Pivot - Trump & Putin’s Alaska Date, Gay Marriage Challenged, and Guest Co-Host Rachel Maddow

Episode Date: August 15, 2025

Scott-Free August continues with none other than MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow! Kara and Rachel talk about the origins of “America First,” Trump’s ongoing D.C. takeover, and The White House’s review... of Smithsonian museum exhibitions. Plus, President Trump and Vladimir Putin meet in Alaska, and SCOTUS is asked to overturn marriage equality. Then, what are The Ladies of the Right beefing about? Rachel’s podcast, “Ultra” won a 2025 Edward R. Murrow Award! Listen to it here. Watch this episode on the ⁠⁠Pivot YouTube channel⁠⁠. Follow us on Instagram and Threads at ⁠⁠@pivotpodcastofficial⁠⁠. Follow us on Bluesky at ⁠⁠@pivotpod.bsky.social⁠⁠ Follow us on TikTok at ⁠⁠@pivotpodcast⁠⁠. Send us your questions by calling us at 855-51-PIVOT, or at ⁠⁠nymag.com/pivot⁠⁠. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:07 Investing involves risk, including loss of principle. Securities trading is offered through an account with Robin Hood Financial LLC, Member SIPIC, a registered broker dealer. In case you're interested, a report from WeWork, every white woman in America is doing a skincare line. Kara, that's the one thing we haven't done together yet. I know. Let's launch a skincare line for people who don't care about skin care. Hi, everyone. This is Pivot from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Starting point is 00:01:41 I'm Kara Swisher. Welcome back to Scott Free August. This is possibly the most badass day of Scott Free August. My co-host and I are the Al Pacino and Robert De Niro of lesbian journalists, respected, feared, and often confused for one another because of our hair, our fantastic haircuts, let me just say. Welcome to the host of MSNVCs, the Rachel Maddow show, Rachel Maddow. Oh, Kara, I'm so glad. And when we made that decision to go bulk at the barbershop where we would always go two for one, I just think it was great for both of us. I mean, we were both 24, who could have foreseen that it would have been the start of our paths in life.
Starting point is 00:02:22 Right. And we often dress like each other, too. And people are always like, are you Rachel mad at? No, I'm not tall enough. People don't know Rachel's quite tall. That's the thing. That's the secret. That helps us twin in a way that will help us ultimately commit great crimes. That is great. Because we will be the alibi for one another. We should do crimes. Should we solve crimes or do crimes? Yes. Both. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. All the things. We have so much to talk about. This is so good. This is everybody, let me just say, we're going to gay enough. for you here a little bit. But we're going to, we have a lot to talk about. But how is it going on your show? You're back to once a week. Is that correct? Yes. So I'm once a week Monday nights on MSNBC and then I spend every other day of the week working on stuff that people can't see yet. And so it seems like I'm doing nothing, but actually I'm working harder than I've ever worked in my life. So you're not lazy. I'm not lazy. No. So can I just ask? I'm just curious, how do you plan that day? When do you do you do it on Sunday? I was trying to think when do you plan it and how do you decide? Because it's the one day. You're like the John Stewart.
Starting point is 00:03:22 does the same thing, the one day, both Monday. I read all week, and then Sunday is a full, full-bore, like, 10 or 12-hour workday when I'm, like, reading intensively and pre-prepping and making decisions, including about guests and stuff, although I don't like to pre-plan guests before the day of the show if I don't have to. Right, because you want it to be fresh. Yeah, because I'm not trying to do a week in review. I'm trying to do a good, here's your Monday newscast.
Starting point is 00:03:48 And so I'm never great at, like, lining up the big guest for the big get. interview weeks in advance. I just don't do that. So, but I read all day and then Monday I work all day and that's, I mean, it's kind of, it's, it's not that different from when I was, the prep time is not that different from when I was doing five days a week. It's just that my whole Sunday is, is dedicated as well. You went from one day a week to five during the first hundred days of the presidency. Do you feel like you need to come back and do more? I know a lot of your viewers think that. I mean, I think doing the hundred days was the right thing. to do. I think a lot changed in our country very rapidly over those first hundred days,
Starting point is 00:04:28 and I was glad to be there every day for it. I also think it was, you know, MSNBC kind of signaling to the audience like, hey, this is not a normal presidential transition. This is potentially, if this is going to be a transition from one kind of government and one kind of country into another, we need to cover it in a way that is not pretending that this is normal. And so I like the instinct at the company to ask me to come back and do that to signal that this is a special sort of time, I think, was correct. But I don't want to do five days a week, and I won't. And they don't want you to. They've moved on. They have gotten more people, but do you ever feel like, oh, my God, something happens and I got to get in there?
Starting point is 00:05:08 Oh, yeah, for sure. And, you know, and I'm a guest on other people's shows, and if it ever, we ever tip over into special coverage, I'm able to come back at any time and lead that stuff. So I just, I think it's a pretty, it was hard to arrive at the system that we're, in, we had to iterate a bunch of sort of different attempts at it before we arrived at this. But I think we're in the right place. I think this is stable and sustainable, and this is going to be what it's going to be like for the foreseeable future. Right. Now, may I ask you, are you excited about your spinoff of Versant? What a great name. Versant. Talk to your doctor about it. You know, results may vary. You could have a rash.
Starting point is 00:05:48 You know, in terms of the practical impact of it, it's been all kind of upside so far. Yeah. I mean, we're hiring, what other news organization is hiring tons of reporters and correspondents and editors and we're standing up this whole news gathering operation, which was funded as part of, well-funded, as part of the spin. And in the end, once that is stood up, we will no longer have to compete with NBC News' properties for the product of the news gathering organization, which we otherwise had to.
Starting point is 00:06:22 I mean, if it's, we're all covering the same outbreak of war or whatever it is, you know, if we're competing with Knightley and the Today Show and meet the press, and it's the NBC News news gathering organization, we're always going to get whatever's left over. In this case, it's all, we can apply our own instincts, our own queries,
Starting point is 00:06:42 our own priorities to getting stuff that we need from reporters and correspondents. And so it's going to be better once that's all stood up. It has to be. I like the cut of your jib here because half the people, I like that expression.
Starting point is 00:06:56 I like to say it a lot. Sounds like I like the cut of your jib. I didn't even know I had a jib. Everyone has a jib, Rachel. It's a sailing metaphor. A jib. Do you ever sail? No, obviously you don't.
Starting point is 00:07:08 A jib. It's a jib. I'm more of a roboat type. I like robots too. When I went out with someone and they bought me a robo once, and we called it a relation dingy. But we want to have a relationship.
Starting point is 00:07:22 Anyway, thank you. Thank you. I'm here all week. One of the things I think is exciting, actually. I've been doing a few shows on the podcast about what works in media now versus the whole doomness of it. And I had Oliver Darcy on.
Starting point is 00:07:37 I had Katie Drummond from Wired. I had a bunch of different people on it. And the whole idea was that things are working, Like, whether it's Medi Hassan, even on the right, whether you like her or not Megan Kelly, there's all this exciting kind of stuff. And one of the MSNBC people either split into two groups, people who are sort of, this is the end kind of thing, or this is an opportunity to be entrepreneurial, which I think you're talking about, right? And it's opportunity to make things people want. It's a, first of all, we make a ton of money. Second of all, we're spinning off with a huge stand-alone, newly built news gathering organization
Starting point is 00:08:14 that is designed specifically for our purposes and nothing else. We have an incredibly loyal, very large audience, and we've got, and we're universally platformed on a device called the television, which Americans use, despite the media reports to the contrary. And so I just feel like I'm super, super happy to see, in particular, the success of some of the people, people you just described, like, WIRE has just been killing it. Oliver Darcy doing his status media stuff is great, it's better than anybody else who's doing the media beat from any of the legacy news organizations. Absolutely. That's because he's not just writing down what the big say.
Starting point is 00:08:53 Exactly. And that is forcing, I actually think it's forcing media reporting in legacy news organizations to kind of up their game a little bit because he's so scrappy and good at it. And I think there's a lot that's positive. The business side of it is a challenge for everybody, but it's also unique to everybody. And MSNBC on that side has a bunch of unique advantages. We're in a spin that is very well funded that is, you know, once it's going to be public shares eventually when Versant does that. That means that's going to sort of lock into a system where there's several years where they can't, you know, do anything dramatic like sell us or anything like that. But right now we make a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:09:34 We have a big audience and we're great. substantively in terms of what we can offer the audience. I just think that's nothing to sneeze at, and I'm excited to see how it develops. Good, because I think that's a good attitude. I think if you sit around and doomscroll about your industry, it's just not true. There's all kinds of entrepreneurial stuff,
Starting point is 00:09:52 and it gives you the opportunity if you pull away from bigger organizations to, like, you have to make stuff people want. Anyway, speaking of... Wait, wait, before we move on from that. You, yourself, are a media mogul, Karriswisher. That's what I call me. But do you feel like you've wired, you've figured out what makes the most sense for you in terms of owning stuff and multi-platforms and the kind of partnerships that you have?
Starting point is 00:10:17 Well, Rachel, if I were advised, like, I helped Dave Jorgensen leave the Washington Post because he's the one who makes all those videos, and he also was on the podcast because he's different. He's doing videos and trying to create a video-oriented, TikTok-oriented media company. Yes, I feel much better. As I often say, I was a terrible employee. I was like, you fuck an idiot all the time. And I was tired of saying that to people,
Starting point is 00:10:39 especially a certain kind of guy, right? It was often a guy, and sometimes a woman. And I just was like, I'll make what I'll make. And if people want to eat it, they can eat it. And then I get to make all the decisions. I also own everything. If I were you, I would own everything. You do own a lot of your stuff, Rachel.
Starting point is 00:10:55 But I would own, like, everything I make. And that way I can make decisions. And then you partner with people, in my case is Fox Media. But, you know, over time, for example, in Pivot Scott and I have gotten a bigger piece of the pie because it's our pie, right? But it's great to have partners that help you do things like advertising and distribution and producing that you may not want to do or they can do better. And so it creates a really great ecosystem of everyone's interests are aligned. And when you own it, you can make decisions that are both temporally specific and specific in terms of equity and all that other stuff and control. as needed, but you can enter and leave those partnerships while you still own everything.
Starting point is 00:11:36 Right, and that's what I'm advising everybody. Like, everyone who, like, I get a lot of, like, when they wrote that very nice piece on the New York Times about me, which was a little too nice, Rachel, I'll be honest with you. It was a big way. You're the backlash to your own profile? Myself, I'm like, come on. You couldn't find one bad thing. I'll give you a list of people that don't like me. But they're always blind quotes, so they're not any good. You know, I would say one of the things that was important in that piece was getting people inspired. But the reporter came to me and said, who's lovely, Ben Mullen, and he said, you know, I've heard you're being paid to advise people to leave media. Like, I get a fee. I was like, if I got a fee, I'd be so
Starting point is 00:12:14 fucking rich. I have like people call me. Right now on my telephone, I have seven people who want to leave media and want to try something. And so what I try to do is the ones I think are going to be good. I say, here's what it takes, like a Jim Acosta or whoever. You've got to be entrepreneurial. You've got to be, you've got to work hard than you did because it's all for you, right? And I think that's the hard part. And some people who come to me, I'm like, yeah, you should stay where you are. You should stay where you are. You're giving people the Rosetta Stone here to interpret your advice in future. I know, but it's only a few people. But, you know, like I just was with Tina Brown, and she's done amazing stuff at her substack. And I think her writing is better.
Starting point is 00:12:55 Paul Krugman, I think, has really come alive. He's suddenly really great. There's all kinds of people. And I think once you find your voice, if it's really good, people will buy it. And media is not all one thing. I mean, I have a production company now, in addition to being an employee at MSNBC. But at that production company, I'm not doing cable news. At that production company, I'm doing documentaries, scripted shows. Actually, podcasts are all through MSNBC.
Starting point is 00:13:20 So it's the documentaries, scripted shows. I'm producing a play with them, some other stuff, feature films. But that's all, it's all different. So my employee status is podcasts and TV shows at MSNBC, which is all the stuff for which I'm still best known. Everything else that I'm doing, I'm very low on the learning curve and I'm figuring out how to do it. And I don't know if I will succeed at any of those things, but I'm trying, but I'm doing that on my own steam. Which one do you like better? I like them both.
Starting point is 00:13:50 I'm better at one than I am at the other. Right. You're used to it. Yeah. And so, but I like working at something that I'm not great at in. learning. So that's what I'm... The problem is that I can't... Once you're better at something, it's easier to turn it on and off to compartmentalize. Now I'm working. No, I am not. When you're not good at something, there's the constant panic about failure, which means you work 24 hours a day,
Starting point is 00:14:13 which means your girlfriend gets mad at you. I've heard... Wait a minute. I've heard that. I have that issue with my wife, too. Speaking of Hollywood, I just want to note the New York Times just called my all-time favorite movie Roadhouse, the best bad movie. I don't know if you know that's my all-time favorite movie Roadhouse was Patrick Swayze,
Starting point is 00:14:34 not the Jake Jillenhall. That was pathetic. The Jake Jillan Hall is the remake? The remake. And in the Patrick Swayze version was there also a lot of shirtlessness? Yes, of course, obviously.
Starting point is 00:14:44 He did Tai Chi in this shirtlessness. Are you kidding? And it was mostly him, by the way. It was not the ladies. There was a lot of shirtless ladies also. But he was the prime piece of beef cake there going on. And I love that movie
Starting point is 00:14:56 largely because of the line. minds like we can do this the hard way or the easy way, just stuff like that. I say that a lot and no one was. It's profound. It's a deep thing. People go, look, where's that in the Bible? I love Patrick Swayze. It's such a great fire that I don't understand it myself. Have you ever seen the amazingly like crazy stars TV show called High Town, which is about drugs in Provincetown? Yes, the lesbian. Hello. Hello. So, what about in the pimp, the terrible, like, evil shirtless, pimp character, Swayzy? And there's no reason in the entire, there's a lot of things about Hightown that are inexplicable.
Starting point is 00:15:37 But one of them is that why is the pimp shirtless? Like, the pimp is shirtless at night, the pimp is shirtless during the day. I'm convinced the pimp is always shirtless because he is Swayze. Because that is his name. Patrick Swayze. You're right. Yes. Yeah, they always take their shirt off.
Starting point is 00:15:51 It's a meta, yes. Yeah, Tom Cruise always takes his shirt. off, too. There's several actors. But in Patrick Swayze's case, I see the point. I get the point. I understand why there's no shirt. Let me ask you question. Do you have a best bad movie or show you like lately? I got to, I like High Town. I got to say. Yeah, you know, I'm a real old lesbian who doesn't see a lot of movies and stuff. Like, my favorite movie is suddenly, which is an assassination movie starring Frank Sinatra, that all takes place in. one room and really ought to have been a play. Like I, yeah. Frank Sinatra. You're going back to Frank Sinatra. Yes, like that's my era. I love Patton. I love Lawrence of Arabia. Like I'm, I'm a lot older than I seem. I was born 74 years old. Excellent. That is from the beginning, from the get from the beginning. I came out near-sighted. I was 37. Interesting. I was born.
Starting point is 00:16:47 I was like, here's how we're going to do things. But 37 and real bossy. So you, to So suddenly, I'm going to watch that now. It's good, it's really good. I like political thrillers is kind of my thing. I like psychological thriller stuff. And, you know, it's great. It's really good. Frank Sinatra actually did some,
Starting point is 00:17:06 I loved him in the first Manchurian candidate. No, he's great. That's a creepy movie. Angela Lansbury is so good in that movie. Oh, God, she's fantastic. She's so good. I love an evil, like a totally, like, like villainous to the core, pretty lady.
Starting point is 00:17:22 Pretty lady. She is. Julie Andrews should be a villain. Has she ever been a villain? That's sort of in that genre. Oh. Hello, Julie Andrews fans of the pivot audience. Tell us what Julie Andrews.
Starting point is 00:17:32 I'm sure she's listening very closely right now. Although I do have a lot of weird celebrity fans, which is strange. I'm sure you have a million of them. They love the Rachel Maddo. Let me give you one recommendation, which I mentioned every show. See Hunting Wives, please, on Netflix. Do yourself a favorite. Oh, this is a new reality series?
Starting point is 00:17:50 No, it is not. It is a series. Malin Ackerman and Brittany Snowstar. And it is about MAGA, MAGA ladies in Texas who shoot a lot of guns. And they're very Christian and very MAGA and Trumpy. And they dress up in what you'd imagine Texas ladies would dress up in. And they're all lesbians. Suddenly they take this turn into lesbian and you're like, but then they do it too much. You're like, stop it with a lesbian. Like there's way too much. And then there's murder. It's not you just like reading a lesbian vibe into it. They actually in the show, they go get. No, it's moving towards softcore port in a way that's really good.
Starting point is 00:18:30 I actually was like, you need to stop. We need some more plot here. Like, stop, make it out, you too. And Malin Ackerman dives into the role, dives into the role. So when Scott did his last episode of Pivot before Scott Free August, his advice to you and your co-hosts while he was away was he wanted a lot more lesbian content. There we go. And now, here you are. Here you are.
Starting point is 00:18:53 We've done it. You're bringing me new lesbian content I didn't have. I'm just telling you. Just text me after you watch it, all right? I'll trust me on this one. All right, we've got a lot to, now we're getting to serious stuff because Trump is having quite a week with his federal takeover, D.C. A review of the Smithsonian in a meeting with Putin. First, you know, I am a huge fan of your work on the 30s and 40s, all the stuff you've done.
Starting point is 00:19:16 I just re-listen to prequel, which I adore and all the characters. And I assume that's what you're making. movies about because there's so many great characters there. We've been hearing Trump using this America first line for years, but it's coming into play more than ever in his second term, as if it's fresh and new. He slapped the label on foreign policy trade immigration. He told the Atlantic a few months ago that America first means whatever he says it does. He said that he was the one that developed it. Obviously not so. In both Ultra, your podcast, which you've been on talking about this in your book prequel, you talk a lot about this. And the deep, deep roots
Starting point is 00:19:51 of this, what's happening now in the U.S., which we have forgotten about in a lot of ways. So talk a little bit about the backstory and this rhetoric at this moment in time. So the America First Committee was a real thing. It only existed for about 15 months, but it was 15 really important months. It was from, I think, September of 1940 until December of 41, Pearl Harbor. But they formed, it was one of the largest anti-war organizations ever in the U.S., And they formed to basically try to block FDR from affording any assistance to Britain when Britain was fending off a Nazi invasion. And their basic idea, at least their public-facing idea, was that we were impregnable.
Starting point is 00:20:33 We were protected by our oceans. Nobody was ever going to attack us. And who cares if the Nazis took all of Europe. Europe kind of sucks anyway. Why should we give money to them? Why should we give money to them? And if we give any money to them, they're going to plow under every fourth American boy. It'll get us into the war, and we don't want to be in another war after World War I.
Starting point is 00:20:53 That was the public facing line. The problem the America First Committee had is that even as they were huge, and they had all these really respectable people associated with them, was founded by the guy who was the heir to the Quaker Oats fortune. They kept slipping into kind of liking the Nazis and blaming everything on the Jews. And the American public eventually came to see that, especially when Charles Lindberg, who was the most famous man in America, not named Roosevelt, when Lindberg became their spokesman and started flat out saying, this is just the Jews trying to get us into the war. And the Jews are the big problem in the world. So the America First Committee, I mean, has a short, very pungent history. And then what the idea of America First became after that is even worse. After the America First Committee disbanded following Pearl Harbor. We then later got other iterations of that concept like the America First Party, which in 1944 campaigned explicitly on the promise of deporting and or sterilizing all Jews in America. So that's the history of America first.
Starting point is 00:22:04 And there were senators that put these things forced, the sterilization of Jews, of blacks, of things like that. The insidious nature of it, even if it wasn't called, America first was the thing I was thinking of, is the idea that, first of all, there was Nazi infiltration in our country very significantly through Congress and also throughout media and everything else. But it was much more insidious America first in a lot of ways because all things attached to it. Yeah, I mean, that phrase, that plowing under every fourth American boy, that was, that originated in Berlin in Goebbels's office. And then it made its way into the speeches of an anti-FDR, America First American politician.
Starting point is 00:22:52 And there was a huge, one of the things that Ultra and Prequel are about is this huge multimillion dollar at the time, which makes it, I mean, in 1940s dollars, multimillion dollar secret Nazi propaganda effort that was shunted through Congress. They used the congressional franking privilege to mail out millions of pieces of Nazi propaganda to American homes using members of the Senate and members of Congress who were on the Nazi payroll in the lead up to World War II. And it's a forgotten history, I think, because of World War II, it seems to overshadow, you know, that overshadowed everything that went before. But we had a big Nazi sympathizing and American fascist movement here in this country. But continued after the war through McCarthy, which is what the second season of Ultras is about, correct? I mean, that it didn't stop. So this never stopped. This is one of the things that I took away from your book is that so much as, you know, it begins with Goebbels, who is, you know, I think they had stolen some ideas from us and Jim Crow or borrowed or whatever and thought that was a great thing.
Starting point is 00:24:00 And then they put it back here and continue. That's what the lost history part. I mean, the biggest figure, there's two figures in your books that I think are so. McCarthy gets all the attention, right, always, because he's such a tragic and horrible figure. But two people, I thought, was Lawrence Dennis and O. John Roggey, two opposites, so similar. Lawrence Dennis was considered to be the intellectual godfather of American fascism and was, like, he was receiving money from the Germans. And they brought him over to, like, observe Nuremberg rallies and blah, blah, blah. He was connected to all sorts of American politicians and to these fascist movements, including the violent fascist movements.
Starting point is 00:24:44 And he was also half African American, correct? He was secretly black and passed until the very end of his life, while meanwhile, you know, articulating the beautiful fascist American future, right? The Nazis, when you say that they got ideas from Jim Crow, the Nazis, you use. used, they actually sent an agent to the University of Arkansas Law School to study Jim Crow, the legal, the liminal legal world. Right. How to set it up. How to set it up. And then they used it as the basis for the Nuremberg Laws, the idea of second class citizenship based on racial purity. So that's on the sort of on the dark side. And then O'John Ragi was a wonderkind prosecutor who brought sedition charges against Dennis and against. against these American fascists who were both working with the Nazis and trying to undermine the American war effort. And he was all but destroyed for having done it, including being fired in the Justice Department for having had the temerity to name the members of Congress who were involved in this
Starting point is 00:25:51 scheme. And write a report that got lost, really, to history for 25 years. Yeah, that's right. And then it didn't matter by then because everyone had moved on, right? Yeah, it wasn't able. They didn't publish it to the 60s. I got to tell you, the resonance to today, it's your, that pre-pical particularly sticks with, has stuck with me so hard because it feels like there's so many links to today. How do you, and one of the things, you have these heroes like, O. John Rugg, or Leon Lewis in Los Angeles, who also did all this sort of secret spy work against these people, against these fascists and militias and things like that. Who is that today? and could you link them to what's happening now?
Starting point is 00:26:32 I don't think there's any. You sound like your eyes there a problem. Yes, there's a noisy man. But go ahead. A noisy man. Yeah, sorry. I just saw you kill him with your eyes. It was amazing.
Starting point is 00:26:43 I'll stop doing that. I don't think there are exact parallels, but I do think that there are sort of inspirational currents. So one story that hasn't had a lot of attention that I've sort of been watching percolate recently is that there's been a lot of stealing from armories and military bases that's been happening recently. That was something that happened in the lead up to World War II as well as violent fascist groups like the silver shirts and the Christian Front and others, not only recruited from
Starting point is 00:27:19 the military and from the National Guard, but also used essentially insider threat people inside the military to steal U.S. military weapons for the use and what they hoped would be a violent overthrow of the U.S. government. And so that happened, that's happening now, very sort of quietly, it's only getting a little bit of attention. That happened there. That was in part what led Leon Lewis, who was a World War I veteran, to get other World War I veterans, German-American World War I veterans, to go infiltrate those groups to figure out what was happening. They could not get law enforcement interested in it because these guys proclaimed themselves to be anti-communists. And so, therefore, law enforcement liked the idea of them. They couldn't get law enforcement
Starting point is 00:28:01 interested in, so they pursued it and pursued it and pursued it themselves. They publicized their findings. They ultimately went to U.S. Navy intelligence, which was willing to prosecute them in part because it was military facilities that are being burgled in order to get these guys their weapons. So that sort of intrepidity by a self-styled civilian spot. I don't know that we've got that sort of singular hero right now. But when I see people who are building apps and building online networks to watch what ICE is doing and to monitor effectively the secret police operations that we've got going right now, I see some of those same instincts sort of in the American character.
Starting point is 00:28:41 Yeah. You were saying they aren't the same. I mean, right now, for example, Trump, let's go right to this. Trump says he's looking to extend the 30-day federal takeover of Washington, D.C.'s police and could bypass Congress declaring a national emergency. I guess he could decide what a national emergency is. His comments come as National Guard troops arrive in D.C. with 800 guards and 500 federal agents set to be deployed in total.
Starting point is 00:29:02 They're often in places that are very loud, although they're over on 14th Street where they're being pundled with sandwiches. That guy. A felony for hurling the sandwich. I know. I love it. I'm like I would, I feel like I wish I had done that. D.C. Mayor Mirabauser is calling all of this an authoritarian push, although she initially said the city could benefit from it.
Starting point is 00:29:25 She's being a little bit quiet about it. The U.S. attorney for D.C., Janine Piro, she of the box of wine, wrote in Washington Post op-ed that she's working to overturn some local laws so juvenile offenders would be prosecuted. I just, you know, a lot of the stuff you wrote about was implicit. It was quietly being done, although the silver shirts, they appeared, all these people appeared in Madison Square. garden. They had all kinds of rallies. It was very explicit, but nothing like, it wasn't the government doing this. Now he's also focusing his attention on DC's landscaping, saying we need to redo the grass with the finest grasses. I agree with that. I'm going to agree. We have shitty grass. I think America can actually come together around the idea of fine grass. Fine grass, yeah. So talk to me a little bit about
Starting point is 00:30:10 what's happening here, because this is explicit. In the time you were writing about it, the government itself wasn't doing things like that, or was in a way in certain areas like concentration camps and things like that for the Japanese. Yeah, I mean, fascist groups in the United States before World War II wanted an authoritarian takeover of our country in which there would not be the American system of government anymore. There would be a strong man leader who would run things at his own whim with autocratic capabilities and would serve the white Gentile population above all else and kick everybody else out of the country. That's what fascist groups before World War II wanted in this country, which is why they wanted us to not only,
Starting point is 00:30:53 to either not fight the Nazis or to fight with the Nazis rather than to go over there and fight them. And they didn't like democracy explicitly. They talked about it. Lawrence Dennis did. They thought democracy was decadent and it was a way for liberals and women. Women and, well, minorities of any kind to have any say. Like they don't, these are folks who don't want, don't believe in sharing power with people different than them. They think that they should be able to have a say on their own terms of what happens not only in government, but in everything. And so now, in our generation, in our time, we have an elected authoritarian leader who doesn't just want to control the executive branch. He wants to control, you know, universities,
Starting point is 00:31:38 their curriculum, and their admissions, and their, you know, student discipline policies. And he wants to decide what economists work at what banks, and he wants to control businesses. He wants to control the Smithsonian. He wants to control high school sports. He wants to control the legal profession. He wants to control what's on television and what's in the news. And guess what? Like, this is what they were after. And this is a president who does not see bounds on the presidency set by democratic processes. But he also doesn't see bounds on the presidency set by what counts as government. He wants to autocratically rule the country in every aspect of the country, both to shut down the possibility of criticizing or opposing him, but also because he
Starting point is 00:32:25 believes that he should run everything. He should be handing out the Kennedy Senator honors, and he should be administering the police force of Washington, D.C., and he should be choosing the CEO of Intel, and he should be setting the recipe for Coke. And that's what they were after. And that's what we have. And do you find this to be, Are you more alarmed by any part of it, or is it part of the same idea? And for people who don't know, the White House plans to review the Smithsonian Museum Expeditions, materials, and operations before America's 250th anniversary next year. The administration sent a letter to Smithsonian this week,
Starting point is 00:32:58 explaining how the museum content is in line with Trump's restoring truth and sanity to American history executive order. And recently, the National Museum of American History removed a placard that mentioned Trump's two impeachments, which has since been replaced. is there one thing like this is like a cornucopia of stuff for you to focus on what do you look at what do you think is the thing that troubles you do most or is it in a whole is it the takeover of the city or the attempt to take over the city or is it the museum i assume it's all of it but is there something you find most disturbing well it's all of a piece in the sense that i i guess i have two answers to this question one is that what trump is doing is so textbook. Like, there's not anything that's very surprising about what he's doing, and we now know who he is and what his intentions are. It's not, there isn't going to be a big reveal. Oh, he has authoritarian inclinations for our country's your intentions. Like, we now know
Starting point is 00:33:54 who he is. He is Victor Orban. He is Vladimir Putin. He is Duterte. He is Berlusconi. You know, pick your, pick your poison. They all do the same thing, right? We're only lucky that Trump isn't taking his shirt off in photos. But so on that, that, too, Me. Sorry. I just put that image right in your head, didn't I? You did. I just totally saw his chest. It looks sad. Anyway. Swayzy. He's not Swayzy. I take this shit from Twasey, but not from this guy. But because he's predictable, because he is playing two-type and it is A-type, and it's a very knowable thing.
Starting point is 00:34:34 I feel like there's only so much value in focusing on every new thing he does. because it's predictable what he's going to do. We know what this is. It makes me more interested in the question of the country's durability and how we're responding and the strength of our institutions in standing up to it. So that's one thing there. But the thing I'm most worried about is the military stuff.
Starting point is 00:34:57 The military, meaning the takeover the city or? Well, I mean, he's using the military to project force inward, you know, domestically everywhere. They've, you know, immigration enforcement doesn't just look militarized. They're integrating with the military. They're building these immigrant prison camps with no due process, and a prison with no due process is a camp. They're building them on military bases. They've got hundreds of miles of territory in Arizona and New Mexico in Texas they're calling military zones where they're giving U.S. active duty troops the authority to
Starting point is 00:35:33 stop and search and arrest people on U.S. soil. He threw himself a military parade for his own birthday. They're using military flights, incredibly expensive military flights, inexplicably, for deportation flights. We've just found out that they've got a, they're building, they're considering building a new rapid reaction force where they've got 600 troops on one hour standby, 24 hours a day, to go deploy into American cities. They put the National Guard in the U.S. Marines in L.A., and now they've got the National Guard, and he's threatening active duty troops in D.C. I mean, he is reimagining the use of the U.S. military as his own Praetorian Guard facing his critics and facing his citizens and normalizing, he's already, in this many months, normalized the presence of American troops in American cities with us at the end of their guns.
Starting point is 00:36:25 Right. And when I think of any country I go to where there's troops on the streets, I'm like, I'd like to get out of this country, right? That's the, like, it makes you feel. I just interviewed Jason Stanley, who you know from Yale, he left this country. He was written about propaganda and fascism. I'm sure you know well. And one of the things he said is he's sort of a kind of a cloddish playbook of a fascist. And I was like, well, does it matter if he's clownish and cartoonish if he's effective in some way? Do you find all this effective? Well, he's doing it, right? I mean, the thing that makes him effective is not any genius on his part or even any ambition or speed on his part. The thing that makes him effective is the cowardice and collapse of American institutions that should be saying no to him. that's what that's the that's the problem do you see any heroes emerging yes uh the heroes that are emerging are emerging from not the leadership class but the people i mean the fact that there's protests against trump on every day of the week and every state in the country is important to me and i think i've you featured that on your show quite a bit yeah and i'm doing that not not because um i think that's what everybody's talking about and i want to get in on that conversation i recognize
Starting point is 00:37:35 that it's not getting a ton of attention But I do think that shows you that the people in this country, you look at the opinion polls and you look at the ongoing protests, especially the small protests in red states and stuff against him. And you realize that nobody's into this. Or individuals, when someone's taking someone away, they start filming. I find those really powerful, like some like lady coming out of yoga, like suddenly saying, what the fuck are you doing to this man? Exactly. And that instinct in the American people is really healthy and is unafraid and is uncouth and is uncouth and is. repulsed by this. And that's why Trump has such terrible approval ratings. He's upside down,
Starting point is 00:38:12 even with men, even with, you know, the number, the way he's dropped with young people, it's a stunning drop. And that to me is very important. The crisis that we've got in our country is a crisis of elite cowardice, the law firms, the universities, the politicians, and the business leaders in particular. Were they ever courageous, Rachel? I mean, I would make the argument they weren't. They're saying that universities were woke. I'm like, have you met a university president before this all happened? They hated those professors. They hated. Law firms hated those pro bono people on their staff. I don't know. I just never thought they were particularly courageous. But they're big, prestigious institutions with a lot of capital and a lot of connections
Starting point is 00:38:58 and a lot of money and a lot of people who have a lot of room to maneuver without ever putting themselves in real danger. And those are the people that are failing us. And I actually think that if we're going to like kind of protest and try to put steel in the spines of people and try to appeal to conscience, which is what nonviolent direct action does, some of that protest should be probably, usefully, strategically directed at the institutions that are failing, not just at Trump. Well, one of the things Jason was saying is one of the things the civil rights things work is those people became empathetic given the visuals of civil rights, right? The hoses and everything else. And he was wondering if the immigration raids will make everyone else who is comfortable angry enough or empathetic really enough in a lot of ways, if you think about it.
Starting point is 00:39:45 Yeah, but you need to see not just the rage. You need to see people standing up against them. So what you remembered about that woman in the yoga clothes in the parking lot there yelling at those guys was not just what was happening to those guys that had inspired her to action. It was seeing her be courageous and outraged and not afraid that stuck with it. Right. Even the sandwich guy, all joking aside. When he did that, I'm like, oh, dear. And then I thought, well, good for him. Like, you know, and I was talking about it with my, my wife was saying, what should I do now?
Starting point is 00:40:14 Like, should I go throw a sandwich? Should I, you know, get herself, you know, a ta. They're in front of Tate. That's the best part. Like, they're just like, like, grab their sandwich and throw it at them. But what do you, what is the action you take, I think, is a lot of people are trying to figure out of those people who become empathetic to what's happening. I mean, I don't think the sandwiches deserve this. I mean, I think sandwiches deserve to be treated with respect.
Starting point is 00:40:38 I'm sure that guy, that was, like, probably a meatball sub, like, with exactly the right kind of cheese and just the right. I mean, he probably had that scooped out, you know, which took a lot of extra work at the subway. I'm sorry, you shouldn't attack police. Let me just say. No, no. Fivitz does not encourage attacking police. But if you insist, the sandwich is probably the best. No, no throwing anything at anybody.
Starting point is 00:41:01 No throwing sandwiches. And Rachel and I do not recommend throwing sandwiches, though. If only for the sake of the sandwich. Only for the sake of the sandwich. It's like, let me have a bite. I mean, we've got, one of the things that's different between now and what Americans were facing in the 30s and 40s, is that we have the example of the civil rights movement of the 50s and 60s to show the apogy, the moral apogy of what it means to take incredibly difficult action against incredibly violent, entrenched opponents and to win on the strength of your
Starting point is 00:41:37 moral case. And that is, that's a moral cornerstone of our country, and we would be remiss to not learn from that in this moment. I mean, there's, there's not going to be a civil war in this country. There's not going to be a violent confrontation. I mean, all Trump wants is for somebody to, you know, throw another sandwich or do something that they can consider to be a crime and uses a provocation, nonviolent direct action gets the goods always. And it's our American inheritance. And it's the thing that will ultimately push them back. Ultimately, and also time. Let's go to quick break. When we come back, Trump's warning to Putin ahead of their Alaska getaway. Support for this show comes from Vanta. Here are a few things that are probably
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Starting point is 00:45:50 startups for free, that's C-O-D-A.io-slash-pivot and get six months of the team plan for free. Coda.io-slash-pivot. Rachel, we're back. President Trump and Vladimir Putin are about to meet in Alaska, and Trump is warning that Russia will face, quote, very severe consequences that Putin doesn't agree to stop the war in Ukraine. The White House downplayed expectations for the summit earlier this week describing as a listening expert. size. He said talking about feeling people, feeling people out, which was relatively creepy in the feeling people up? Feeling out? Feeling out. Feeling out. Feeling out. He might feel them up. That's
Starting point is 00:46:30 grotesque. Trump also, you've already gotten like lots of pictures in my head, and I don't appreciate it. Trump also spoke with European leaders and Ukraine's president, Zelensky, ahead of the summit. European leaders asked Trump not to strike a unilateral peace deal, so gave him some key points of negotiations. Zelensky said he warned Trump that Putin was bluffing on pursuing peace, obviously. He's called this meeting Putin's personal victory. What are you looking for? I just had David Remington on the last episode, and he said, you know, as long as he doesn't fuck up or give anything away right away, it'll be a victory.
Starting point is 00:47:03 Like if he has a second meeting, and he's been talking that way recently. I mean, this is all just so embarrassing. You know what I mean? Yeah. Jimmy Fallon had that very good line where he was like, oh, listening and exercise, two of Trump's favorite things. He is funny. Do you remember the red line, Obama and the red line with Syria?
Starting point is 00:47:31 So this was like 2012, I think it was, Obama gave a speech where he described Bashar al-Assad, potentially using chemical weapons as a red line, that's how the United States would treat it. And then in 2013, Assad absolutely did that. And Obama responded by saying, all right, I'm going to Congress to get authorization for the use of military force against Syria. And Congress debated it a little bit and then it kind of looked like it wasn't going to pass. And then they didn't do it. They did not pass the authorization for the use of military force. That went down in political commentary, common wisdom as like, Obama was such a wuss.
Starting point is 00:48:14 He blew it on that red line thing. that was such an embarrassment. First of all, Obama didn't do anything wrong there. He went to Congress for an authorization for the use of military force, which is how it works in our system, and it was Congress that blew it. But that supposed failure, which wasn't a failure at all, by Obama, 12, 13 years later, people still talk about that as like a nay dear, a terrible thing about the Obama administration. Well, meanwhile, here's Trump. Wasn't it going to be like if by Friday, the war wasn't over. It was going to be the end of days for Putin, and there was going to be sanctions, ooh, and there was going to be tariffs. Oh, that's the worst thing in the
Starting point is 00:48:53 world. It was going to be all of this terrible stuff. And instead, what does Putin get? Putin gets a trip to Alaska. Go visit the former Russian Empire and a one-on-one meeting. Trump will fly as far as you're flying to come have a one-on-one man-to-man summit with you the first time that you've been in this country except for the U.N. since 2007. and we get to talk about the war in Ukraine without Ukraine here. I mean, that's, I mean, talk about, talk about a red line moment. I mean, I think it's, well, I'm just worried that we don't end up in the post-press conference with Trump in his lap. Or like, kind of delicate, or like delicately, like, touching his hair, you know, or like cupping his face, spooning him.
Starting point is 00:49:36 What would you consider a success? What would you, is there no success here it's already given away? The success here would be if the U.S. government arrived at this summit, which has been put together on, what, four days notice, a bilateral summit between the American and Russian president, if we arrived at this meeting and then somebody opened a door from a supply closet and Volodymyr Zelensky walked out and sat down and Trump said, you guys talk, I'll be right outside this door. That would be a victory, right? That, but as it. I'd give them the Nobel Peace Prize for that. I don't know that they allow us to vote. But, I mean, Trump is the right word here is Licksbiddle. He is so afraid of Vladimir Putin. He is so afraid of him. He will do absolutely anything.
Starting point is 00:50:22 I mean, we've got a 35% tariff on Canada, and Russia has what percent tariff? Right. Russia is mysteriously missing from the whole tariffs on even uninhabited islands that only have penguins, but not Russia. And the way the media responds to Trump as if his word is his bond, right? Oh, Trump is explaining that he now has a new feeling about Putin, and he's very upset with Putin. Oh, he's very disappointed him. He's really changed his tune. I think he's soured on Putin.
Starting point is 00:50:58 Really? Watch what he does, not what he says. He's literally in the man's pants. Right, right. And there's no distance here. There's no distance between them. So you think just the fact that he's flying there is just. It's already given away.
Starting point is 00:51:11 This is something that no American president has done in 18 years. In many countries in the world, if Vladimir Putin stepped foot on their soil, he'd be arrested and dragged off to the Hague. This is an abject humiliation for the United States of America and for the U.S. presidency that we will be reading about for 75 years. So what is the best thing that could come out of this? Besides Zelensky. Short of Zelensky popping out of the supply closet? Right. What did the janitor say when he jumped out of the supply closet?
Starting point is 00:51:43 What? Supplies! Oh, my goodness. I'm sorry. What is that? That's not even a dad. That's a dad joke. That's a dad joke.
Starting point is 00:51:53 That's a bad dad joke. That's a bad dad joke. Anything good? No. No, I don't, no. I mean, what the Ukrainians say is nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine. And so if this is being negotiated, this is like, if you're like, getting a divorce or something, and the person from whom you're getting a divorce is going
Starting point is 00:52:12 through the court proceedings without you. Like, how do you think it's going to, how do you think your side of the divorce is, you know, you think you're going to get your alimony? You think you're going to get your custody agreement? No, like, this is, this, there's nothing, there's nothing good about this. I will also say that Trump always, always, after he talks to Putin, although now he admits he talks to Putin without telling anybody that he's doing so, every time we know he talks to Putin, he comes out after those discussions and starts parroting a new Russian line. Just like, we're going to plow the boys under, right? Where it went from Goebbels to senators, U.S. senators, things he's saying.
Starting point is 00:52:50 He repeats any, he's absolutely, he will just parrot whatever Putin tells him to say, which he has done. I mean, back to Helsinki, back to the very beginning. And he also adopts whatever position was last presented to him. And so in this case, he'll adopt whatever. Whatever, Putin says. Have you ever thought of calling him on the phone, Rachel, yourself? There is a cell phone that he answers. Trump? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:13 I did speak to him on the phone once during the 2016 campaign, which was funny. I was trying to get an interview with him. This is early in the primary process. And they had gone through this whole big, like, swearing me to secrecy thing that in order to get the interview, I needed to call him personally. And even the fact of the call had to be off the record. They made us, like, swear there was no listening, there was no recording device, and then, like, going through all this rigomerol. And so then I have, I call Rona, like, I get, I have the point of time. I get on the phone with him. I ask him to do the interview. And at the end of my conversation with him, he goes, well, you can air this. This was nice.
Starting point is 00:53:54 I was like, first of all, this is off the record. Right. I didn't tape it. I can tell you now, I agreed to it being off the record, but because he said that, I can now tell you, Caras Fisher today, that he said it was. It was now, I was allowed to air it. And I was like, my dude, like, do you, are you aware when you were in the media versus when you were having a phone? No, he doesn't care. If it goes well, he wants it out there, right? If it goes, you know, if it's a very good call and stuff like that. So you're not expecting anything here.
Starting point is 00:54:22 It's going to be a role. It's already a rollover. No, this is a bad thing. The meeting itself is a bad thing. Vladimir Putin being invited to the United States of America to meet one-on-one with the American president is all I need to know. And that's a bad thing. There's nothing substantively that's going to come. out of this meeting, except for Trump getting more of his instructions, right?
Starting point is 00:54:40 I think he's going to get back to Alaska. I'm telling you. We're going to lose Alaska. We're going to lose Alaska. They're going to trade Sarah Palin and so on my God. You know, you can see Russia from her porch. Anyway, let's bring that one back. I'm going to move on to something totally different. The U.S. Supreme Court has officially been asked to overturn the 2015 decision that granted equal marriage rights, same-sex couples. If you remember Kim Davis, heinous Kinbavis is what I call her, the former Kentucky County Clerk, who was jail for six days in 2015 for refusing to issue marriage licenses to a gay couple. She's filed an appeal in July for the compensation she was ordered to pay that couple.
Starting point is 00:55:16 Davis is taking her case to the court on the grounds that Obergefell of her B. Hodges, which established merit equality, was wrongly decided and infringes on her First Amendment rights. Davis has been unsuccessfully appealing the order for years to lower courts. She's the only one was standing to do this, from what I understand. I did predict an attack on marriage equality back in January. Let's listen to a clip. And that's all they're doing is a naked grab for overturning the gay marriage Supreme Court decision, like they overturn Roe v. Wade.
Starting point is 00:55:47 And it's very vulnerable to two court justices, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, said it should be reconsidered. So we'll see. It's theater. It's theater, but they're going to try to do this. They're trying to get a case up there that will make it. happened. Are you concerned about this at all? Well, on this, I'm sort of two, I'm of two minds about the decision. I feel like I agree with your prediction from January that they want to
Starting point is 00:56:14 overturn. At least there are parts of the court that want to overturn it. I mean, remember, Obergefell was 5'4 decision and now, yeah, and now the court is 6'3 in the direction that had been in the minority. And so I think they want to. But I also feel like the sort of legal common wisdom on this case. As I understand it, I'm not a lawyer. But the legal common wisdom is that this is not the case, that while Kim Davis is appealing to the Supreme Court her illegal actions in denying a marriage license because she says God told her to, she is in appealing that part of her case, she is also asking the court to overturn Obergefell. And this doesn't just doesn't seem like legally the right vehicle to do that. The court also doesn't have to take up any of this.
Starting point is 00:57:02 And even if they did take up the Kim Davis part of it, they don't have to address the Obergefell request in it at all. So I think, yes, the anti-gay movement in this country senses it's got the wind in its sails. They've got a newly reactionary Republican Party on these issues that's getting really demagogic on these issues. And they think that they've got victories ahead. I just don't think this is the case by which they're going to do it. That said, I mean, they've been doing all sorts of stuff that isn't warranted or necessity. by the material that's being put before them. That's the whole shadow docket idea.
Starting point is 00:57:36 So there's a pretty radical court. I don't really want to stand here on plant two feet and say it's not going to happen, but it would be a weird way for them to do it if they were going to. Weird way for them to do it. Well, I think they go through trans people and then to gay, like ultimately marriage
Starting point is 00:57:52 really chapped their ass. They really did a lot of these people. And I think that was the problem. But still like more than two-thirds of the country is in favor of the same thing. marriage, which is a reversal from what it was when they decided it. Right, but still, look at abortion, gun control, all that stuff has the, you know, the 80-20 rule on so much stuff.
Starting point is 00:58:12 There's so much stuff that has an 80-20 people are for it, and it doesn't matter. That's part of the reason they don't like democracy is because they actually don't have the people with them on this stuff on which they're making some of the worst. Correct. The largest advances, at least. Yeah, I'm not getting gay married again. That's all I have to say. Anyway, good luck taking away my marriage, honestly.
Starting point is 00:58:33 It's so ridiculous. It's a waste of time. All right, Rachel, let's go on a quick break. When we come back, we'll talk about what the women of the right are up to. My name's Sean Ramos for him. For today, explain, I'm outside the Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., with one question, do you think we should go to Mars? I don't think you should live in Mars, no.
Starting point is 00:58:57 I don't know why just Mars. I think as Earthlings, we are a nosy group of people, and I really don't think that we have any business going to Mars. Our knowledge about the solar system and the universe will grow substantially. I think maybe we should just leave Mars alone, just sit with Earth. So many innovations are going to come out of it because so many different companies are going to be fighting to get, you know, that first ticket to Mars. So I feel like we should. At the same time, we should solve some problems here first. I think we need to expand what we know, what we see.
Starting point is 00:59:34 Honestly, for our own benefit. You should go way beyond. Today, Explained from Vox, is taking a summer sojourn on Mars. Join us. Rachel, we're back with a quick update of the women on the right. Let's start with Katie Miller, wife of Stephen Miller, former employee of Elon Musk. She launched her own podcast, the Katie Miller podcast, and kicking it off with a J.D. Vance interview. that charmer. Now, let's listen to some of the hard-hitting journalism happening over there. Oh, God.
Starting point is 01:00:03 If you could only eat one condiment for the rest of your life, what would it be? One condiment? Yeah. Is barbecue sauce count? Yeah. Okay, barbecue sauce. Not mayonnaise. No. Now, mayonnaise is like, in low doses as good, but it's kind of, like, I had a buddy who used to eat French fries and mayonnaise. I thought that was disgusting. That's the only thing my husband eats. With French fries or like period? Period. Period. Okay. Wow. I didn't realize. He's only a manas guy. Okay. I learned something about Steve and I didn't know. Yeah. It's, Whatever. Oh, Kara.
Starting point is 01:00:32 Why did you put that in my head? Because you put naked Donald Trump in my head. Oh, my God. I don't want to think about mayonnaise at all. I don't want to think about Stephen Miller at all. Now as Stephen Miller and mayonnaise are the same neuron. Oh, my God. What's your favorite condiment?
Starting point is 01:00:49 I joke. Whatever the opposite of this moment is is my favorite thing. Oh, my God. Is she going to steal our thunder? Good God. So why does Katie Miller have a podcast? There you go. That's the question.
Starting point is 01:01:04 What was Katie Miller doing for Elon Musk? I don't know. Wasn't she working? She was. She was working from PR, presumably. There were other comments about their relationship, but I don't, I allegedly. Was she working for Tesla or like for Doge? She was working for Doge.
Starting point is 01:01:23 He looked like him personally. No, she worked for Doge. Remember, she was the Doge lady. And then when he was knocked out, she went with him, and that was the big, like, what's happened here? You know, because obviously Miller is the most significant player in that administration at this point. And then she's left. She stopped doing stuff for him. She had to get out because she knows where her mayonnaise is buttered.
Starting point is 01:01:47 I'm going to sue. I'm going to sue. I've been irreparably damaged. With mayonnaise. I'm on a temporary restraining order from any more mayonnaise talk. Out of you, Carol Fisher. Everyone has a podcast. There's all these Ladies of the Right that are now pushing.
Starting point is 01:02:03 There's this whole movement of Ladies of the Right. You know, she's like, we need to be heard. I'm like, you need not to be heard. You've been heard enough. I love the idea of Ladies of the Right is also great because the whole Lord of the Rings thing was so weird. But I think that if we could change the acronym, so it was Ladies of the Right rather than Lord of the Rings. And so name all our companies after that, you know. They just, they're getting into podcasting and some are more successful.
Starting point is 01:02:26 Like I said, Megan Kelly is very popular. But there's a whole movement of these people. They feel like, oh, I got a microphone. I can say whatever I want. Like, it is a movement of people. It's not specific to them, though. I feel like everybody, like every homeowners association in PTA has a podcast now too. Yeah, that's true.
Starting point is 01:02:44 It's the way that people are, it's the blog. Remember when everybody had a blog? Yeah. It's the blog of today that everybody has a microphone. Well, she'll get, she's sort of a house organ for these people. they can come on and say adorable things and it'll get, so to speak, eaten up like mayonnaise.
Starting point is 01:03:01 Did you listen to more of the podcast than the mayonnaise clip? Does she have an appealing? Literally, that was the highlight of it. The mayonnaise was the highlight. It was sort of like, so what do you do for fun? Like, it was painful.
Starting point is 01:03:16 Do you remember in the first term, first Trump term, when he appointed Jared to a job at the White House? And then it was like, Jared's in charge of, Middle East peace. Jared's in charge of it. Like, Jared's in charge of COVID. Jared's in charge of COVID. And as he was accruing all of these jobs and more jobs and more jobs and more jobs, Jared Kushner was starting to really loom as maybe this is the person who's actually kind of running the federal government. Jared Kushner, oh, and like lots of things are being ascribed to him and dark things being ascribed to him. And he's really seen as the power behind the throne, especially post-Bannon and everything. And then it occurred to sort of a collective mindset.
Starting point is 01:03:55 at some point that like nobody had ever actually heard from Jared. And then they rolled him out and they had him do a White House press briefing, a White House press conference statement at some point. And everybody's thinking like Jared Kushner is the man. Jared Kushner is the power. He's the Sith Lord here. And he walks up to the microphone and he says, hello, everybody. He was like, open his mouth. And it was like, oh, no. All illusions have gone. There's something about his presentation in particular his voice. I was like, oh, yeah, I don't have to worry about this guy. I felt the same way about Ron DeSantis and his much-heralded presidential campaign. It was really, on paper, it looks fantastic, and then he walks up to the microphone.
Starting point is 01:04:34 Yeah, yeah, looks and sound. Well, do you remember, what's his name? Howard Dean had the same problem, right? Like, there is an element of looks and presentation that matters to people. Yeah, although with Howard Dean, I think that was a little bit of a, it was the scream, right? It was a scream. And it was just like a weird pickup. It was a weird pickup thing, but he didn't otherwise speak like a weirder. I think that he got, he got, he got, Democrats were scared of him because he was doing pretty well. Yeah. Well, Howard Dean was for a while too, but Democrats got all scared because he actually had class analysis. Right. That's true. That's fair point. So you're not worried about Katie Miller taking a show from you, right? Oh. No. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:13 Are you? You still haven't answered the condiment issue. I, the weird thing about me in condiments is that I put mustard on my eggs. Oh, that's okay. I like things with vinegar in them. And mustard has vinegar in it. And so when I get like a bacon, egg and cheese, I put mustard and hot sauce on it. That's acceptable. And by the way, many people in Belgium eat mayonnaise with many people in Europe eat mayonnaise with fries. There aren't that many people in Belgium, though. Well, and yet they enjoy their mayonnaise.
Starting point is 01:05:39 And we're not getting into Ioli. All right. Some more ladies of the right, Laura Lumer and Marjorie Taylor Green are beefing. In the last week, Laura Lumer claimed that Trump White House can't stand Marjorie Taylor Green in a deposition, a lawsuit against Bill Maher. By the way, please go read that whole deposition. It's one wacky thing after the next. Marjorie Taylor Green suggested Laura Lumer was bankrupted by Israeli intelligence.
Starting point is 01:05:59 And Lumer is called MTG, a rabbit dog and a lying fake Christian whore. I don't think we could do any better from that. What is happening? I think a bigger question is, on the right, what happens post-Trump? Because there will be eventually a post-Trump, unless they weakened Bernie's this guy.
Starting point is 01:06:19 What happens? Because there seems to be so many fissures in this gang of, like, incompetence and malcontents. One of the things, you know, I've done a lot of work in the past few years on, like, the far right and the far right in American modern history and what they've done and who they are and how they network with mainstream and elected right-wingers and stuff. And they're good at it. Let's just be clear. Yeah. And it's always been much more seamless between the far right and the center right than it is between. between the far left and the mainstream left. But one of the things that has limited the
Starting point is 01:06:55 ascendance and the power and the sustainability of the very far right in the past is that they're all crooks and mean girls. And they steal from each other and get in fistfights and set each other's houses on fire and sleep with each other's wives and husbands. And there's so much infighting that they can't keep it together for more than a single generation. ever. And that's true in everything from the American Nazi Party, where we have George Lincoln Rockwell assassinated by one of his own people, to the Liberty Lobby, which was a Holocaust denial neo-Nazi organization that was very integrated with the elected right in the Reagan era, where they descended into incredible, like, fistfights and smashing each other over the head
Starting point is 01:07:41 with iron bars. Like, there's all this stuff. And it always goes that way. And right now, we do have, an authoritarian in the White House, we do have greater and more scary, more powerful integration between the very far right and the right than we've ever had before. But it doesn't expunge that dynamic, which I think always exists on the far right, which is your Israeli intelligence. No, you're Israeli intelligence. And you're a whore and you're a... A lying fake Christian whore. That's the name of my band. But go ahead. Aw. Actually, the name of my band is pregnant women smoking, but go ahead.
Starting point is 01:08:18 I would buy merch from either. Yeah. So you feel like a crack-up is inevitable in that regard, without the organizing glue of Donald Trump. I just feel like the constant cracking up. Like, I feel like constant warring and cracking up and, you know, they're polygraphing each other in the Defense Secretary's office, right? And they're all the same people. They're all on the same side. Yes.
Starting point is 01:08:41 And, you know, and Bannon is out there denouncing, you know, Bannon and Musk or, eh, they're going to kill each other. And these guys are fractious by nature because they're conspiratorial and purist and they're not awesome when it comes to rational argument and compromise. And so they're always denouncing and beating one another to death. And I don't think that will change. And I think that's to all of our benefit. Right. And I hope they never change. Right. Because they will continue to do so. Yeah, you're going to see more of that no matter how I agree with you. I'm always like, minute Trump leaves the picture. it degenerates really rather quickly.
Starting point is 01:09:20 The conspiratorial right is inherently fractious, and that's part of why they're a bad bet for governance because they're constantly schisming against each other. Well, they're bond throwers by nature, right? And they're shithsters and breakers of things. They're sort of like toddlers, almost like the tech bros. But you know what I call it tech bros now? Technically broken.
Starting point is 01:09:40 I keep repeating that. Oh, that's nice. Catches on. You can use it any time, Rachel. Please, you'll popularize it, if you will. Technically broken. All right, Rachel, one more quick break. And we will be back for our last segment on predictions.
Starting point is 01:10:00 Okay, Rachel, let's hear a prediction. I can make one too, but I would like you too. Do you want, you go first. Well, I'm living for two things. I think Gavin Newsom has done very well with his tweeting of Trump. You know, he's mimicking Trump, which is really great. But I'm really enjoying the AI boys fighting, Elon Musk and San Francisco. him Altman are going at it again. Musk alleged that Apple engaged in antitrust violations,
Starting point is 01:10:23 making it impossible for AI companies other than OpenAI to reach the top of the app store. Musk says XAI will take immediate legal action. Alton responded to a claim saying, this is a remarkable claim, given what I have heard, alleged that Elon does to manipulate X to benefit himself in his own companies and harm his competitors and people he doesn't like. And Musk responded saying, you know, you had three million responses to this. and I have many more followers and I didn't have nearly as many. And Sam Altman delivered the fantastic
Starting point is 01:10:54 and only gay people can do this a slap, which was skill issues. I predict this war is going to get worse because I think that Elon will do anything. There is a weird anger that he has towards Sam Altman, who he used to be not aligned with. They did a company
Starting point is 01:11:12 to open eye together and he will not rest until he is somehow sullied. couldn't have your opinions about Sam Altman all you want or any of these tech people, but this is going to get, I think, worse. As Grok continues to crater, a founder just left, and so Elon's going to sort of focus his attention away from Trump, although I do think he did start the Epstein thing, and continue to, like, go at anything that has to do with opening and try to kill it. Does Musk have stick-to-itiveness problems, though? Does he...
Starting point is 01:11:44 Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. He is like a, like, you know, like... What's a bird, a hummingbird? He flits. He flots. He flots. He, there's a song. What is that? Oh, it's in Sound of Music. It's a sound of music song.
Starting point is 01:11:58 It goes back to Julie Andrews, the villainous. I was just going to say. We're back to Julia Andrews. No, the villainess, and that is my favorite character of all time, the Baroness. Oh. The Baroness, remember her? The Baroness. The Baroness.
Starting point is 01:12:10 She was the blonde. Susan watches the sound of music like three times a year. As she should. Yeah, I just, I go get on the exercise back. Do you? You don't watch it? It's such a brilliant thing. It is, but three times a year, really? You know, there's an idea that it's anti-gay because all the Germans are gay coding and all the Austrians are like hikers or something like that. I just heard that. I'm like, what are you talking about? Rolf is just an asshole. He's not gay. Goodness sake. Also, there can be gay assholes. It happens. Oh, hello. Nazis had a whole division of them. They did get killed, as you know, as you well know, as a study. of the Nazis. They did kill Ernst Rome and his band of gays before they're going to power.
Starting point is 01:12:55 Anyway, on that note. They didn't call them the band of gays. The band of gays, mean gays. It sounded better in the German. I know. There's way more mean gays than we realize. Okay. Let's hear a prediction from you. Okay. I have a couple of things that are just like a heads up in terms of things that I think are going to get more important. Okay. One is the U.S. attorneys scandal. So this started in Albany, Northern District. of New York, and then New Jersey with Alina Haba, and then in California, and then in Las Vegas, Trump is, it would appear to be illegally installing U.S. attorneys. And U.S.
Starting point is 01:13:31 attorneys doesn't sound like that big a deal, but these are the people who prosecute federal crimes in these states and districts. And there's a real question as to whether or not it's possible to have federal law enforcement legally in any of these states where he's effectively illegally installed these U.S. attorneys. So this is a slow. Byrne story, but it's going to become a bigger one because he's trying something that isn't working and it's going to result in a confrontation with the courts and with federal district judges. Which it has in New Jersey with Illinois. Which it has already.
Starting point is 01:14:01 And that's just, that's going to break one way or the other. And Trump is, it's just worth watching there because that could be an important constitutional moment. I would say it's also really worth watching Trump's threat that he wants to redo the census. And again, census sounds boring. But there is a universe in which Trump is worried that he's going to lose the House in the midterms in 2026. And so he says, OK, we need a new census because actually the last census, I'm nullifying it because it had immigrants in it. And therefore it doesn't count.
Starting point is 01:14:35 Therefore, all the congressional districts nationwide that were set by that last census, those are no longer in effect. Therefore, we cannot have the 2026 midterm elections. the way we're supposed to because those congressional districts are illegal and we'll have to delay it. I mean, it's a sort of doomsday scenario in terms of the technical part of our democracy and continuing to have elections. But that census part of it is a key piece. So those are worth watching. Of course, it's going for the census. It's going for the census, but it's a way to, it's a way to go for elections. Right, right. Over under on how, 50, 50, 40, 30. What is I don't know. I mean, I think that they've floated the let's have a new census thing in part
Starting point is 01:15:17 to see what the reaction to it is. And people have treated it like that's weird or that's like a technical, a technically infeasible thing. Hey, guess what? He doesn't actually want a new census. He just wants to slow it down. That's a very good point. It's not to get a new census. Don't assume any good faith on the part of these arguments. The takeover is not about crime. The attempt to nullify the census is not about the equality of the census. All of these things are all about what everything he does. does is for, which is to accrue more power and to make it more dangerous and difficult to oppose him or criticize. And slow down the possibly inevitable, which is his defeat. Yeah. And so that's one potentially positive thing to look for is that I do think the MRNA funding decision has to be reversed. I think that that was, I think they blew it. I think RFK Jr. blew it in terms of announcing the cut off of MRNA vaccine funding, MRNA technology. It would be like us opting out of penicillin, right? Which we just did.
Starting point is 01:16:20 Right. Did you see that thing to Washington Post, which is the new House organ for carcelesis from the Trump administration? The opinion section ran a piece by why we tabled MRNA. And we tabled MRNA funding because the American people, for some reason, have suspicions and they don't trust MRNA says, right. We just appoint – Trump just put a guy in the health department who says that Wi-Fi gives you leaky brain, says that HIV doesn't.
Starting point is 01:16:46 doesn't cause AIDS and that COVID was genetically engineered to spare the Jews. Yeah, I wonder why people have weird ideas about vaccine technologies. There you go. I actually think the MRNA decision is bad enough. And that pushback in the Washington Post is part of the reason, I think, actually, that they are going to have to reverse it. Oh, no, the Post didn't push back. They published a positive piece by the guy who did it. Yeah, the op-ed. But that op-ed was so weak. If that's the argument for why you're doing it, they feel that need to make the argument. The argument, the argument is risable. That's a fair point. And it's such important technology. They also had an editorial. It's such a heinous public. David and I talked about this week, but saying
Starting point is 01:17:25 that, hey, maybe the D.C. needs more crime fighting. I was literally, I nearly walked over there and slapped them. I just, it's like, I need to now go down there and slap them at this point. Turns out having a billionaire running stuff doesn't make it good. Technically broken, Rachel. I think actually your prediction was going to be that you were going to the UFC fight at the White house. Oh, well, I was wrong. Yeah, I don't know, not unless they're going to use me as a prop like a, you know, like a chair. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. You'd be a great UFC fighter. You'd be a great wrestler. Yeah, yeah. Remember, I'm taller than people expect. That's true. I'm noodily. Kara. I really appreciate you doing this. I'm enormous, besides someone, I've gotten to know you a little bit, I think you're a wonderful person, but you are, you're doing God's work, I think. And I think people don't realize how fun.
Starting point is 01:18:13 you are and everything else and how substantive use. Please read her books, all of them. They have changed my life in a lot of ways. Stuff I didn't know, and I'm a very big student of history, both Ultras. Is there another season of Ultra coming? There is a new podcast coming. It is not a season of Ultra, but for fans of Ultra, you will find a lot that you like. Great. That's really good. Stuff I didn't know, and I knew a lot of stuff. And prequel is a wonderful book. Everybody read it. They should, that's the part of, I love your show, but that stuff I just adore. I think is amazing. Kara Swisher, I'm very thankful for you.
Starting point is 01:18:43 Thank you very much. Thank you. I'm going to read us out. We want to hear from you, send us your questions about business tech or whatever's on your mind. Go to nymag.com slash pivot to submit a question for the show. We're called 85551 Pivot. Okay, that's the show.
Starting point is 01:18:54 Thanks for listening to Pivot. Be sure to like and subscribe to our YouTube channel. We'll be back next week. Today's show was produced by Lara Naman, Zoe Marcus, Taylor Griffin, and Kevin Oliver. Ernie Enderdot engineered this episode. Nishat Kerwa is Vox Media's executive producer of podcast. Make sure to follow Pivot on your favorite podcast platform.
Starting point is 01:19:10 Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox Media. You can subscribe to the magazine at nymag.com slash pod. We'll be back next week for another breakdown of all things tech and business. And Rachel, a jar of mayonnaise is on the way. Thanks, Kara. So gross.

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