someone, you know, privy to context, but as an ethereal, eternal, everlasting, ghostly celestial being, with no context whatsoever, who isn't talking to impoverished Jews,
he's talking to you and me.
Kingdom of God means something completely different,
has nothing to do with the liberation of Rome.
And so we strip Jesus' words of all of its complexity,
its politics, its historical context. We spiritualize it.
And in spiritualizing it, it does something very, very useful to Patrick's point.
It does something very, very useful, which is that it now becomes the foundation of empire.
Jesus isn't talking about this world.
He's talking about the next world.
So you can do what the fuck you want to in this world, he's talking about the next world. So you can do what are the fuck you want
to in this world, right? You know, the first will be last, the last will be first. Well,
that's in heaven, not on this earth. I don't have to worry about that. I don't have to worry
about any of the implications of this radical teaching that resulted in him being hunted down like a rebel,
arrested by the state, and executed for treason.
Like, let's just acknowledge that for a moment, right? I mean, you don't get executed for
treason because you're like, be like the birds of the sky. Don't worry about the things of this world.
That's not how you get executed for treason.
I can fully appreciate, by the way,
what you're saying, distinguishing between the man and God.
I know Tom as a man of deep faith,
and I'm sure he wants to ask you a question.
I just want a specific question that you brought up.
You said he was only talking to Jews.
And I just want you to just hone in on that for a second.
Two-part question.
Was it only Jews around him, straight up?
And then number two, in your expert opinion,
did Jesus mean to start a new religion?
The most important thing, the most important fact
to understand about Jesus when trying to figure out
who he was and what he was talking
about is that he was a Jew preaching Judaism to other Jews. This was not a new religion,
there was nothing new about what he was preaching. It was Judaism. And he was preaching it in
Jewish terms. He was preaching it in Aramaic. Was he speaking Hebrew? Aramaic? What was he speaking?
Hebrew was an educated language.
So he may have understood Hebrew when it was spoken.
Like when if someone read the Hebrew scriptures,
he probably could have understood it,
but he wouldn't communicate in Hebrew.
He would communicate in Aramaic,
which is the language of the poor.
And he was speaking to other poor Jews. He was a poor Jew preaching
Judaism to other poor Jews. Once you understand that, and that's not disputed, right? That's
sort of a very basic understanding of the gospels. Once you understand that, then it opens a door
to understanding what it is that he's actually saying.
How would these poor Jews understand these words?
He's not talking to you, he's not talking to me.
He's not preaching Christianity.
He's a Jew.
It wasn't invented yet.
It wasn't invented.
He's a Jew preaching Judaism to other Jews.
What was so radical about what he was preaching to Jews?
Because you've used that word, he was a radical,
he was right, you know, he was, he had all these crazy ideas,
but if he was preaching Judaism to other Jews,
what was so radical about that?
Well, Judaism like all religions
comes in a hundred different flavors, right?
We've already talked about it with Catholicism.
The Judaism of first century Palestine had a bunch of different flavors.
There was the temple Judaism, the Judaism that was controlled by the Jewish authorities,
that was involved, that involved very restrictive, extraordinarily expensive temple rituals
that all Jews were forced to do at least once a year if not more.
And that was a business decision governed by the Pharisees,
and the Sadducees. And they controlled the temple, and since the temple was the source of salvation,
they controlled salvation. If they could tell you that you were a Jew or not
a Jew, because they controlled the thing where God literally dwelled. Then there was this sort of
ferrisseic Judaism, which eventually becomes what we know as rabbinic Judaism, the Judaism of the law,
Judaism, right? The Judaism of the law, right? The scholars, the thinkers, the debaters, and that, like, as you can imagine, ran the gamut, right? Very conservative views, much
more sort of innovative interpretations of the Torah and the law. And then there were thousands upon thousands
of charismatic street preachers like Jesus,
many of whom called themselves Messiah.
Many, many.
Oh, really?
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
We know, I say in Zellat, we know the names of at least 12.
If we know the names of at least 12,
then there were 1200. Of people who said that they were the Messiah at the 12. If we know the names of at least 12, then there were 1200.
Of people who said that they were the Messiah at the time.
Who said they were the Messiah,
who led Messianic movements
who had far, far more followers than Jesus ever did.
And all of whom were killed.
Here's what I'm gonna do.
Tom, do you have any questions back or rebuttals back
because I wanna go a different direction right now? Yeah, maybe it's time we just go a different direction. Okay, so here's what I'm gonna do. Tom, do you have any questions back or rebuttals back because I wanna go a different direction right now?
Yeah, maybe a time we just go a different way.
Okay, so here's what I'm gonna say to you.
So question for you.
Do you believe the story of Virgin, birth, Mary,
what are your thoughts like?
Do you believe in the credibility of that story?
Do I believe it's a fact or do you believe it's truth?
Do you believe?
Well, what's the difference? That's the you believe, well, what's the difference?
That's the key.
Okay, so what's the difference?
A fact is a thing that can be debated, right?
A fact is a thing that can be scientifically verified.
That's what we now understand.
A truth doesn't necessarily have to do with fact.
Truth is a far deeper, I think.
Well, both ways, what do you think about it?
No, there's no fact whatsoever
about the Virgin birth.
It exists in one section of the entire Gospel.
No one else mentions it.
Matthew doesn't mention it, it's just in Luke.
That means 90 AD, so 60 years after Jesus's death, we can go back to the writings
that we find, you know, a little bit earlier, there's some writings of Paul in 50s, Virgin
Birth has never mentioned in those writings. This was, the Virgin Birth was a problem that
arose out of Paul, because Paul, who never met Jesus,
never spoke to Jesus, had nothing to do with Jesus,
whatsoever, but who claims to have had this experience
of the risen Jesus long after Jesus died,
in which according to him,
Jesus makes him the sort of the 13th apostle, right?
And a apostle was somebody who walked and talked with Jesus, and there were 12 of them.
And Paul, who neither walked nor talked with Jesus of Jesus that the apostles had never heard of before.
Jesus wasn't even a man in Paul's view. Jesus was born of pure light. He is a new genus of being. to earth as the sort of begotten, the only begotten son of God, in order to deal with original
sin. Again, Jesus never mentioned anything about original sin. It's not in any of the
gospels. And Paul's imagination, when Adam and Eve fell, all human beings were born and sin, and Jesus's death cleared that sin for everyone
for all of time.
This is Paul, no one except Paul had ever said or thought anything like this.
It was the first time these words were ever written.
It's now basic Christianity.
But here's the problem. If everyone who is born is born of sin
until Jesus is born and
Rids everyone of sin, then Jesus can't be born.
Paul himself never said Jesus can't be born.
He just let the contradiction live.
But then later on, by the time you get to the 90s,
an answer to criticism, an answer to critics saying,
wait a minute, what are you talking about? Then there's no make any sense. He himself was born,
then he had sin. Was this new idea that no, no, no, Jesus wasn't born in the same way. He was born
of a virgin. It's mentioned once, it's mentioned in the year 90,
and there's no reason to think that it's anything
other than what it sounds like and answer to a problem.
So in other words, for you, your interpretation is
that that's just a fictional story
that's being told about.
It's sacred history.
But the same can be said about Quran, the same thing can be said about all the books. fictional story that's being told about it's it's sacred history
But the same can be said about Quran the same thing can be said about all the books That's right, and that's what you're saying so in other words all the books just to be fair
If from your point and you see yourself as an atheist or you're a Muslim. Oh, no, no, I'm a Muslim
I'm a person of faith. So your personal faith that you so you believe in
Prophet Muhammad you believe in his book, you believe in Quran.
I don't believe in Quran.
Again, that's the wrong way of putting it.
These are not things to believe in.
They are signposts to the thing to believe in.
Scripture as sacred history is the attempt by individuals who have confronted an extraordinary
experience and who have, using the limited means at their disposal, attempted to record
that extraordinary experience, often in poetic and symbolic language, deep
meaningful mystical language, so that they can preserve it for generations to
understand. So you're also a man of faith. So you're also a man of faith. So to you,
the risk you're taking is, I'm risking believing the Quran, not the Bible.
That's your risk, right? I mean faith is
believing in something you have not yet seen. There's a lot of criticism on the book of Quran.
There's a lot of criticism on the Muslim religion. A lot of criticism on the religion you are present.
Your risk is I think afterlife is my bed is I'm going to take the route of
My bed is, I'm going to take the route of, I mean, a Muslim versus my route is.
I see where you're coming in.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
When you study the religions of the world,
it becomes impossible to take any one of these religions
all that seriously.
And there's two reasons for it.
One, because you instantly recognize
the religious patterns,
the sort of phenomena that they all have in common
with each other, that they're all saying,
basically, the same thing.
And more importantly, they're saying it kind of
in the same way, right?
A lot of the same myths are just kind of repurposed.
The myth of Jesus' resurrection is just the myth
of Mithra's resurrection, right? The Sraushant
in Zoroastrianism is a salvific character whose mother magically gets impregnated and
gives birth to a messianic figure who brings in the end of the world. That's a thousand
years before Jesus, right? I I mean these are just the same
stories over and over and over again
However
they are interlinked in
the sense that they are trying to express something that as a person of faith I believe is real and
faith, I believe is real. And that is that there is something beyond the material realm. There is a real transcendent reality beyond the physical world that we are locked in.
Faith. Faith. Faith.
It's so the risk. It's absolutely a risk.
Okay, so the risk, so there's a part of me with that sitting here listening to you for the first hour, you sound more atheist
than you sound Muslim, okay?
You sound more atheist.
You definitely don't sound Christian, obviously.
You're given the arguments of atheists.
It's like I'm listening to Chris Hitchens' debate
as brother, or I'm listening to an atheist
give their argument.
That's the part.
So that kind of comes back to saying,
well, why do you choose to be a Muslim?
Why do you choose to follow the Quran?
If you're such a scholar and you're educated
and you got these four degrees,
shouldn't an educated man like yourself
who's dealing a lot on facts, not the risk,
believe in any religion,
and rather just being atheists.
You are, you are.
And a minute ago, you just said that when you look at any of the world religions, that
there's, there's flaws and there's issues and there's, and there's lunacies and then
there's repeated myths.
So how did you choose one rather than just being a very scholar of the fake question?
Yeah.
Say, hey, I'm the scholar of the fake.
Here's all my books.
I'm gonna delve into certain characters,
basketball and others like this.
But you know what, no.
I'm gonna stop and I'm gonna choose one.
How do you get there?
So yeah, this is a great question.
First of all, let's try to rid our minds
of these categories like atheist, Muslim.
Well, if you're clearly not a Christian
because you question
certain aspects of the Bible bullshit, there are
hundreds of millions of Christians who would agree with everything that I just said and
Would I mean priests the priests who taught me these things, right? They're not just Christians
They've given their life. They're dedicated their entire life.
To be fair, a lot of things are we.
Pope is saying certain things right now
that the Catholic Church wouldn't have agreed with 20 years ago.
But Catholics unfortunately have to be our force to agree with them.
Not force?
Just because he's not going to excommunicate them.
When I say forced, if you want to be part of the church
and the Pope says it, oh my God,
I'm either going to have to leave my rituals
that I've been living for the last 48 years
and go be a non-denominational, go be something else
or to say defend the Pope.
Just to be clear, that's only if the Pope threatens
discommunication.
If the Pope says this is now belief
and if you don't believe it, then you are excommunicated,
then yes, you're forced to believe it.
But the Pope doesn't do any of that stuff,
and the Pope is Christian.
And so if he is...
Not a different kind of a Christian today,
then 20 or 30 years ago.
Okay, there is no such thing as Christianity.
Let's start there.
There is no such thing as Islam.
There is no such thing as Judaism.
There is no such thing as Buddhism. there is no such thing as Judaism, there is no such thing as Buddhism.
There is only Christianity's, Buddhism's,
Islam's Christianity is whatever a Christian says it is.
Buddhism is whatever a Buddhist says it is.
There is no mechanism for me to say,
you call yourself a Buddhist, okay,
but you don't believe this part.
So there's more of the person, what you're saying.
You're not really a Buddhist.
So let's start there.
That's the important thing.
The second thing that I think is really important to understand
is that religion, all religions, are far less a matter of beliefs and practices
than they are a matter of identity.
And that's true of every religion in the world
and every part of the world.
70% of Americans call themselves Christian.
Bull shit.
Bull shit.
70% of Americans follow the teachings of Christ.
70% of Americans go to church on Sunday.
70% of Americans read the Bible on a consistent basis.
The vast majority of that 70% when they say, I am Christian, they are not making a faith
statement.
They're making an identity statement.
And that is true of Buddhists and Jews and Muslims.
What we, people on the outside, tend to do do is think that religion is just about the things
that you believe, and if you don't believe
what the mainstream believes,
then you're not really that thing anymore.
I don't disagree with that.
I'm with you, though, on the identity part,
since 70% fully agree with that.
To the question.
There's some fundamentals here, right?
And when, if a person says I'm a Muslim,
or a person says I'm a Christian, you dive into it a person says, I'm a Muslim, or a person says, I'm a Christian, you dive
into it a little bit.
And you're more often than night, you're going to find some worldview creep in where they've
made their own designation.
When you take a look at the 70% of people in America that say they're a Christian, there's
only about 15% of those that have what you would call a biblical worldview.
And these are not the omniscient middle of Pennsylvania
adopting nothing of modern technology.
These are people that have an authentic biblical worldview.
And at the same thing, there's people that say,
well, I'm Jewish, well now wait a minute,
are you a Zionist as a political state Jew,
or are you authentic?
So I think identity is like, you're correct about it,
but we need to kind of wash that a little bit
because I can say I'm a southerner.
Oh, sorry, sorry, listen, I'm a Bostonian.
What is a Bostonian?
I'm sorry, I'm a New Englander.
We have all these labels, do you know what?
We just kind of take it as it is, I'm a Midwestern.
Right, you've all labels that happen all over the place.
And you can't take a broad brush and just sweep everything out, Resa, because you're correct
about the 70%.
You are correct about the 70%.
You said, but within that, there are people that do have a biblical worldview, whether
they be Jews, whether they be Muslims, whether they be Christians.
Are they the real Christians?
Because they have the biblical worldview.
And the other 45% aren't?
I think, well, you know what?
A cleric would tell you that it is my job,
and I'll speak to your faith, that it is my job
to ensure that I teach and I help people to calibrate
what is the authenticity of their Muslim faith
and the principles and tendencies of the Islam.
And who gave him that job?
And who gave him that job?
He went to school and he learned a bunch of things.
And now he also has the scripture that they have,
and he can either choose.
I had that same scripture.
That's exactly right.
You can be north of London and you can be a radicalist.
Right, cleric that does. What I don't want to do is to follow. Here's exactly right. You can be north of London and you can be a radical cleric
What I don't want to do is to follow. Here's what I don't want to do. By the way, there's there's angles
I can take with Virgin Mary and the Quran and what you know the Quran says about Virgin Mary and what
many Muslims think about Virgin Mary and we can go that angle but the part I was going to go with you on
the Virgin Mary side that even in the Quran they talk about is
the chances of somebody being born because you know a lot of people made side that even in the Quran they talk about is the chances of
somebody being born because you know a lot of people made that claim back in the days because
it's embarrassing. Oh my God, you know, you're having sex on, you know, prior to this, prior to
getting married. And then for the chances of that sun ending up being Jesus, that's a one in a
trillion type of a number. That's just a very random math, a very random math guy, very random mathematical
number to come up with that. So the faith part with that is it's tough to kind of fight
against that part. But let me let me come back because the question was still not answered.
Yeah, let me let me come back to the question. So if your arguments, I'm listening to you,
very critical of the Christian church in a very non-critical way.
The way you're doing it is a way of scholar would do it, where the average
person listens to that and they say, oh my God, what do I say to this part here?
But I'll flip it and I'll say, do you sound like an atheist?
And I can respect that.
If you're an atheist, you're an atheist.
If you're going to say, like, my risk I'm taking in life,
I'm taking a risk that Quran's the book,
I'm not taking a risk that I'm gonna be a Christian.
I'm taking a risk that I'm gonna be a Muslim.
No problem.
Let's get past this part.
I'm gonna go to the next part on question.
If you wanna answer the atheist,
atheist, you will answer this while you're in a minute.
But here's what I want you to be thinking about.
How do you judge a great parent?
How do you judge a great parent?
By their actions.
By their actions. By their actions.
Yeah, by how they raise the things that they do.
That's how I judge every person.
Okay. Things that you do.
Is it fair for me to judge you based on,
like if I see you, my imagination, I've never met your mom,
I've never met you that.
This is our first interaction to get us to the audience.
And we've never had dinner together.
I don't know your story, except for what I've read, right?
I see a part of you that's your dad, and I see a part of you that's your mom.
I see the rebel in your dad, where he's a rebellious guy, and he's, I see the atheist arguments
of your dad when I'm listening to you, okay?
But then I see also your loyalty for your mom's side, and then your own independence.
I'm going to go take my ride, and here's what I come up with.
Listen mom, that salute you on this side, pop,
salute you mom on this side.
My dad never fails to remind me that Chomene was a big mistake.
That, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that,
he called it, right?
You talk about that regularly.
But if we're gonna judge a product based on its parents,
product, parents, parents, good job.
You raise a good citizen, he's done well for
himself, right?
I think it's also fair to judge a religion based on what it produces, okay?
Based on what it produces.
So let's go away from, I've sat and debated with guys who know every single scripture in
the Bible, but nobody follows them, they're very small.
And I've sat and talked to people that are generalists who have a lot of people that follow them
because of their messaging.
This is not a debate of, we would need two days to go through.
Scripture said this, what's your rebuttal to this and what about this and what about that
we'll be here for days.
We too are snot enough.
But if we were to judge a religion based on what it produces,
if you had the choice to choose a country and you can't say none, you have to choose one,
if you were to say, you know, a country's, we're starting a country together,
what religion would we want to start it with, what religion would best be a good religion to be? That's a fun question.
The one to start a country with.
That's a really fun question.
I'm curious.
Okay.
So let me answer the first part.
Please.
I left you hanging, because you ask a professor a question.
He has like 40 minutes of prelude to it, but to just get to it,
I am not an atheist because I think atheism is an intellectually vacuous position.
I think it's unsophisticated.
I don't think it's smart.
An atheist, a true atheist, right?
Someone who is truly an atheist, is a materialist.
A materialist believes that literally nothing exists, that nothing can exist beyond my empirical experience of that thing.
That, to me, is the height of hubris and absurdity, right? The idea that all that exists is the
material realm and nothing beyond it is just, just, I would say even scientifically absurd.
Now, what is that other thing?
Who knows, okay?
Just let's just give it a word.
Because that's all the word God is.
It's just a word.
It's not a thing, it's a word.
And like all words, it has a thousand connotations.
It represents a bunch of things.
But in its simplest form, let's just say what we mean when we say God,
is that which is beyond.
That which is beyond the material realm, the thing.
The question then becomes, can I access that thing?
Do I have the ability to commune with it, to communicate with it, to experience it in some way?
And that's a personal thing. I've accessed it. I've communicated with it. I've experienced it.
People who do yoga, people who climb mountains, people who surf, and yes, people who are Christians or Jews or Muslims or Buddhists or whatever,
can tell you a very similar story.
Yeah, I'm not going to prove this intellectually. All I can tell you is that there is something beyond and I have touched it.
I have felt it. So then the next question is, do I want to know it?
Was it enough that I climbed that mountain and was like, wow!
And then I went back home.
Or do I want to know it now?
Well if you want to know it, it so happens that there are thousands of years worth of
systems, languages.
That's what religion is really all about.
It's just languages. Languages are made up of symbols and metaphors
that help you experience, communicate that experience,
make sense of that experience,
and you can pick any language you want.
It is irrelevant what language you choose.
Just different symbols, like saying,
what's better, French or German?
What are you talking about? They're both expressing the exact same thing. Just pick one. The Buddha very famously said,
if you want to strike water, you don't dig six one foot wells, you dig one six foot well.
Islam is my six foot well. But the important thing that's hidden in the Buddha's words there is that the well is
irrelevant, the well is nothing more than the means to get to the water and guess what?
The water that you're drinking from is the water that every well is drinking from.
So pick a well.
Pick a well that works for you.
In my case, for a whole host of reasons, my culture, my background, my identity, my comfort,
Islam is my six foot well.
And particularly Sufi Islam is my six foot well.
It's the language that I use to make sense of a thing that is inexpressible.
It's a language I use to talk about a thing that's impossible to talk about.
And it's a language that other people understand, so I can communicate with them. They get it.
We can talk about that experience. But to say that I believe in the well is stupid.
but to say that I believe in the well is stupid. People who say, I believe in Christianity,
I believe in Islam, I believe in the Quran,
I believe in the Torah, are doing it wrong.
Those are not things to believe in.
They're your well.
They're the thing that points you to the thing to believe in.
And so as someone who wants a deep and meaningful spiritual life,
who has experienced transcendence and wants to experience it more and understand it more,
I've chosen this particular well. Which is your risk. We've taken risk. Everybody's second
there. The atheist takes a risk. The Christian takes a risk. Now risk everybody second. Yeah, the atheist takes a risk the Christian takes a risk now
Body question. Yeah, so so let me preface questions of the audience
Jesus has a clip if we could start a new country. Yeah, which religion would be the best religion to start the country on?
What religion would be the best religion to start a new country?
This is a really really good, because on the one hand, no religion has a monopoly
on democracy.
The idea that democracy fits better with Christianity than it does with Islam is demonstrably false. But the one big advantage of Christianity
is that it has fully and completely married itself
to capitalism.
And so if you were gonna start a country
that required economic success,
capitalism is the right way to do it.
So I would say, yeah, probably some kind of Protestant version of Christianity would be a great start.
But I will say one thing.
Democracy, true liberal democracy, isn't dependent on secularism.
Secularism does not a democracy make.
Paralism is what makes democracy.
The whole point of a democracy is that individuals get to vote on things based on
their own personal ideas and beliefs.
And whether you like it or not for the vast majority of humans on earth,
their personal beliefs and identities are enrapt around religious identity.
So to say that religions should not have a role to play in democracy means that there's
no democracy.
That's what that means.
The question is, can you have the proper safeguards in place to make sure that people who do not adhere to that majority religion or to religion at all
are equally protected from having their rights infringed upon by the religion of the majority.
That's what the United States was supposed to be with the anti-establishment clause.
establishment clause. But, you know, we are 350 million people of which 150 million of us are right-wing evangelical Christians who believe that the country is a Christian nation
and should be based on Christian principles and laws and that non-Christians would have a sort of
secondary role, you know, as second-class citizens in that kind of country. Well, that's legit. That's like half the country.
That's a serious threat. So all religion can threaten
democratic institutions, but if I were to start all over again, and it had to be founded
on a religious tradition, I think I'd probably pick Protestantism.
So in other words, you're a capitalist Protestant who chooses to argue socialist Muslim.
What a strange life.
That's about right. So listen, the way I want everything to be is a
Protestant capitalist because it makes me. But you know, first of all, I appreciate you
for being honest because you know, you could have taken that and manipulated it and taken
many different angles to kind of make the argument better for you. But you took the argument
and just straight up said what you would what would make you feel safer.
Why didn't you say Muslim?
Why not start a country and it being based on Islam, Muslim, being the original foundations
of the country?
Again, so Islam's right, they're multiple, multiple.
Anisotialist.
Why not create a country based on, you know, like the Judeo Christian?
No, we're going to be Muslim.
We're going to follow Prophet Muhammad.
We're going to have a socialist nation.
Why don't you start a nation based on that?
Yeah, I would also excise the phrase Judeo Christian from your language right away.
That's a bullshit phrase invented by white Protestants in order to bring Jews into the fold.
No Jew uses the term Judeo-Christian.
And the contradiction between those terms is hilarious.
The whole point of Christianity is that there's no more need for Judaism because one Jew said so.
So it's just, Judeo-Christian is just a bizarre fake term to basically mean white.
That's what it means.
It means white.
Stop using it.
You just triggered my friend over here.
What was the question?
I'm sorry.
So, you know how America is built on a
Judeo Christian. Why not start your country where America is built on Protestantism. Let's be very
very profound prophet Muhammad. So should tell me. Now, when you go, when you go back and take a look,
basically the founding fathers were deias more than anything else.
Dism is a form of Protestantism. Dism is Protestantism. That's what it is.
I think if you want it to be, it can be, if it helps your argument, it can be.
But when you hear people saying, well, go take a look at the things that are at the Lincoln Memorial and the Jefferson Memorial,
and I've heard that over and over and over again in various speakers who are Christian pastors.
There are no scriptures carved in those things.
There are none.
And as a matter of fact, it was Thomas Jefferson
who built, and as a scholar, you probably know this,
you know, the Virginia religious clause
where he listed everybody and used the word infidels
because he thought that all people should be protected
in America to have the word infidel's because he thought that all people should be protected in America to have the freedom, freedom of expression. But this was a, these were deists that applied certain
things. And if you look at Jefferson, he goes back to France for his writings. Hamilton came from
Prick and St. Croix, right? But all of these come together with deism that may have been influenced by Christianity, but first and foremost, they were deists, not Protestant pastors.
Right.
No, they're not pastors, they're not religious scholars.
No, they're Protestant scholars, by the way.
They weren't Protestant scholars at all.
But what this argument that you hear all the time that the founding fathers were deists, is a absolutely correct.
And deism is a movement that arises out of Protestantism.
The primary purpose of Protestantism is to say that we don't need an institution to interpret
the scripture for us.
We can interpret it on our own.
That means we value the scripture.
We don't think the scripture is false or unnecessary.
It's just that I don't need an intermediary
between me and the scripture to tell you what it means.
Hence Thomas Jefferson pulled out his scissors
and said, I don't like this verse.
And he just cut it out.
I don't like this section and he cut it out.
Deism isn't some brand new religion invented
by the founding fathers. It is a natural progression from Protestantism and it's thousands of
thousands of sects from Quakers to Shakers to Methodists, Subaptists, deists were just one of the many, many, many interpretations
that arose out of the body.
We can move on and disagree because deism has the truce and basically all men's
Sikhs.
That when you find Native Americans that they encountered, when they Iroquois, when they
first came here, they said, isn't it interesting that the Iroquois seemed to seek this creator,
this God, and sometimes it's raw, theroquois seem to seek this creator, this God,
and sometimes it's raw, the sun God,
of the Egyptians, sometimes it's other things?
Deism, I thought, had a truce in all men's seek,
not in its end, recognizing men,
meaning all civilizations, all living humans,
ultimately, are seeking, isn't it interesting
when we encounter them that they have their way
of seeking this thing, this creator creator whatever they want to call move on time
We can move on time so go back to it. So if if
If America's a Judeo Christian nation, okay, I'm gonna keep saying that to you because
Aray Netanyahu says the same thing, but okay you oh good. Let's you. That's cool
Religious fascist. He's so for you, why not start a country based on the Quran,
follow on Prophet Muhammad and socialism?
Well, I think the, like I said, it was the issue of capitalism
that I think is the big, is the bigger.
We were capitalist.
I'm a world capitalist, man, look at you.
You're a capitalist, we're all capitalist. I'm a proud capitalist. I don't know if you're a proud capitalist. I will a world capitalist man. Look at you. You're a capitalist. We're all capitalists. I'm a proud capitalist
I don't know if you're a proud capitalist. I will I will go I'm a I'm a moral capitalist
I do not believe in the invisible hand of the free market if that's what you're asking so you're so I don't I don't worship the
Invisible hand. I don't know the difference between a capitalist and a moral capitalist you're talking criminals
That's what you're talking about. I mean, I'm with you.
I was saying, I believe when when people say, I don't believe in, uh, uh, what do you
cut pedophilia on within the churches? Or will you think I believe in that? Like, so, of course,
I support moral capitalism. No, but I have your capital. No, but I bet I bet that you have a almost religious like faith in the power of the free market
to set its own agendas and regulations and limitations
and that if you just leave it alone, it will take care of.
It'll take care of it.
I used to until I studied China.
Okay.
I used to until I studied China because when I studied China
and I realized in the 80s,
they only had four law schools and it was a doggy dog type of an environment.
You start realizing you need law and order in some regulation.
It's the over-regulation.
I have a challenge with where the bigger companies use lobbyists and politicians
that are broke to buy them to create laws to make it tougher for the smaller
guy to compete with them.
That's the problem.
I have a just chronic capitalist.
That's what I would say.
So you're capitalist. so that's good.
I will say the one thing that I've always read the...
Twitter is gonna trend today saying,
Reza, Aspon, Set, he's a hardcore capitalist.
Yes, exactly, I'm no longer on Twitter,
so I couldn't give a shit.
Why are you no longer on Twitter?
I deactivated all of my social media accounts
as part of my...
Oh, it's part of your choice.
So you're not on...
You're not in the penalty box or something?
No, no, it was part of my new year's resolution to my wife.
Although I did four days ago.
No, I actually didn't know, I didn't know,
November, I went a little bit early.
As soon as Musk was like,
I'm letting Trump back on, I was like,
well, all right, that's enough for me.
So I was at the trigger point.
I mean, I was gonna do it January 1st,
as part of my New Year's resolution,
but I was like, fuck it, I'll do it November 19th.
Do you believe that I know we're going off topic here,
but it's not gonna get the questions answered.
No, we're gonna get a 20 minute left.
You guys keep taking things different direction.
You constantly hear.
This is the third time I'm trying to get a questions answered.
Yeah, well, you brought it up.
So no, all the way to this Twitter, then you went with a question.
About Twitter, here are the more questions.
No way in the world.
Do you believe in the short?
Mario, the Ayatola of Iran should be on Twitter,
but Donald Trump should not.
I don't think the Ayatollah of Iran should be on Twitter.
No, but he is.
Yeah, Trump was off.
Well, again, Trump is an insurrectionist
who tried to destroy American democracy
and uses his Twitter to actively promote violence,
actively promote violence against his enemies.
There's no room on Twitter for someone like that.
Doesn't the IOTOla do the same thing but much worse?
Well, the IOTOla's on Twitter in charge
of a fascist, a religious fascist regime
that murderers children and uses his Twitter account
in order to promote propaganda and lies about what he's doing.
He doesn't belong on Twitter yet.
Why would he still be on them?
That's actually the fuck, don't you?
No, I don't know.
I don't know.
Guys, I think it's very important to realize
like where he's at, he's saying neither should be on.
His position, it's better to ask,
why do you not believe both should be on
than why how many, how many is on.
So go back to your question.
So I'm gonna stay on this question.
Guys, go ahead, because I got 30 minutes
before I get on my max seven call.
So, okay, so why not start a country based on socialism,
Muslim, book of Quran?
I will say, the one thing that I do,
I'm fascinated by Islamic finance, right?
This idea in Jewish finance is the same way
that the prohibition against interest and userry,
that there are ways to do that,
and there have been a number of very successful ways
of doing this, where the way that it works
is that instead of loaning someone money
to start a business, you invest in that business.
And so there isn't any interest that you're owed,
but you are owed dividends from the business.
That's how most Islamic financing things work.
And the idea there being that,
hey, we're all in this together.
It's not like I loaned you $100,000,
your business collapsed too bad.
Where's my money?
But like most things, it has been absolutely infected by Western capitalism so that
you can say we're not charging interest and so therefore staying islamically compliant
but this investment comes with fees
But this investment comes with fees that are essentially interest
and that make it very, very difficult
for these small businesses to actually function.
If you want to start a, I mean,
I would took your question very, very literally,
like I'm starting a country from scratch, right?
Which requires an enormous amount
of economic stability and build up.
How would I do that? Well, I would need capitalism which requires an enormous amount of economic stability and build up.
How would I do that?
Well, I would need capitalism and Islam
is not exactly conducive to capitalism, neither is Judaism.
But Protestantism, it's not just conducive to capitalism.
It is capitalism, radical individualism.
You've been, and not all Protestantism,
but like in Calvinist, evangelical,
Presbyterian Protestantism, you've already been predestined,
you've been prejudged to be successful.
If you have money, it's because God likes you.
That's why.
If you don't have money, it's why you should really
look at yourself and figure out why.
Those are, you know, immoral ways of thinking about money,
but if I'm starting a country from scratch, right?
And I want this thing to last.
Yeah, I'd probably start with a good dose of products.
How about now that everything's established,
raising your kids, you got three sons, okay?
Three sons and a daughter.
Oh, you have a daughter, okay,
it's the wrong sister's three sons, you gotta update it, the wrong Three sons and a daughter. Yeah, oh, you have a daughter, okay? Roneses, three sons, you got to update it.
Yeah, I'm gonna say that.
I'm like pandemic baby, yeah.
Congratulations to you.
Thank you.
We also have four kids, two two.
But go back to it, now that you have the kids,
it's different to start versus where you wanna be
once you have a family.
Why not raise your family, your kids,
in a Muslim nation rather than in a US you have a choice right now
Just like your mom and dad chose to say let's get out of here. Let's go to a different place
I know your wife's a Christian so you could say well my wife is a Christian so it'd be tough to go to a different place
But why choose to raise your kids in a Judeo Christian
Country like America. Why do that to yourself? Why put yourself out of your misery? Just go
to the from Plagodol and Donisia. Why be here? Well, I don't, first of all, I don't know if
I would think about it in those terms about like, you know, raising them in a Christian
country as opposed to a Muslim country as opposed to a Jewish country. Yeah. What I do is
I raise them to be multi literate in all the languages, all the religious languages of the world.
My kids understand both at a spiritual level and at an intellectual level that religion
is a language made up of symbols and metaphors that are communicating very similar sentiments.
What matters is the sentiment.
I want you to be spiritual.
I want you to know that there is more to life than just what you feel or smell or taste
or see, that there is more, and that you can access that thing.
You can strive for transcendence and use your own means of doing it.
Find out what's most comfortable for you.
One of my sons a few years ago,
after a very raqqis, Rasha Shana celebration,
just flat out declared himself Jewish.
It was like, this is fun.
This is way more fun than anything else that I've done.
I wanna be Jewish now.
And Rasha Shana celebration?
I've been to many Rasha Shana celebrations.
I've never been like, this is the best party I've ever been to.
Come to the Apple's and honey, you could eat.
Come to West Hollywood.
I was going to trade, buddy.
He said it was the rockest one.
The rockest, yeah.
The most Hollywood, yeah.
West Hollywood.
Wow.
And, you know, we lock us for everyone.
A couple of years ago, we went to Israel as a family in the whole time.
He was like, my people.
I'm amongst my people.
I have another son who has, I bought him a kid's version of the Ramayana, which just blew
his mind.
The idea that God can exist in multiple avatars, and that each avatar has a different
Thing to it like this the for strength and for wisdom and for for power like that so Hinduism
He's all about Hinduism right now. I mean he radically believes in reincarnation radically believes in karma
I have another kid another boy who I'm pretty sure is the reincarnated Buddha, but that's a whole different story.
And we go to mosque, we go to church, we go to synagogue, we took our kids on an 80-day
journey around the world.
Literally, we circled the globe in 80 days and went to ancient religious places, modern
religious places.
It's great. You know, what's very important,
if you want to raise spiritual kids
who want religious fanatics,
teach them about all religions,
they have the ability in a way that adults
whose minds are fixated to differentiate
between the external aspects of a religion
and the internal aspects.
Confused the hell out of them is your approach.
On the contrary, it confuses adults.
It makes perfect sense to kit.
It makes perfect sense to attend your role.
What kind of school do you get to go to?
What kind of school do your kids do?
I'm gonna go to a nice private school.
But no, no, no.
Is it a Christian?
No, no.
Catholic is it a...
No, no, no, no, no.
Secular, so, okay, got it. Is it a Christian? No, no. Catholic is it a... No, it's not. No, not.
Secular.
Okay, got it.
A 10-year-old can understand intuitively that the rabbi and the Imam and the priest are
saying the same thing.
They're just using different symbols.
And the symbols even look kind of familiar.
It's we, we right here, who can't figure that out.
Like, what do you mean? Like, there are different religions to say different things.
They have different ideas.
They read different scriptures.
And you know, they, they, it's like,
but are they saying the same thing though?
Because like, I guess my question is like,
can all religions be correct or can only one be the correct
religion?
Remove the idea of correct and incorrect right and wrong.
We're talking about religion.
They are signposts.
All religions are signposts.
To say that Christianity is more correct than Islam
is to say that French is more correct than German.
What are you talking about?
It's the thing that you are expressing.
Whether you say it in German, or whether you say it in French,
doesn't make it any more correct.
You're saying it's a means to an end and the end is where it means to an end.
Religion, so is not an independent phenomenon.
Religion is an amalgamation, a collection, a system of ways of thinking about the world, many of which
has been constructed over thousands of years, and often very sort of under control, right,
by institutions.
This is what it means and it can't mean anything else.
Yeah, but I think that's the problem is that nobody interprets it like that.
That's actually a great way of looking at it, whether it's like, like how you use
the example of, I'd rather dig one six foot well to reach the water versus six one foot
wells.
I can appreciate that.
Here's what I would say is you think that nobody interprets it that way because people
are not as conscious of it. Two thirds of American Catholics
believe or disagree with the Catholic church
when it comes to abortion and LGBTQ rights.
But they call themselves Catholic.
But wait a minute, abortion, LGBTQ,
those are like fairly set things in the Catholic church.
It's like, you believe this if you wanna be with us.
Well, I wanna be with you, but I don't believe those things.
And there's no contradiction there.
Doesn't don't stay up all night thinking about these things.
They don't write books about it.
They don't come on podcasts and talk about what that actually means for two hours.
It just is.
And that's true for all religious people.
I think a lot of unreligious people, people outside of religion, the dockins and the
herrises and the, you know, Hitchens believe that religious people are like automatons,
right?
They're like the old-fashioned, you know, IBM computers, right?
You remember the little sheet with the dots on it and stuff?
That's what scripture is.
That it's like we're in a Tomaton
and the scripture is the program.
And the scripture, you read the scripture
and it goes, boop, boop, boop, boop,
and you do the thing in the scripture.
That's not how it works, man.
That's not how it works.
Scripture without interpretation is just words on a page.
It requires an individual to encounter it for it to have any meaning at all.
And by definition, the minute an individual encounters that scripture, it goes through
the filter of his entire experience, his entire identity, and it comes out different on
the other side.
That's why two people can go to the exact same scripture and walk away with
two radically different points of view in American history, not two centuries ago, both slave
owners and abolitionists, not only use the same scripture in order to justify their viewpoints,
they use the same exact verses. That's what scripture.
You know, you know, I got to tell you so a couple things very interesting point
I agree somebody can go watch a movie and have yes that I was telling the kids I said hey
How is it that both of you guys are the same parents yet? You're too completely opposite people right?
There's the same things being taught you're taking two different messaging. There's a part of that that's correct
I've twins, so yeah, but there's a part of it as well as on how
It's being taught messaging received all of that part of it as well as on how it's being taught, messaging, received all of that.
Part of it is on the person's individual personality.
You know, the reason why I asked that question about,
you know, country starting all that other stuff.
Sometimes we spend time debating things
that is just purely opinion.
Here's what I think.
Here's what I believe.
Here's what I think.
I think, G.D.
that's stories.
There's only one time.
Paul said this and to Paul Jesus is this.
And let me tell you, Prophet Muhammad and this and marriage and slaves and pah pah pah.
Great.
God, you can debate that all you want as scholars, all that stuff.
And then you go to what produces results, what provides the most important letter for
mothers' interests when raising kids, the S word,
which is security, safety, a country that provides that,
they wanna live there.
And then for somebody that's hard working
to be able to build a life that they wanna build,
whatever that life may be.
And then for someone to say,
hey, I don't want the guy to be able to bully me.
Hey, this guy's bigger than me.
I don't want him to come and take advantage of me.
Can I be protected by the law so guy cannot bully me?
So we need some laws.
And then hey, the other countries that are attacking us,
can we have a decent military?
So people just don't want to fight us.
Let's not have a military to kill people.
Let's have a military that prevents others
from wanting to fight us.
And then at the same time, allow me to have whatever religion
and beliefs that I have.
Leave me alone.
If I'm a Muslim, leave me alone.
If I'm this, leave me alone.
Like some people say,
hominase should be on Twitter.
And Trump should be on Twitter
and Trump should be on Twitter.
Your argument is a argument of,
no, I think both of them should be off of Twitter.
My argument, maybe I think both of them should be on Twitter
for somebody to be able to make a decision
and say, I can't even believe what Trump just said.
I can't believe what Hominase just said.
I can't believe what Putin just said.
Now, there are some that are inciting,
let's go kill, let's go do this.
That's a different story.
That's your breaking the law that we're talking about.
Let's go to the last topic that we have here before we wrap up.
Iran, you and I are Iranian.
And when I tell a lot of friends that, you know,
Reza's coming on, I had 50, 50 split.
What people say.
That's my route.
Oh my God.
Let me tell you, don't do it.
Because I'm gonna tell you, they're gonna target you.
These Muslims, you gotta be careful you bring bring call out Christianity
Nothing will happen to you call out Jesus. Nothing will happen to you call out Scientologists something may happen to you
Call out a lot of but the gitch one thing you don't go
You know, you just don't go. Yeah, it's kind of like the the movie tropic thunder
What does he say you never go for the point is you don't ever
Bring and argue the Muslim religion and there's risk to by the way. I've brought
Gangsters mobsters, boys, Sammitable, Gervano and everybody will say
You cross the line with Muslims. They are fanatics. They will come after et cetera, et cetera
Then some of the people said you know, hey, let me tell you the facts that you're bringing
them, I think you can enjoy the conversation.
You guys are not going to agree on everything, but I think you can enjoy it.
He's reasonable.
Some of the stuff he says is crazy, but you can enjoy it.
Which by the way, to be fair, I've enjoyed this conversation a lot.
And some of the people that know that I'm a capitalist, why would you give this guy a platform?
This is my desire.
I enjoyed this. I walk away today this guy a platform? This is my desire. I enjoy this.
I walk away today saying,
what a great way to start today.
But the one thing a lot of Iranians will say,
they'll say, Patrick, he's a noyak.
Mm-hmm.
He's a noyak.
To Chiturimituni, how can you talk to a person from noyak?
Do you realize he represents Iran
and he is a spokesperson for those guys and they defend and they want the nuclear deal
because it was them that the started the nuclear deal
go look at the website who sits on their board and fight fine stand Hillary
Clinton you know Kamala hairs all of these guys you have to be very careful
dealing with niaq now for people that know who niaq is
americans don't say niaq
americans will say n i a c which is what
national Iranian association of a national Iranian American council American council
and so that's what n i c stands for so on the on the website you have your picture there
no I'm not on the way maybe they removed you were on the way you're on a website saying
that you supported niac I can text it to you and show it to you on some of the places.
But tell me your position with NIAC and Iran
and where you're at.
You're a fuck about NIAC.
Okay.
This whole thing is so stupid.
Well, people are asking, just so you know.
People are asking because they've been brainwashed
by a purposeful, deliberate, well-funded,
well-coordinated disinformation campaign that seeks to paint all progressive
Iranian voices as regime supporters.
My writing, I have written, spoken, been on TV.
I have two decades of me on television talking about what I feel about this regime
and what I think needs to happen to it.
I have repeatedly called for its downfall.
I have repeatedly called it a murderous regime
that belongs in the dustbin of history.
My advisory role at NIAC, which I used to have,
is because I am an expert on religion and politics.
So I advise the Plowshares fund.
I advise NIAC.
I advise the fucking state department.
I advise actual Congress people who are making these decisions about what to do with Iran.
I'm an expert in Iran.
So I advise those groups.
I have no loyalty or membership to NIAC.
I'm not here to speak for
Nayak. To be fair, you don't advise the other side. You're strictly advising the progressive
side. You're not advised. You're 100% which they support the nuclear deal, which you support
as well. A hundred percent support the new. So you support negotiating with a nation that
says, Matt, bad OmriKa, death upon America, you're comfortable negotiating with a country
that hates us.
I'm sorry, who do we negotiate?
We only negotiate with countries that love us.
Is that how negotiations work?
Have you heard of the phrase diplomacy?
But diplomacy comes,
diplomacy comes,
no negotiation with a country that actually agrees with you.
We negotiate with countries that disagree with us.
I totally get that.
But for the most part,
the countries we negotiate with that disagree with us. They don't say death upon Americans.
Iran says death upon Americans that tap at the Iran. This is not even the
people on the streets. Give us a fuck. So what? So give 150 billion dollars. That's a
valid concern. That's a valid question. First of all, it's their money that we are
releasing in exchange for removing nuclear weapons from Iran.
How do you suggest we remove nuclear weapons from Iran, Patrick?
Okay, I have ideas for that.
Tell me.
Give it to you.
Not to remove nuclear weapons.
First of all, do you believe, no matter whether we give them the money or not, they're
not going to continue working on nuclear weapons.
They literally didn't.
But, oh, no.
We're not going to move past this until we establish the facts.
The JCPOA, which was negotiated by the United States, Russia, China, the Security Council
and Germany, which is extraordinary, the idea that those five countries came together
and the European Union and agreed on anything,
let alone agreed on this absolutely remarkable deal under the Obama administration.
To remove all the enriched uranium out of Iran, there is zero doubt that that worked. Zero.
The IAEA came out in no uncertain terms and said within 12 months of that deal
being put in place, Iran no longer had the enriched uranium to create a nuclear bomb.
Within 12 months.
You have to be naive to believe that.
Okay.
But fair enough, let's, let's, let's find into the naivete and move forward.
Okay. Let's, let's, let's just say you're right. Let's say you're right. Let's not believe
the people on the ground. No, I actually monitoring the new to to believe somebody that believes in the values that they do. Yes,
I don't believe that. But let me go to the next one. I'll ask you to question. Let me go back to the next one.
I'll ask you the question. Okay. Your father was right about Humeini. Humeini. Fair? Yeah, absolutely. Your father was right. So do you think Iran, and I know this is going to be hard
for you to answer this question, don't go Mossadeh.
I'm purely talking Shah and the advancements we were making
under Shah versus what happened to Iran under Humeini.
Okay.
If we had a choice between the two, this is not the, you can't say why I would choose this,
I wouldn't choose either.
If you had a choice between how Iran was during Shahz
or versus Khomeini, which would you choose?
Neither.
I knew you were gonna say that,
but you can't say neither.
You cannot say neither.
You cannot say neither.
How do you mean neither?
Orra, how can you say neither?
Be honest, I mean, I'm being serious with you.
You may literally have this idea about the Shah's age
that is in your imagination.
I do not have an idea about Shah's age.
We don't remember the thousands of people
that he slaughtered on the street,
the tens of thousands of people
who would disappear into education camps.
We replaced one murderous regime
with another murderous regime.
And it's stupid to say, which one would you prefer?
It's naive for you to say what you just said.
You said since you've left Iran in 79,
till today, Adam asked you a question,
when's the last time you visited?
You said 2005 before I became famous,
you didn't use the word famous,
but before I became known in a marketplace, okay,
you haven't gone back since.
Under shot, you could go back.
This is not about saying one did it right or one did it wrong.
Is your question which is more beneficial to me
or which is better for Iran?
It's, by the way, the shot was more beneficial to the people.
You're saying,
how many is more beneficial to the people?
Fuck no, that's not what I said.
So the question I'm asking is,
I literally said,
what is more beneficial to me?
You are telling me,
you can't say neither, though.
You are telling me which murderous regime would you prefer?
The murderous regime of the Shah or the murderous regime of the Shah?
You cannot be that naive, though.
You cannot be that naive.
Listen, if you take it from that route,
if you take it from that route,
the Resa Shah Palavi and Iran, which by the way,
for me, an imperialist model, I'm not an imperialist. My model would be more
what we have in America. What I'm asking you, a simple question you can't answer. During Chomene,
millions of people died from other countries. Other innocent people died because of Chomene's
policies and his regime. This is not Resaul Palavis, other people died because of his regime. This is not Resort Palavis, other people died because of his regime.
You can't give that argument.
Okay.
For you to say that, I'm gonna choose both of this.
If what you wanna do is a fun intellectual exercise
in which you are saying, gun to my head,
I can only pick the murderous regime of the Shah
or the murderous regime of the I.
It's too different.
Which one would you want?
You cannot say it. I would say the murderous regime of the Shah. Okay's too different. Which one would you want? I would say the murderous regime of the Shah.
Okay.
So then because you got a gun to my head,
not because I got a gun to your head,
because logically it makes sense to say right after Homanie,
you're probably not leaving Iran if Shah was still in Iran,
or not being in Iran.
You probably would, and I would probably,
and I'd be probably miserable.
I wouldn't have, I wouldn't have,
no, you'd have right. I don't don't think I disagree. You would have chosen to
leave to another country. You would have chosen to come to I think you've got a nostalgia
for the days of the show. I don't have a lot of like make America great. But this but this
to me takes you back to why Nia gets to criticism that it does because for you you're saying
give a hundred fifty billion dollars to those guys to Iran. Is there Because for you, you're saying give $150 billion
to those guys to Iran.
Here's their money, it's their money anyway.
But you're saying it's their money and you do it.
No, you're putting words in my mouth.
Begu, we have two options with Iran's nuclear program.
Two options and nothing else.
Two options, period.
We have a third option.
What's the third option?
I'll give you the third option.
Option one, we blow the shit out of it.
Option two, we use negotiation and diplomacy.
What's your third option?
Very simple.
It's very simple what you do with option three.
Option three is the same exact thing
that happened in different nations.
Iran, Iran is going through a potential revolution today.
Hold on, I want to make it clear.
Please.
I am talking about 2012. I am not
talking about 2022. I'm not, I have never said we should renegotiate the nuclear program.
Now you're asking me, did I support the JCPOA versus today? Well, there's no concrete
in the ocean. Let me tell you, let me tell you, let me tell you, but let me make sure I'm
glad you clarify now. I'm glad you clarified that. I am not saying that we should go back 10 years.
Fair.
So then was it right in 2012?
A hundred percent.
Let me make my point,
let me make my point on what I'm thinking.
And I want to hear your rebuttal on this
and your argument on this.
For me, it's the following.
Have you heard of John Perkins, the economic hit man guy,
the author, he's a hardcore progressive,
a very interesting guy, I had him out two times.
I really like talking to that guy.
And it's very interesting his arguments, what they did,
you know, to cause nations to go down.
Do you think the current model
and the government today in Iran is good for its people
and good for the world?
Fuck now.
Okay, if they're one of the same page.
So is it fair to say that if we can figure out a way to
Help the Iranian people not the government the Iranian people to cause a fall in Iran
That's probably a good noble thing for us to do that's that has been my goal for 20 years fantastic then if doing that
your
Mission of wanting to do that which niAC's mission is for the people,
policy to help with the people,
that doesn't align with the rulers and the president
and the people that run Iran.
You guys don't share a common value.
You're wrong.
You're absolutely wrong.
You're telling me, you're telling me,
the former minister, Javad Zadev,
like you're saying his ideal situation is to bring democracy to Iran.v. Like you're saying his ideal situation
is to bring democracy to Iran.
No, what you're saying is,
can we pursue policies in the United States
to help the people of Iran?
And have we been?
My answer is we have not been.
We have not, 40 years of blanket sanctions
has not helped the people of Iran.
It is only entrenched the government further.
And there's reams of academic data that indicates that.
The question is, does the, for instance, nuclear deal,
the JCPOA in 2012, did that help, would that have helped
the government or the people?
And there is very good, real, like meaningful arguments
to be made that it it would only
help the government.
I disagree because there are much better arguments that it would only help people.
Why goes back to your God capitalism, the free market, the Iranian people live in an oppressive,
murderous, a theocratic regime. And as a part of American policy,
we have decided that we're gonna blanket sanction everyone
in the hopes that eventually they'll rise up
and take down their government for decades.
For decades we've been doing that.
Now, instead, the argument of the JCPOA was very simple.
A, we get rid of Iran's nuclear capabilities without launching
a war without, like, given a Mahan or a fifth building, without, without, again, I want
to make sure that you understand that this isn't my 150 million or your 150 million. That's
the only reason I said it doesn't matter. You're strengthening them. What you are doing
you're strengthening their government. It's not about the money that you give them.
It doesn't get to the people. It doesn't get to the people.
You cannot be that naive to think the money goes to the people.
I'm not talking about the money going to the people.
What I am talking about is the policies that arise from the JCPOA, which requires the
liberalization of Iran's economy.
What Iran, what the Iranian people need, what the Iranian people need? Not gonna happen. What the Iranian people need in order to actually succeed
in bringing down their government is access to the free market,
is access to the rest of the world.
Like given money to the government?
You are conflating two different things.
I'm not telling you.
Listen to me, I'm not saying that the money in exchange
for the nuclear weapons is what is going to free Iran.
I am saying that the policies pursued by the JCPOA
have on top of it the goal of economic liberalization
in Iran, which is why I argued 10 years ago
that Iran should be allowed into the World Trade Organization
because then they would have to actually pursue policies that require economic
liberalization.
You can't go shit with unreasonable people.
It's impossible to negotiate with unreasonable people.
Who we read?
Do you know how much shit we send to North Korea right now?
Do you know how many billions of dollars in aid we send to North Korea?
Is there anyone more unreasonable than Kim Jong-un?
That's who we negotiate with is unreasonable people.
Because the other option with unreasonable people is you just bomb the shit with them.
Don't put, as a, I know you're a hardcore capitalist.
As a capitalist yourself, don't confuse the two, okay?
With a Judeo-Christian nation that we're talking about here.
I'm not talking about North Korea here.
I'm talking specifically to Iran.
If you go back and you think about
during the Shah era, when that place is safe,
everybody around them felt safe.
Nobody around Iran feels safe, right?
Nobody in Iran felt safe in the Shah of America.
Of course they did.
Of course it's called great power.
Maybe when your family did?
No, yours did as well.
What are you talking about?
Are you, your example is the perfect one. The moment Shah live did, yours did as well. What are you talking about? Are you, your, your example is the perfect one.
The moment, Charlotte, your dad as a communist left.
What are you talking about?
My father didn't say if you're in,
then why didn't he leave under the shot?
Why did he leave right?
Homeini came in.
You realize how much hypocrisy there is for that.
So there's contradiction to that.
But let me, a lot of things that,
I'm happy about you.
I never honestly thought that you were going to sit here
and actually defend the fucking shot
Like hear me you're defending Chomeini. You're defending Iran. You're defending all the people that
That you chose 50 50. Hold on have has anyone here actually hurt me in directly you are in directly you are when I ask you
Between the shan the Chomeini you said that's neither
Well, you're saying Chomeini and sharda same you have to be naive to say that I didn't say they were the sameomeini said it's neither. Well, you talk a little more. You're saying chomeini and shard the same. You have to be naive to say that.
I didn't say that we're the same.
What I said was your family to be there.
Your family murderous regime.
Baby, I left in 89.
I left 89.
Okay.
My family was actually the family
that thought your aunt was gonna figure that.
I'm part of that family.
If I were to left early.
I have my friends.
Okay.
If I had your father, I would've been like,
hey man, we're in the US all right,
I would have had a 10 year lead.
But my dad took 10 more years with mom
because they thought that this thing's gonna get figured out, right?
All I'm saying to you right now is the phone.
I have four kids.
I would love to take my kids to Iran.
I'm gonna hold you to Jam Hospital.
I love to go to New York.
I'd love to go eat at Obelli, Jigar, Duke, original, Duke.
I dream about that.
Ballol to, you know, what's that one park?
Park is Shahan Shahi.
It's a different name right now, whatever it's called,
or go to Bandar Palavit.
It's not called Bandar Palavit anymore.
My mother said they're from a rash
and Bandar Palavit area.
It's my dream to go there.
I think my opinion, by giving these guys,
even if it's their money back,
to make the government even stronger,
you're delaying those people being free.
You're delaying a 10, 15, 20 more years.
Let's establish.
What's your goal for Iran?
My goal for Iran is to be a nation
that is freer than it is today.
Free such as,
we have the exact same goal.
We do, but our approach is a different approach.
How do you think we get to a freer?
Now, it's in 45 years.
It's been 45 years where we've done one thing.
All we have done for 45 years is sanction,
contain, and isolate.
45 years.
Now you tell me, have we gotten this much closer
to the Iran that you're asking for?
So let me, let me.
You're saying American policy?
Yeah, I understand fully what he's saying.
Have you been sanctions?
I explain to you in the statement.
Can you tell Prarina to tell the people to get on the Zoom,
I'm six minutes late, I'm gonna be there in four minutes.
Tell me, have we actually pursued your goal?
Have we pursued our goal?
So my answer is gonna upset you, okay.
And just brace for impact, maybe take a deep breath,
lusa and then fake it.
And you're probably gonna upset me as well.
But would you know my answer, these are my answers.
I think there are a lot of people in the world
that want to keep Iran in the havoc that it is today.
Absolutely.
I think there's a lot of people that, if they could...
Saudi Arabia. Israel.
It's not just Saudi Arabia or Israel.
There's a lot of people here. It's UK.
It's a lot of people.
The last time Iran was very powerful,
they became a little too powerful.
And they're like, wait a minute, pump your brakes. My people are going to your place. Elizabeth Taylor is dating Zaheddi,
Frank Sinatra is coming at performing concerts in Iran. The richest people in the world in
the 70s are going to Iran for vacation. The top three countries in the world, countries
on the world for vacation is Iran. Are you out of your freaking mind? They're killing
it. Guys, we got to kind of slow. They need havoc in the Middle East.
It's a necessity for some.
Financially, it's a necessity for some.
Politically, it's a necessity.
It's just like-
But what's happening about the Iranian people?
But let me, let me, let me,
it's the same policy, the same, the Iranian people.
It's the same way as many progressive, not you,
or Democrats would like to keep certain communities
and sects poor because they keep
winning that vote if they lose that vote if they start becoming financially free not needing
we're not getting off the subject we're not getting off the subject what i'm saying to is i'm
giving you my opinion i don't think i want to free it having said that my approach
would be any possible way to give the power to the people how How do we give the power to the people?
They need weapons in Iran.
The people don't have weapons.
We're not gonna ship weapons to Iran like it's a thing.
You're asking me a question.
I'm telling you.
Let's talk about the realm of the possible.
No, no, no.
The realm of the possible is not logical.
What needs to be done is not on freaking black and white.
It's a lot of gray needs to get done for this thing to get done.
It ain't no black and white type of stuff.
You need a similar situation on what happened with most other and what happened with the
Shah as crazy as this sounds.
They've done this before to a guy that would be considered a Republican, the Shah, and they
did it to a guy that would have been seen as a socialist most other.
So how do you think they have the purple?
How do you think we help the people in Iran as by giving them weapons?
That is one of many different ways to do it.
One of many different ways to do it. One of many different ways to do it.
That's one of the ways to do it.
How do we empower those people to actually be able to remove their government from them?
By suffocating their government.
How do we suffocate their government?
Why do you think all these girls right now willing to sacrifice their lives?
What do you think the woman right now are doing in Iran?
What do you think they're doing it for?
They're sacrificing their lives for their lives.
Why are they doing it for?
Basic human rights.
Basic human rights things that you and I have here. Absolutely.
I support that.
And I support the more we strengthen their government, the less power we give them.
So the more money we give to the government, the less money we give to the less power we give to them.
Right. Right.
So how so you do realize that right now the rich people on Iran are the people in government.
The mullahs with the role like this.
I don't disagree.
The so I don't disagree.
45 years of sanctions has made the people poor
and the government rich.
No, what they do is the government from the top says,
see what America did to you.
See what America did to you.
Take it off.
No, no, see, we take it all.
And then, hey, you send us more money
or else we're gonna keep saying,
mad about Henri Cah, we're gonna keep saying,
America's the evil empire, that's what they do.
No, it's not about American empire,
it's about an existential threat to the world. It's not Iran has. No, no, Iran
has money. It's not like Iran doesn't have money. The level of again, again, let's not
confuse things. The nuclear deal was to get nuclear weapon capabilities out of Iran.
And it was according to your strength in the government, according to five countries,
it was worth bringing them money in order to do that. So here, now, strength in the government. According to five countries, it was worth
bringing them money in order to do that.
So here, now, here's the question.
Here's the question to you.
You're saying that for 45 years,
the government has gotten richer
and the people have gotten poor.
And that's because the government
has a monopoly on the black market.
So I'm saying actually, let's invest in the free market.
Let's give the people around.
You're naive to think some money goes to them.
The money goes to them.
You can't be that naive.
You have four degrees.
I don't have a degree.
The money goes to them if they actually have an ability
to access it.
If they have access to the free market economy,
if they have access to it,
interdependent, they're gonna have access to that.
For 40, five.
If you're a business owner or an Iran,
let's say you're selling carpets.
Iran's business.
You're selling pistachios.
Yes.
You can't sell pistachios on the international market.
So that's not about the mullahs keeping all the money
for them, they can.
The fact of the matter is,
and for a capitalist like you,
I can't believe you're disagreeing with this.
I'm against the government having the power to bully its people,
which is what it's been doing for 44 years.
You're for it.
I'm against it.
That's bullshit.
And then say that I'm for it.
And what do you mean?
Give them the $150 billion to the government?
Your argument is that if you're saying the argument has let them have their money,
that's theirs.
You're not thinking we're strengthening them.
I think we have a common mission by the way.
My argument, I'm going gonna say this one last time
is that in exchange in twenty twelve for the removal of your
believing that your believing them for in exchange for nuclear weapons
capabilities which have the stringest
investigative group the i a a now you can say off of the i a a a fuck the u
n they all don't know anything
okay well then there's nothing really to talk about.
But the people on the ground who actually take the tests
told us in no uncertain terms that it was working.
That's a fact.
The point is separate that from this larger conversation
that we're having, which is how do you empower
the people in Iran to bring down their governments?
And it's a legitimate argument.
I'm not saying you're wrong or dumb
for thinking that sanctions are the right way of doing it.
You're not dumb, it's naive, it's different.
What I'm saying is, there are two ways to do this.
You could either blanket sanction the entire country,
and as we know, 45 years of that has led to the government
being more entrenched than it's ever been. And the people at the top being billionaires
and everyone else barely struggling. Or any other thing, 45 years, any other thing.
And what is the other thing? Well, it's quite easy.
There are mechanisms in place already that allow for an investment on the ground of the
Iranian people themselves access to the free market economy, which comes with rules.
Here's the problem with what if I-
What rules?
So rules are rules bank rules rules are you you okay
So so so if I negotiate with a murderer you think he's accustomed to
Following the rules this if I if I negotiate with a nation with a government like there's you think they follow
What's in a contracts? It's so there's no you believe that. I understand that you have this mystical view
of what the Iranian government is that exists
in this kind of existential,
I just want to explain to what they say.
No, no, no, I just listen to what they say.
But they are not actual people who care about their own
livelihood and they care about nothing else.
I do think they care about their livelihood.
The government people care about their wealth.
I don't agree with you.
Yeah, but I'm talking about its people.
That's what I'm talking about.
And what I'm saying is
Right now we have nothing but the stick we have no carrot at all in Iran There's nothing you get in care to the wrong guy the you giving care to the guy that's got plenty of carrots
We're dozing on carrying carry to the economy. No, you're not giving a care to the
I'm a Syrian Armenian. I'm a Syrian on Armenian. Let me tell you what both sides will say.
You ready?
Here's a criticism.
Here's a criticism both sides will say.
And I want to wrap it up.
I will go off.
If you're up for two, three hours, I'm up for bringing you back.
You have no idea how much I've enjoyed.
I'm being serious with you.
I'm being serious.
Okay.
So I'll tell you this.
Armenian is Syrian.
Bedavit, Borosyan.
Bedavit, a Syrian, Borosyan, Armenia.
Okay.
You know every time when people say,
Hey, you know, let me tell you what's going on,
send money to this charity.
Send money to go help these Syrians.
How come you're not giving money here?
And I'll send money.
You know, both sides of my family will say,
never send money, you know why?
Can I say, goes to the wrong people?
Cause it never goes to its people.
Yes.
You know this reputation.
So if you and I are giving money,
150 billion to the government
We have to be naive to believe it's gonna end up to its people. That's what I'm not gonna end up to its people
And that's that's that's the strength to do it something different. Okay anyway, hold on hold on
I need to say one last thing because if you probably know anything about me
You know that I get cut up and re-edited and there's an entire industry online meant to make me look
in a certain way.
It's not us.
We don't do.
I want to say a final word here because it's very important.
And I'm hoping that this final word will make it.
I have absolutely nothing but loathing for the Iranian government, for the Islamic Republic. It is a murderous, terroristic regime
that slaughters its own children.
It has no legitimacy whatsoever.
It belongs in the dustbin of history.
The only proper response of this current revolution,
and it is a revolution, is not for reform,
it's not for a little bit more rights.
It's to burn the whole thing down and start all over again
and I wholeheartedly support that.
The question is how do we empower those young people?
How do we give them the tools necessary in order to burn it down?
Next time.
Next time.
How about we do this?
Next time we just do podcasts on Iran not religion
So we're like and it's just gonna be you and I was a real book, but I but no no
What I'm in by the way just so you know what you just said that's a clip and we're gonna put the entire clip of Iran
Me and you going back and forth and your last part will be in it as well as a closing just so in the city audience
We don't play those games. Please tell us about your new book
The book is a biography of Howard Baskerville,
who was a 22-year-old Christian missionary from Nebraska
in 1907.
He got assigned to Tabriz, the city of Tabriz,
and Iran to go preach the gospel and teach English.
And he showed up in the middle of Iran's first revolution,
the constitutional revolution of 1905.
He showed up in 1907 in the middle of it.
This was the first democratic revolution in the entire Middle East.
It led to the first constitution and also a parliament in Iran.
The Shah launched a war against the constitutionalists.
That war kind of culminated in the city of Tabriz.
And at that moment, Howard Baskerville, this 22-year-old Christian missionary, gave up his
missionary post and his American citizenship and joined the revolutionaries in this fight
against the Shah for democracy.
They won.
They beat the Shah.
They exiled him.
They established the Shah. They exiled him. They established the Constitution
and they established a parliament. Iran was a constitutional monarchy for a very, very short
amount of time until Resa Pahlevi, the father of the man that you...
Your hero. The father of the man that you weirdly seem to have some nostalgia for.
The father of the man. Reza Khan?
Reza Khan.
He was a, he was a, he was a, he was a,
declared a military coup on Iran brought down the parliament.
He's a feared man, you would say.
This is where we are now.
The point is, is this incredible story of this American Christian who is still considered
a hero in Iran today.
Rob, link in the chat, link in description.
Folks, go buy the book. He has a track record
of writing books that gets people thinking, talking, debating, Resa once again truly. Thank
you so much for coming out. I can not wait for the next one. This two hours foot like two
minutes to me. I appreciate you. Let's come back. Let's come back. Let's come back when
we're together, bro. Let's go to Iran together.
Next year in Tehran. Next year in Tehran.
Fuck, that's my man.
Thank you everybody. Have a great weekend.
We're not doing another one this week. We'll do it again next week.
Take care. Bye bye.