Pod Save America - How Trump Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Bombing Iran
Episode Date: June 24, 2025Donald Trump, without consulting Congress or United States allies, orders the military to bomb Iran, and then claims that Iran and Israel have reached a ceasefire. Military and intelligence services p...ush back on Trump's claims that Iran's three nuclear sites have been "completely and totally obliterated." MAGA isolationists change their tone to avoid Trump's ire. Jon, Lovett, Tommy, and Dan react to all the latest, including reports that nuclear material may have been removed before the attacks, Iran's retaliatory strikes on an American military installation in Qatar, and Trump's new posts indicating he may be open to regime change. Then, the guys walk through Democrats' response to the attacks, the latest from Trump's ongoing National Guard deployment in Los Angeles, and a New York City mayoral primary that's both frustrating and exciting.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
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Now new episodes drop Mondays. Welcome to Plaid Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Dan Pfeiffer. I'm Jon Lovett. I'm Tommy
Vitor. Dan is our special Middle Eastern war correspondent. Thanks for flying down for
this. I'm the Richard Engel of this podcast. That's what we always say. Later in the show,
we're going to talk about the latest on Trump's deportation regime, as well as our final thoughts
on Tuesday's big primary in the New York City's mayoral race.
But obviously we'll start with Iran.
And by the way, you should all check out
the excellent Pod Save the World bonus episode on this topic
that Tommy and Ben recorded Sunday.
Hey, thanks.
Yeah, it's a good primer.
Here's my take on where we are as of late Monday afternoon.
And then you guys can all jump in.
On Friday, Trump ordered the US military to bomb Iran without
consulting Congress, which the Constitution says is the only branch of government that can declare
war, without consulting our allies who are in the midst of pursuing a diplomatic solution with Iran,
and without making any case at all to the American people, most of whom have been telling pollsters
they're against military action, and many of whom voted for Donald Trump based in part on his promise to end forever wars in places like the Middle East.
Trump ordered the attack anyway, saying it was to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon,
even though his own intelligence director testified that there was no indication Iran was
building an actual nuclear weapon, so there was no imminent threat of attack to the U.S.
But on Saturday night, we learned that American B-2 bombers and submarines struck three of
Iran's nuclear sites.
Though after Trump spent a week posting about how he might bomb Iran, it appears the regime
may have removed a few bombs worth of nuclear material from the sites before the attack.
So it's still unclear how far Iran's nuclear program has been set back.
On Monday, Iran launched a retaliatory strike on the US military base in
Qatar, but thankfully the missiles were intercepted and there were no casualties,
partly because the Iranians notified Qatar about the attack ahead of time to avoid further escalation,
which Trump thanked Iran for in a Truth Social post after calling the response, quote,
very weak and urging Israel and Iran to end the war.
All that said, US military bases throughout the region
are still on high alert.
And the Department of Homeland Security
has issued an advisory warning of a quote,
heightened threat environment here in the United States.
All right, let's stop there for a minute.
Tommy, what's your reaction to Iran's attack
on our military base in Qatar and to any of the developments
since you guys recorded on Sunday?
Well, there's some literal breaking news happening right now.
Apparently Trump just tweeted that Iran and Israel have agreed to a ceasefire that will
go into place six hours from now.
So it's 3.09 PM Pacific time.
And then I guess after like 24 hours, there will be an official end to the conflict.
So that would be good news.
Yeah.
That's a big deal. The strike we saw today in Qatar, it did seem like designed in a way to
allow us around to save face and hopefully deescalate, which I think is backed up by this
Trump news we just learned. I mean, they reportedly gave Qatar a heads up that the strikes were
coming, which allowed the base to be evacuated and also made sure the missile defense systems were ready.
It reminded me of the Qasem Soleimani strike response which was back in 2020. Trump ordered
the assassination of Qasem Soleimani, the head of the IRGC, which is a big powerful military
intelligence organization in Iran. And the Iranians fired 12 ballistic missiles at a base in Iraq.
It was pure luck that no one was killed, but 100 service members got brain injuries,
but Trump basically used that as a moment to deescalate.
Someone I was talking to today
who recently left the Pentagon said he thought
this war was likely to end soon
because both the US and Israel were running very low
on the interceptor missiles that are used
to knock down Iranian ballistic missiles.
And so the Iranians are also running low
on their weapons stockpiles.
So it's kind of in everybody's interest to wind this thing down.
That doesn't mean that Iran won't conduct terrorist attacks down the road.
It doesn't mean Hezbollah won't do something or the Houthis do something on their behalf.
It doesn't mean they won't mess with oil supplies.
It doesn't mean they won't conduct cyber attacks or in the long term go for a nuclear bomb.
But it seems like good news that this conflict might be ending.
Dan, love it, initial thoughts.
Are you guys ready to give Donald Trump
the Nobel Peace Prize?
I mean, who among us isn't ready
to give him the Nobel Peace Prize?
I think-
Pakistan and us so far.
That's right.
The, I think in Tommy's right,
this seems to be a response designed to avoid escalation,
and you can see how everyone in the political conversation is going to look
at this and say, see, Trump was right.
Yep.
He was able to launch these attacks by, we don't have a full damage assessment,
but he clearly did damage to their nuclear program.
And therefore this, and no American service members lost, so this was fine.
That is just, you can't judge these things in the short term.
When you launch an attack on a Middle Eastern country
based on faulty intelligence, you open Pandora's box.
So we're gonna have to,
like this is gonna have consequences down the line.
It could be a terrorist attack,
it could be the use of their proxies
somewhere around the world.
It affects our relationships in the world,
it affects US standing in the world.
We know that their program is not destroyed, it's delayed.
And when eventually you're gonna have to go back to the table with Iran, what
impact are these strikes going to have on our ability to get a deal?
Why would Iran trust us to make such a deal?
Because we came out of the last deal and we launched these strikes.
So before anyone either hands them the Nobel peace prize or says that Trump was
right or that everything worked perfectly as you have to judge this over the
meeting long from you can't do it.
Like a 48 hour political playbook news cycle.
Yeah.
Donald Trump, uh, someone has zero credibility
as a negotiator, he has terrible judgment.
He has no attention span, no curiosity
surrounded by sycophants and kooks.
Uh, and then he's going to be the one that
cuts the Gordian knot of the middle East.
And so you get, you, it's not dissimilar to the cycles we've gone through where
they all claim victory when they get some sort of trade deal after putting on and
then removing tariffs, claiming, oh, there, you know, there's Trump again,
getting another great deal.
And there's no, uh, there's no, first of all, there's no sense that, Hey, did we
pay any price for the credibility we lose?
Right?
Does it matter going forward that the president said, you have two weeks, we won't do anything
for two weeks, and then had apparently already decided to go through with this?
What is the US's word worth in the future?
What is the cost of just occasional bouts of American chaos in the world?
Right?
What happens when someone doesn't want to deescalate?
What happens when Trump's TV-based image
of how the world is meant to work doesn't go
according to plan in the short term?
What happens then?
Yeah, it seems like it also encourages
other countries to lie too.
Like, why would we believe Iran if they're like,
yeah, we're agreed to a ceasefire, we're done.
If, from their point of view, if they just like, yeah, we're agreed to a ceasefire, we're done.
From their point of view, if they just saw Donald Trump lie to them and to the world
about this.
Let's talk about the back and forth over just how much damage was done to Iran's nuclear
program.
So Trump said on Saturday night that all three nuclear sites had been, quote, completely
and totally obliterated, which is an opinion apparently not shared by the military or intelligence services in the US and Israel, who've said the facilities
have been heavily damaged but not totally destroyed. Trump is very mad about
the coverage on this. He posted on Monday that quote the fake news won't admit
that the sites have been totally destroyed because they're trying to
quote demean him, which he blamed on, quote, Allison Cooper of Fake News CNN,
dumb Brian L. Roberts, chairman of Concast,
and Johnny Karl of ABC Fake News.
Tommy, what do we know so far about the damage
to the facilities and whether Iran may have moved
any of its uranium stockpile before the attack started?
It's funny that he's mad at reporters
for accurately quoting his secretary of defense
and chairman of the Joint Chiefs
and like his entire team.
Yeah, like there was some like background quotes
from officials to the Times on this,
but also just a very public statement by his.
They all were like, hey,
it's gonna take some time to assess it, we don't know yet.
Like that was what the chairman and Hegseth said.
It's sort of this strange situation
where you have Iran's leadership wanting
to seem for a domestic audience to claim
to have done something to push back on what the US did,
even if what they did wasn't something that had actually
no sort of negative consequences.
At the same time, Trump just wants for his domestic audience
to hear that it was obliterated, regardless
of what actually happened.
Yeah.
I mean, what we know is anything that was above ground is decimated. Anything
that was below ground, we're just not going to know for a while or maybe ever know. A lot of the
infrastructure they were targeting are these things called centrifuges that you use to enrich
the uranium to, like, a level of purity that can be used for a weapon. Many of those were at the
Natanz site. It sounds like the Israelis were able to take out most of those because people think
that if you cut off the power supply to Natanz, it would cause them to spin out of control
and just break.
But then they had thousands, like 3,000 centrifuges at the Fordow facility, which is the one that's
buried deep underground and required the bunker busting bombs.
We just don't know if the bunker busting bombs were able to take those out.
And then on top of that, there's reports that Iran moved some of its uranium stockpile from
some of these sites before the bombing happened.
So they have 408 kilograms of uranium rich to 60% purity, which is very close to weapons grade.
You need 90% to be weapons grade. That's all unconfirmed.
But like you're seeing all these background quotes from Israeli and US intelligence saying we don't know where that material is.
I assume like the Mossad clearly has the entire Iranian government wired, right?
So like those guys were watching these sites to see if stuff was getting moved around.
Yeah, definitely.
It's a short straw who's driving that truck.
Yeah, exactly.
But like, you know, they say you can fit, you know, this kind of material in the trunk of a car.
So, you know, like that gets you to the longer term fear with this way to go after Iran's nuclear program, which is that I suspect that Iran will withdraw from the NPT, the treaty that prevents the spread
of nuclear weapons. They'll likely kick all weapons inspectors or nuclear inspectors out
of the country and then they could use that nuclear material that we no longer know where
it is to make a bomb. You're also seeing people say, again in background quotes,
we maybe need boots on the ground to verify whether
the stockpile was destroyed and that would be a big deal.
It feels like misplacing a stockpile of highly enriched uranium is probably something that
we want to keep an eye on.
Yeah.
But so I think that some officials said that there were trucks spotted outside Fort Odris
like a couple days before the strike, which is why people think that they moved
the enriched uranium.
Any of you uranium enrichment experts
wanna offer a take on what might happen
to that loose fissile material?
I would just note that obviously they tried to move it.
Trump told them that he was gonna bomb there
for like two weeks.
It's like why, and if you can move it
in the trunk of a car, you would try to do that.
You would not just leave it
and just wait for the bomb to fall on it.
I also saw that there's another nuclear facility that the inspectors haven't been in because
The Iranians were telling them it's not open yet. It's not officially open yet already
Well, you want to do an official?
We're still making some changes to the second act. Yeah, the chefs gotta get the menu. We're just doing a soft opening
Yes, you're also friends and family
He was doing a soft opening for us. Yeah.
When you're also friends and family.
There was a US official quote in the New York Times
saying the biggest threat to operational security
in this whole operation was Donald Trump's tweets.
Yeah.
Obviously.
Well, so bigger picture.
Tell me, what would success look like for a strike like this?
I mean, what probably happened is
that the strike set back around its nuclear program
a few months to a few years, meaning they blew up a bunch of infrastructure that'll take a while to
rebuild.
But we just don't know because if we don't know where this 60% enriched uranium stockpile
is or if they have covert enrichment facilities somewhere or whether they blew up Fordo or
not, it's just really hard to judge success.
And there's also just the fact that Trump has never articulated a goal for himself,
right?
Like, JD Vance says we're at war with Iran's nuclear program
but not at war with Iran,
much like Japan was at war with Pearl Harbor in 1941.
The Trump lackeys were out on the Sunday show saying,
this isn't a regime change.
And then Trump's tweeting,
why wouldn't there be a regime change?
Netanyahu seemingly does want regime change,
although maybe the ceasefire indicates otherwise,
but he was picking off military and political leaders and encouraging
the Iranian people to rise up and throw off their government.
So there's all this uncertainty around it,
which again is why you want a diplomatic solution
to these problems over the military,
because under the JCPOA,
Iran was prevented from getting a nuclear weapon,
and there's a verifiable inspections regime
to ensure that was the case,
and that will likely not be an option anymore.
Right, and that's not an option.
And so if that's not an option anymore,
then you have to ask yourself,
and I know you guys made this point, Tommy,
on Sunday's pod, like, why wouldn't Iran at this point
race to build a nuclear weapon?
Because now there's no inspectors, there's no cameras,
there's no inspection regime.
And they know that if they go the diplomatic route,
they can't trust the United States,
they can't trust Israel,
we might go in there and bomb them again.
So to protect themselves,
you would think that it's in their best interest
to try to race to build a nuclear weapon
with the enriched uranium they have,
trying to get new centrifuges and, and, and
whatever else.
Yeah.
I mean, look, Moammar Gaddafi, uh, and the
Libyan government gave up their nuclear program
and he ended up getting bombed by the U S and NATO,
uh, dragged out of a drainage dish,
sodomized with a knife and then murdered.
So, uh, you look at that example, then you look
at North Korea and how it's going for them.
And you think, hmm,
Ukrainians also gave up their program and look what happened to them. So yeah, the
the incentives are are not great on this. So when Dan and I recorded Friday's show, the
White House had just announced that Trump was going to take two weeks to decide whether to
strike Iran based on the hope that a diplomatic solution might be reached before then. As we've
talked about that was just a ploy to trick Iran, apparently.
The Times has a detailed story about how Trump had already arrived at a final decision to
strike.
Per usual, the president was, quote, closely monitoring Fox News, which was airing wall-to-wall
praise of Israel's military operation and featuring guests urging Mr. Trump to get more
involved.
The Times also reports that then he was telling people, he's like, I just keep getting calls from people that say the Israeli operation's going so great, you've got to get more involved. The Times also reports that then he was telling people, he's like, I just keep getting calls from people that say the Israeli operations going so great, you got to get more involved.
Everybody's telling me I got to get more involved. So that led him to start publicly musing about
bombing Iran, which is apparently one of the reasons the Air Force had to send a decoy mission
of several B-2 bombers westward over the Pacific, even as the real mission was
about to take off.
And yeah, the one military advisor said the biggest threat to OPSAC, which is the plan's
operational security, was the President of the United States.
What should it look like when an American president makes a decision like this?
Is it usually just, you just, you watch Fox, you get sort of jealous that the Israelis
are getting praise for their operation,
you jump in, you lie about it,
you don't really take your intelligence director's
testimony to Congress very seriously,
and then you just do it without consulting Congress
or seemingly any lawyers in the White House or allies?
It's easy to laugh about the things in the story that Trump Trump's watching Fox News. He's meeting with Steve Bannon
He's just getting calls from like random Palm Beach real estate developers with it with advice on what to do here
But what's kind of stunning by that story is what's not in it, right?
There is no discussion of Trumpers advisors meeting with the lawyers to figure out the legal basis for this is there's no
Trump or his advisors meeting with the lawyers to figure out the legal basis for this is there's no gathering of
His allies to try to build an international coalition to do this
There's no like game planning what happens if things go wrong. There's no discussion of the economic
Consequences if Iran were to close the Strait of Hormuz, right? It's? It's really just like fly by the seat of your pants
governing and it's like we've all come to accept
that as somehow normal way of doing business
when it's absolutely fucking insane.
And it's sort of like, we don't know what's gonna come next
as we said, but the fact that we're here
and that like this has not yet spun out of control
based on Trump's process for getting here
is kind of stunning.
Yeah, and then their public rationale, right?
Like, look, I don't know how much better it was
to have presidents who were gonna step beyond
their constitutional authority,
but have very, very smart lawyers create the rationale
to justify it by like bending the meaning of words,
which both Democrats and Republicans
have been doing for 50 years.
But at least there was some assertion of a rationale
or a sense that I have authority as president
because there is an imminent attack.
And here you have some claim that the threat was imminent,
but then they're basically also saying at the same time
that the reason they decided to do this
is because they hit some arbitrary negotiation mark and the Iranians weren't negotiating in good faith.
And so we decided to act, which is basically admitting that there was no change in the
program itself to justify it.
And so we can debate the particulars of this and the result of this. But to me, like when I first saw all this unfolding
over the weekend is to me, I put it in the context
of Donald Trump taking what has become a job
that is already way too powerful and finding ways
to push the bounds of presidential authority even further
in ways that are dangerous,
not just because he's Donald Trump,
but because this job has become one in which they can justify
or rationalize any use of presidential authority now,
both domestically now and internationally.
That was that, that to me is what is so scary about this,
because they're not even pretending to have a real,
justifiable presidential authority as commander in chief
for doing this.
It seemed like there was no process for a debate.
It was like old school crossfires,
like Mark Levin from Fox News is pro,
Steve Bannon is con, Tulsi Gabbard,
the head of intelligence is iced out
because she tells Trump the truth
and not what he wants to hear.
And Pete Hegseth is iced out
because he used Signal one time.
Literally iced out.
Yeah, and like it sounds like it was
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs,
Raisin Cain, the head of CENTCOM, JD Vance, John Ratcliffe, and like it sounds like it was a the chairman of Joint Chiefs Raisin Cain the head of CENTCOM JD Vance John Radcliffe and Trump just kind of
like deciding whether to bomb Iran. It's just like we're not going to Congress
we're not going to the UN we're not doing anything like. Yeah the fact that
they don't go to you didn't go to Congress at all didn't consult and then
apparently the Gang of Eight didn't even brief the
Gang of Eight or didn't brief the Democrats on the Gang of Eight didn't brief them. Yeah, didn't even brief the Gang of Eight or didn't brief the Democrats on the Gang of Eight.
There's some reporting that perhaps they briefed some of their Republicans.
Afterwards though, right? Yeah, I think they briefed them afterwards and then I
saw Seth Moulton, a congressman from Massachusetts, say on TV that he has
heard that Fox News was briefed ahead of the Democrats as part of the committee.
Right. And I don't even think like I haven't heard any of them make the case that there was an
imminent threat of attack, right?
Like they're saying there's an imminent threat because, you know, the uranium has become
highly enriched.
But you know, as Tulsi Gabbard had testified, our intelligence showed that the Supreme Leader
had not authorized the actual weapons program from being to be restarted,
that there was no intelligence there actually building a weapon because there's a difference
between highly enriched uranium and actually turning it into a weapon. So when is the last
time a president has like ordered strikes when there was no imminent threat, nothing happened,
even in Libya, right? There was an imminent threat. There was an imminent threat.
Or consulted with allies.
I mean, I guess we consulted with Israel, but like the Europe part of this is also kind of crazy
that our European allies were literally trying to do diplomacy while this was happening.
In part based on the president's word.
It certainly seems like a violation of the UN Charter.
Shut up your ass, nerd.
Yeah, forget about the international community, international law.
It also seems like it might run afoul of US law and war powers of the president.
I don't know.
Yeah, look, there's no effort to go to Congress, no effort to go to the UN, no effort to sell
the American people on the necessity of the war.
I mean, look, we know the US intelligence assessment is that Iran has not made a decision
to get a nuclear weapon. They haven't since 2003. Maybe there, now there's some reporting
or rumor that like maybe the Israelis passed along some new intelligence. I don't, no one's seen that.
They've not described it to us. The last time a US president made the case for war based on
intelligence passed along from a foreign government was the yellow cake that came from Niger that ended up
in Bush's State of the Union speech,
which was total bullshit.
That came from the Italian Intelligence Service,
and it was also based on an assessment
by the British Intelligence Service,
and it was just wrong.
It was all based on forged documents.
So we just don't know.
Like that's a crazy thing.
Like this moment has such 2003 vibes,
like Indy Club is on and Hey Ya is on the radio,
we're all intrigued by this MySpace thing.
But in that case, at least Bush tried, not at least,
Bush tried to sell the case for the Iraq War.
He did it in Congress, he went to the UN.
The Trump people just skipped that part.
I mean, it's obvious what happened here
is that the people within the government,
and for both parties frankly,
have been wanting to bomb Iran for a very long time.
Forever, yeah.
And this was the best time to do it.
Right, I mean, like the headline
in Shane Harris's piece in the light exactly right,
which is Trump didn't change,
the intelligence didn't change,
the situation just changed.
Like this was the opportunity to do it
because Iran was weaker than it has been
in any time recently, so they did it.
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show name after checkout so they know we sent you helixsleep.com slash crooked. So we don't know what else Iran might do to retaliate and hopefully, based on the news
of this ceasefire, hopefully nothing.
But there are a few big concerns out there still.
Terrorist attacks against Americans abroad or at home.
Cyber attacks against the US.
Closing the Straits of Hormuz,
which would disrupt global oil supply.
Trump, at least this morning,
seemed concerned about this last possibility.
On Monday, he directed the Energy Department
to quote, drill baby drill,
and then posted the following,
everyone keep oil prices down, I'm watching.
You're playing right into the hands of the enemy.
Don't do it.
Aside from the fact that the small thing
that the energy department doesn't drill,
the interior department drills,
nor do they drill oil immediately.
Yeah, the energy department,
they get their hard hats out, they get out there.
Yeah.
The, uh, yeah, the, so, it's so stu...
God, it's just amazing how stupid this all is.
Like, everything is so stupid and so dangerous, but
It was like to Dan's point
They'd make this decision to do this right, you know
Donald Trump cares about what things look like on television
But the war but like the world exists and continues and he's not in charge of what happens after he's not in charge of the macro
Economic forces that happen ever you can't bully Adam Smith into
He's not in charge of the macroeconomic forces that happen. You can't bully Adam Smith into keeping oil prices down or from like individual traders
from assessing risk and volatility based on this.
He's not in charge of that, right?
He does this based on images and what the images are going to look like.
But war is the thing even autocrats can't control.
They are not in charge of what happens because he's not in charge of whether it's what Iran
does in response or what an oil trader somewhere does
looking at the futures market.
So it's like this incredibly silly thing of
like I'm watching you. What are you watching
exactly? People responding in the world to
what you're doing. You're not in charge of them.
You can't threaten them. It's a bunch of individuals
making decisions. Yeah. Tommy, why do you
think that Iran didn't try to just close the
straits of foreign moves? I mean it hurts
them as much as it hurts anybody because they're trying to move oil
through the strait as well.
I also think, like, let's say that the Iranian Navy started mining the Strait of Hormuz,
I think that, you know, our Navy would blow them out of the water.
So it probably wouldn't last very long.
Who knows?
They still might try to do it.
Yeah.
And of course, the risk of the cyber attacks, the risk of the terrorist attacks, is still very much alive here.
One of the big questions, of course, is what the actual goal of American involvement is
and whether Trump wanted to go full John Bolton and demand regime change.
Trump's advisors were out in force on the Sunday shows, assuring everyone this isn't
what we're in it for.
Let's listen.
This mission was a very precise mission.
It had three objectives, three nuclear sites.
It was not attack on Iran.
It was not an attack on the Iranian people.
This wasn't a regime change move.
We're not at war with Iran.
We're at war with Iran's nuclear program.
This mission was not and has not been about regime change.
So then, as he always does, Trump undermined all of these statements a few hours later by posting,
it's not politically correct to use the term regime change, but if the current Iranian regime
is unable to make Iran great again, why wouldn't there be a regime change? And then, Miga? Miga?
What do we think? I think it then Miga, Miga, Miga, what do we think?
I think it's Miga.
Miga, working with Miga.
That's his new thing there.
So obviously Trump seems to have-
Miga ran, Miga ran great again.
Correct.
Yes.
Right, right, right, cool, got it.
Yeah, he did say that.
He did say that in the statement, yeah.
Trump seems to have backed away from this statement
with his latest post calling for an end to the war,
potential ceasefire now.
But what do you guys make of all this?
Like, was he just trying to say
that he hopes the Iranian people
will overthrow the Iranian regime,
or is that too generous a reading for me?
I did not take it, honestly,
as him undercutting what people were saying.
I took it as his kind of negotiating over countertops style,
saying to the Iranians, I will go this far. his kind of negotiating over countertops style,
saying to the Iranians, I will go this far.
I think it was, I took it as just trying to say,
who knows, I'm crazy.
I'll go all the way to regime change.
If I have to, I don't want it.
It's not politically correct.
Nobody's gonna want it.
But hey, if that's what it takes, that's what it takes.
I took it as bluster in the middle of this moment,
hoping that it would deescalate.
That was my honest reading of it this morning.
I read it like you read it, which maybe probably is too generous, but sort of this moment hoping that it would deescalate. That was my honest reading of it this morning. I read it like you read it,
which maybe probably is too generous,
but sort of this idea like,
ha, what if I could use my powers of immense persuasion
to convince the Iranian people
to put on some red hats and overthrow their leaders?
Because without any of their internet access,
they're just waiting to hear what Donald Trump has to say.
And when he tells them to rise up,
they're gonna be like, Trump told us, let's do it.
Not a well-thought out notion, I wouldn't admit that.
Yeah, they're looking for videos from Bibi Netanyahu
and Trump before they decide what to do.
I also suspect that he's susceptible to arguments
from people about how historic it would be
for a regime change in Iran.
It's like, sir, this is just like Reagan taking down
the Soviet Union, sir, blah, blah, blah, shit like that.
Counterargument is like, okay, you have regime change,
that leads to chaos,
that leads to civil war in Iran and a migration crisis
that would make Syria look like nothing.
Do you want that?
Like that's probably more.
Yeah, like what are the odds
what you get is better than what you have?
Pretty low.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, we have a good track record
of bringing democracy to places.
Maybe this will be the one.
This will be the exception that proves the rule.
We have trouble bringing it to America.
Yeah, I was gonna say, yeah, that came back to bite us.
So we spent a lot of time last week talking about the
intramagga rift over Trump getting us involved in another war.
But so far the, uh, the anti-war wing of the Republican party, as it may be,
you're Steve Bannon's and your Tucker Carlson's and mostly quiet in response
to the strikes over the weekend.
People like Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gates have been leveling most of
their frustration
at the pro-war faction, not Trump himself.
Charlie Kirk posted a poll on Sunday
asking what his followers think.
No results as of this recording,
but we will certainly keep you updated.
So far the only Republican in Congress
who criticized Trump's decision to strike
was Kentucky Congressman Thomas Massie
who told Fox News on Sunday,
I feel a bit misled.
I didn't think he would let neocons
determine his foreign policy and drag us into another
war.
Trump responded with a lengthy diatribe on Truth Social where he called Massey a grand
standard and a bum and then promised a primary challenge against him, which one of Trump's
super PACs is now helping to make happen.
How serious do you think the super PAC thing is in scaring off other potential defectors?
I think that the billionaire fund at Trump Super PACs
who fund primary challenges to anyone who votes against him,
that thread has been there since the beginning.
It's one of the reasons why Joni Ernst flipped on P-TECH, Seth.
And so I don't think this is any different.
Massey is probably more politically insulated than others.
He has an independent political identity,
but this is what is keeping a lot of people in line
on the nomination votes, will keep people in line
on the big, beautiful bill coming forward.
So I don't think this is new.
This is unique to, it's a new way to do.
It's like David Hogg with more money, you know?
Yeah, sure.
Sure, no, I'm sure he appreciates that comparison.
Yes, just put that in his marketing materials.
Yeah.
It wasn't surprising to me to see Trump go so hard
against Massey, not just because I think Trump
is genuinely annoyed by the fact that he's got this guy
criticizing him on this and being a vote against the bill, but Massey's problem is that he's been alone, right? Like, why not go against Massey, not just because I think Trump is genuinely annoyed by the fact that he's got this guy criticizing him on this and being a vote
against the bill, but Massey's problem is that he's
been alone, right?
Like, why not go after Massey?
He's not bringing anybody with him right now to go
after the big, beautiful bill.
And so he's like, you know, it's not just that he's
opposed, that he's weak.
He's gotta make an example out of him too.
I do think it's like, you all, look what I can do
to this guy, so no one's, no one step out of line
either on this
or on the bill in Congress or anything else.
Literally anything.
But what's ironic about it is that
he's already consolidated, right?
Like what, two people voted against the bill in the House?
One of them was Massey, a couple of present votes,
he's already got it.
Yeah, they're all already scared shitless
of a Trump endorsed primary challenge.
Yes, the super PAC like ups the stakes,
but I think like the Trump endorsement
will be the problem.
I like don't really expect the Trump kind of
mega pundit political class to leave him.
I suspect that Tucker Carlson, MTG, and Steve Bannon,
while they sincerely oppose the war,
will find something new to be mad at Democrats about
and just focus on that.
I think the question is, what about the first time voters
who voted for Trump because they watched him on Joe Rogan and now they listen to Dave Smith, the comedian who said he should be
impeached or Theo Von who had Ro Khanna on the other day making the case for why the
war was bad or watch Tucker's content about what a bad idea with this would be.
Will those people decide they don't like Trump over the policy?
Will they decide they were lied to?
There's two pieces of this.
The policy is bad or, hey, this were lied to, right? There's like kind of two pieces of this. There's like the policy is bad or hey, this guy lied to me.
I think it's the latter more than anything else,
which is if you are a lesser engaged
first time Trump voter,
how you get to voting for Trump
is a relatively complicated calculus,
you need, because you're not an idiot.
You know that Trump is kind of a moron.
You know you probably don't love his insurrections.
You don't love the fact that he's been convicted of crimes,
but you made a couple of, you made some rational choices
of reasons why I support him.
One of them is you thought he'd be better in the economy,
maybe you have concerns about immigration and the border,
and the other one is that he is quote unquote anti-war,
right, Donald the Dove in Marine Dowd's very infamous column
from 2016, and when you violate a core part
of your political identity, you turn those voters off.
And those voters either step out of the electorate
because they felt they were lied to,
or they become people who will vote
for a check on Trump in 2026.
I think it really depends on what happens
from here on, right?
If this ends with these strikes,
I think a lot of those people will come back to Trump
and say, you know what?
He said he was gonna do targeted strikes.
That's what he did, caused the whole situation
to deescalate after, and there's no boots on the ground.
I think one lesson-
You could even get some of them being like,
I was wrong. Absolutely a hero.
I thought it was gonna be a drag dead thing,
but Trump's right again.
We should always know that Trump's always right.
I think what Trump, like, look,
there's always this debate about like, is it a war or not?
And I think in Trump's mind,
he looks at like the last few conflicts we've been in
and war means boots on the ground to people.
And I think he took from the Soleimani strike
and what happened after,
I think he's trying to make that happen here,
which is as long as it's target, as long as it's short,
as long as there's no boots on the ground,
you pay no political price and you look kind of tough
and people move on and forget about it.
And I think that's right.
I also noticed today that Fox is softening up the ground to absolve Trump of any responsibility
should there be a terrorist attack in the United States because of this.
They were talking about how the Department of Homeland Security has issued a warning
and there's been some talk of like sleeper cells, Iranian sleeper cells here being activated.
And then Bill Meguland, who's the immigration reporter for Fox, said, well, there's also
been something like 750 Iranians who were released into the country under Joe Biden.
So you can tell, even if something like horrible happens, God forbid, you can see they're immediately
going to go, oh no, that wasn't Trump, that was Joe Biden's immigration policy.
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So the democratic response to Trump's strike has been predictably more negative.
Many Democrats in Congress are upset they weren't consulted or given any notice that
Trump had decided to launch an attack.
They're pointing out that Congress has the authority to declare war, not the president.
There are different legislative efforts to rein in Trump's military action, including
one by Thomas Massey and Ro Khanna.
Chuck Schumer's trying to get a vote on the issue as soon as this week,
so we'll see where that goes. AOC, among other Democrats,
did write on Twitter that Trump's move was, quote, grounds for impeachment.
Obviously, that's not going to happen anytime soon.
What do you guys make of the way that Democrats have responded so far?
No, I mean, like, I think some Democrats have been great. I think Ro Khanna's been great.
Tim Kaine has been a really principal leader on this kind of set of issues for a long time.
He's trying to repeal the AUMF. I wish AOC didn't say the impeachment thing. Tim Kaine has been a really principled leader on this kind of set of issues for a long time.
He's trying to repeal the AUMF. I wish AOC didn't say the impeachment thing. I think it just kind of
like muddles the debate and gives them something to caricature. I think the congressional leadership
has been terrible. Before the war started, Chuck Schumer was accusing Trump of tacoing on Iran,
like basically calling him soft. Hakeem Jeffries was asked about Ro Khanna's bill today and he said,
quote, haven't taken a look at it.
The bill is three pages long, pretty big font.
So there's two categories of response from Democrats.
One is Congress should have voted on this first.
And I think that's great, and that's important,
and everyone should make that case.
And I realize I'm a hypocrite for working for Obama,
and the Libya conflict was not something
that was congressionally authorized.
But I think more generally, what I want to see from Democrats
is to forcefully argue that diplomacy was a better way
to solve the problem.
The Iran nuclear deal, the JCPOA, worked.
It was working when we pulled out of it.
When Trump pulled out of it, Trump's own staff
wanted him to stay in the JCPOA.
They said it was in our national security interest.
They testified before Congress that Iran was in compliance. And then he pulled out of the deal. And then Iran started enriching
uranium and funding more money for their proxy forces. And that's why we got to the war. And so
a diplomatic deal is how you permanently solve the problem. Bombing Iran is this temporary
solution with all kinds of secondary and third order impacts that we just can't predict.
And I think we need to make the case that diplomacy is better
and fight for those agreements when we cut them
like Obama did in 2015.
I went back and looked at some of the votes
that the Republican House led
when President Obama announced military involvement
in Libya and started the bombing campaign in Libya.
And you had all these South Republicans say
that the president had no right to do this
without congressional authorization.
You also had 70 Democrats join in that vote, right?
One of whom was Chris Murphy, another was Tammy Baldwin,
who was, I think, really consistent on this.
And I wanna hear more from Democrats who are willing
to say, hey, we have allowed presidential authority
to go way too far.
The problem with Donald Trump being president
is not just because of his, you know, his flaws and
criminality, it's because he's in a job that is way too powerful and that both
parties contributed to making more powerful. When when President Obama
sought congressional authority for military strikes in Syria, he said, I
don't need to do this, but it's just something I want to do. And that was
wrong. It just was.
It was the wrong thing to say because it made it as if there's this sort of, we live in
this perpetual gray area where what the president can or cannot do is a kind of complicated
and divine bit of religion that only the lawyer-priests can help us figure out and they can disagree.
But now it's like we need to start having a kind of clear position about the need to
limit presidential authority over time, even when there are moments where democratic presidents
have not wanted to cede that control.
And I think it starts with Democrats who have been consistent all along and even some maybe
that who haven't been being willing to say the president cannot start wars
without first going to Congress for approval,
unless there is a clear imminent threat
that Congress has been notified of.
Yeah, I do think you've got to lay out
sort of conditions for that because you could see,
forget about which party does it,
like the president does need to reserve
some ability to act quickly.
Of course.
And that's what the war is about.
And you have a war power.
Right, this is what I'm saying,
I think then the question is like,
what is exact, under what exact conditions,
what are the exceptions here and there?
But like, yeah, the fact that we just have just been
just dragging this along without clarifying it
since 2001 at least.
Well, and before, but by the way,
also the other side of it is true too.
All these Republicans that were in Congress were like Barack Obama is exceeding his authority,
they voted no.
But what they didn't do, I think this kind of speaks to the problem in the way in which
Congress has become so feckless and useless, is after the House votes to say Barack Obama
doesn't have the authority to do this or shouldn't have the authority, or we don't approve of
this, they then had a vote on funding, but they didn't wanna do that, right?
They didn't wanna actually go the next step
of actually asserting their power.
And Congress is afraid to assert its power,
which is dangerous when the president isn't Donald Trump,
it's even more dangerous when it is.
Dan.
Tommy, you said it feels like we're in 2003.
And some of the members of the Democratic party
have been in 2003 for 22 years now,
because there is this learned helplessness on national security issues.
This idea that if it's national security week,
so we must begin every sentence about this with this long-winded caveat about
how Iran is batting, can't even nuclear the weapon,
as if you don't spend upwards to 30 seconds making that point,
you will be declared a member of Hezbollah tomorrow.
And it's just like be forceful and strong and unequivocal about why what Trump is doing is wrong
Why the process under which he is doing it is wrong why he is rushing into
Military conflict in the Middle East based on manipulated intelligence, right? We have been down this road before there are consequences to it and
Just make that case. It's not as hard as we are making it every turn
Yeah
under the War Powers Act,
the president can authorize the use of force
if the US faces attack or an imminent attack.
And in this case, that's just clearly not what was happening.
That's not the context.
And I agree with you, Levitt.
The president should have to go to Congress.
And what is so hard about this is often the Congress
doesn't want the vote.
They do not.
Well, that's the problem.
If you try to get a vote on Syria, and they were like, no, we don't want that on our record. They don't want this vote. They do not. That's the problem. People are trying to get a vote on Syria
and they were like, no, we don't want that on our record.
They don't want this vote.
They don't want to be on.
They're cowards.
But it's like, that's the politics.
That's why the president shouldn't be able to do this
because the Congress doesn't want to get behind it
because they don't want to lend it democratic legitimacy
because they know the American people won't have their back
if this thing goes south
because American people don't want to be involved
in foreign wars. They're also cowards because it south, because American people don't want to be involved in foreign wars.
They're also cowards, because it's not just
that they don't want to help.
There is partisanship there, as there was with the Syria vote,
but they're so afraid of being wrong.
Because if you're wrong on a war,
it defines your career, right?
There were a bunch of people who wanted
to run for president in 1992, who had voted
against the first Gulf War, who thought they could not
run because of that.
Exactly.
A bunch of people in 2003 who wanted
to run for president in 2008,
voted for the Iraq war,
even though it was a wrong idea,
and ended up being wrong there and paying a price for it.
Yep.
Well, there's also the, you know,
and it's applied to domestic politics here too,
but the Bill Clinton line,
like it's better to be strong and wrong than weak and right.
And I think especially in matters of foreign policy,
national security, that is on the minds of Democrats. I don't even think you...
That's a misread even of what Bill Clinton said too.
I know, I know.
But that's how Democrats have thought since 9-11, right?
And, but I even think that like,
you don't need the throat clearing of,
we all know the Iranian regime is dangerous and blah, blah, blah.
I think it's like, we don't want them to have a nuclear weapon.
We don't. That's a goal that we share.
What's the best way to do that? And this is to your point, right? The best way to do that is to have a nuclear weapon. We don't. That's a goal that we share. What's the best way to do that?
And this is to your point, right?
The best way to do that is to have a bunch of inspectors in there to make sure they're
not enriching more uranium or moving stuff around.
Now we don't have fucking inspectors in there.
Now they're going to have a chance to, uh, because we can't bomb them.
We can't like bomb the knowledge of how to, uh, create a nuclear weapon out of Iran.
It's a country of 92 million people.
Uh, we can kill a bunch of scientists. We can bomb weapon out of Iran. It's a country of 92 million people.
We can kill a bunch of scientists.
We can bomb a bunch of facilities,
but at some point, these people are gonna keep trying
to build a nuclear weapon.
So what is the best way to prevent a nuclear weapon?
Diplomacy is the best way.
War is a stupid way to, bombing is a stupid way
to solve this problem long-term.
But I think they don't believe that.
I think the reason that part of what, to Tommy's point of why they're not gonna, I don't don't believe that. I think the reason that part of what,
to Tommy's point of why they're not,
I don't think they believe that.
I think they are conflicted on the policy.
They don't wanna talk about it.
They don't wanna take a position,
but I think they are conflicted on diplomacy
versus, well, maybe these strikes could help.
And maybe that, I think that like,
there's a genuine lack of assuredness about the policy.
I even think there though, it's short-termism,
which is a big Trump problem,
but I think it's also a Democrat problem.
It's a political problem.
It's a political problem, right?
Which is they can convince themselves that yeah,
the strikes can help in the short-term,
which by the way they may, but long-term solution?
Like if you really believe that,
then come out and say, fucking great,
strikes are the way to go,
and this is for the next 10, 15, 20 years,
this is gonna protect us.
There are three possible results here.
One is Iran ends up with a nuclear weapon.
The second is we have a diplomatic deal
to prevent that from getting it.
And the third is a war of regime change in Iran
so the people in charge of Iran
are not people who want a nuclear weapon.
Those are the three options. And what happened here didn't change those three options.
It may even made it the diplomatic solution harder in the long run.
Oh, definitely. 100%. There's no diplomatic solution.
Who are the Iranians going to trust? Us? The Israelis? The international community? Nobody.
And also just a big picture on the Democratic Party. For a long time we were viewed as the anti-war party.
Now we are not, right?
That's partly because of votes on Iraq.
It's partly because of Joe Biden's handling of Gaza.
It's partly because of Joe Biden's support for Ukraine,
which I think was the right thing to do, right?
But we have to get back that mantle.
And I think we're in this moment where there was a lot
of consternation, including on the far right,
about Trump going to war with Iran.
We have to provide a clear alternative.
We can't just be like the wishy-washy silent people in the middle or else the pro-war people
are the only ones making argument.
And that's why I think politics or policy, you've got to make the argument for diplomacy
first and war is a last resort, which is a very simple argument that Democrats used to
make all the time.
The other thing that happened in Iraq
is you had a lot of Democratic politicians
voted for the authorization to go to war in Iraq,
and then when things went south,
would say, well, you know,
I voted for authorization
because I thought George Bush would handle this well,
but then he just didn't handle it well.
And like, I don't wanna hear this now,
where they're gonna be like,
well, Trump, the strikes were fine.
The initial strikes were fine.
And so I supported that.
But then, you know, Trump prosecuted the war wrong.
And then all this stuff went south afterwards.
And so I'm gonna step away from that.
Like, no, no, no, no.
If you don't speak out now, you fucking own it.
Well, that's the worst thing is that other than Fetterman
and maybe a couple of handful of others,
no one's actually supporting the strikes.
They are just like in the mushy middle of good
They're gonna be wrong no matter what the outcome is because they didn't pick either way
They just unless there's a vote in Congress on the unless one of these resolutions get to vote in Congress
Well, but that was I mean, that's even a that's even an afterwards thing because they were not in a real war power situation because
You have 60 days of conflict
and then you have 30 days to get out.
Unless there are more ongoing strikes,
we're not gonna be in that situation
to be over one strike that happened.
But like in 2003, a lot of the argument
the Bush administration was making
before the vote for authorization
is you need to give me this authorization
so that I have negotiating power, right?
And I think, look, I think some people knew they were voting for war.
I think some people genuinely convinced themselves
that they needed to give Bush that authority
leading up to it.
I think you could see the same thing happening here, right?
With a bunch of people voting,
but claiming it is because they want to the US
to have the strongest negotiating posture.
But by the way, I don't think we're gonna get to that,
because at this point,
they're gonna all claim the vote's moot
if Trump isn't pursuing long-term military action action which means Donald Trump will have shown that you can
just bomb a country you do not need to claim the threat is imminent the president has this
kind of limitless he is an imperial president abroad and then he is an imperial president
home.
Speaking of which let's turn to Trump's other military campaign the 4800 troops were still
deployed here in Los Angeles ostensibly to protect federal buildings from unruly protesters who haven't been
seen on the streets for over a week. The military also has been supporting ICE
agents who are still out there arresting, assaulting, and detaining anyone they
deem suspicious including undocumented immigrants with no criminal records,
legal residents, even US citizens. In just the past week, we've seen videos of masked agents
tackling and arresting an American citizen
who had been filming ICE agents dragging a man out of a truck
after smashing his window with a baton.
We also saw graphic footage of ICE violently assaulting
a landscaper in Santa Ana, who turns out to be the father
of three U.S. Marines.
There's another Marine veteran whose wife was detained
while she was still breastfeeding their newborn.
There's a six-year-old girl in Chicago
who has essentially been orphaned
after her mother was deported to Honduras.
A guy was mistakenly arrested and detained
twice in the same week,
twice in the same week detained and then released
despite having been granted asylum years ago.
That was just a mistake.
And the list goes on and on.
ICE's own data shows that less than 10%, less than 10% of the nearly
200,000 people who've been detained this year have been convicted of violent crime.
The director of one immigrant rights group told the New Yorker that his
organization has received around 4,000 calls just this month in June about
friends or loved ones who've just disappeared.
No idea what ICE has done with them.
Do you guys think these stories are breaking through or are we in a
situation where people are getting numb to this and we've just moved on?
They are breaking through.
Right.
And there is evidence that in the polling data using G.
Elliott Morris's approval tracking on June 5th, Trump's approval rating on immigration
was five points above water.
Today it's two and a half points underwater.
What is what happened in LA, the protests, these
video, what there's the true success of the mostly
peaceful protests in LA is people paid attention to
what ICE was doing.
These clips are going viral.
People are seeing them.
This is supposed to be Trump's best issue and he's
underwater on it.
And that is, there's been a pretty hard shift over the last couple of weeks, so this stuff
is breaking through.
You saw like a clip going around of Joe Rogan talking about the fact that they're going
after people at Home Depot, that they're going after people that are just trying to work
on construction sites and saying that that's not what we voted for, right?
That's not what people thought they were voting for, that's not what he said he was going
to do.
And then you see kind of two responses to that.
Some people say, actually, this is what you voted for.
And then other people, I think more helpfully saying,
you're right, you thought he was gonna deport criminals,
but he's not, he's going after people
that are just trying to earn a living.
And I do think that matters.
It's another example of an issue where Democrats,
I think, were scared at first.
Maybe they still are scared, but when we made an argument,
it seems like we're actually having some success here.
And yeah, I think the Rogan thing was important.
I mean, that is this conversation breaking through
to an influential audience, to an influential person
who has a huge audience and saying,
I don't think anyone would have voted for this.
And to all the progressives out there,
don't scold people like that.
You did know, like don't do that shit.
Like we have to, let's create a context
where we welcome people back into the fold
and we don't make them feel stupid
for voting for Trump last time. Like, come on, let's build a context where we welcome people back into the fold and we don't make them feel stupid for voting for Trump last time.
Like, come on, let's build a coalition here.
Well, also like they were, you know, Trump lied to them.
And he said all he talked about, right?
Like, yeah, if you went into his policy page somewhere, you'd find that he was
going to just deport everyone.
If you knew about Stephen Miller, if you knew anything about Stephen Miller and
that he was going to be in the administration, you'd know that he was going to deport anyone they could.
But if you just listened to fucking Trump on the stump throughout 2024, you'd think it was just
the worst of the worst violent criminals. And he's going around saying that he wants to protect
dreamers and he wants to staple fucking green cards onto people's diplomas and all that kind
of shit. So like, yeah, people were lied to. Should they have, you know, thought better of it
because they shouldn't have trusted Trump? Yeah, of course. But whatever, we're
trying to build a fucking coalition here.
And for the most part, this didn't happen the first time.
Right.
Well, the other part too is Trump didn't just lie throughout the campaign. He's lied in
the last week and a half. He's been posting every kind of position he could possibly take.
Gets a call from his ag secretary telling him about the problems he's causing. Next
thing you know, he's saying, oh, we don't want to go after people that are just working hard.
The next day, Stephen Miller and Kristi Noem
are back at the sticks, and all of a sudden,
the deportations are back on.
I do think that these, the fact that people are filming
some of these deportations is what's gonna help.
They're horrifying.
It is horrifying.
And the guy they arrested at the Home Depot
right down the street from here in Hollywood,
which is the one they raided,
and he was in American cities, 37 years old,
and they thought he was an undocumented immigrant
who was just another day laborer at the Home Depot.
And he was working at Home Depot,
but he's getting his doctorate.
Based on his skin color, they thought.
Yeah, at a college right here.
And he was like, what the fuck are you doing?
As you can see, he's filming it.
And also the guy that they dragged away,
who probably was an undocumented immigrant,
sitting in his truck, smashing the window
and frightened at his face and then dragging him out.
And then when the guy's filming it, then they tackle him.
And then they're bragging about how many they got to,
how many bodies do we get today?
31, oh, that's amazing, we got 31 today,
and they say, oh, Trump's really riding us on this.
So like, this is the fucking incentive here.
I wanna see Democrats make a bigger deal
about ICE agents wearing masks.
I know there's a bill in the California legislature
that would ban mask wearing ICE agents.
The fact that in this country,
a plain clothes cop can run up to you with a mask on,
tackle you and throw you in its unmarked van is insane.
With no warrant, no identification.
And we were talking about this on Friday's pod
and I was like, there's gonna be, you know,
how do we know it's not just some criminal
with a mask on pretending to be an ICE agent?
And then after we recorded, CNN said,
there's actually been a rise in impersonations,
people impersonating ICE officers
and just trying to round people up.
And then on top of that, you can't trust
the Department of Homeland Security
to tell you accurately what they're doing,
when they're doing it, they're lying all the time.
The spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security
just lies and on your constant basis, Christy Noem lies,
Christy Noem's boss lies, obviously.
So these people show up, they're wearing masks,
then they drive off, then the department claims
they were never there to begin with.
It's on fucking video that they were at Dodger Stadium.
So the guy in Santa Ana, the landscaper,
it was interesting watching how this unfolds
with the Department of Homeland Security.
So there's video of him getting just the shit beat out of him.
They're tackling him, they're pepper spraying him, right?
And then a bunch of like right wing accounts
started saying, oh, they didn't show the whole video.
He was actually attacking the federal agents
with a weed whacker.
Well, what was actually happening is he was,
you know, weed whacking the lawn, doing his job.
Then they started chasing him.
They first, they also asked him like to answer
their questions, he didn't have to,
cause you don't have to, That's part of the law.
So he started, then they start chasing him.
He's running away with the weed whacker.
And then they're like, see, see, this is proof
that he was attacking them with the weed whacker.
And I'm like, these crazy fucking right wing accounts.
What is this?
Then I see today, Department of Homeland Security
tweets the same thing.
And they're basically just basing their explanation
for their arrest and detention
off random right wingwing Twitter accounts.
That's what we're doing now.
Then you have Stephen Miller posting something like,
oh, there are more undocumented people in LA
than we ever thought possible
getting all of these free services
and parasites on our economy or whatever way he's saying it
when what you're talking about are people
that just work in this city,
most of just working every day, really hard fucking
jobs, often with paying into Social Security and paying taxes that they can never recoup
the benefits of because they're not citizens.
And then they're being chased down the street in this terrifying way.
And so the ramifications for Los Angeles is like most people are going about their days,
everything seems normal, but these immigrant communities, especially communities with a
lot of undocumented people, they're terrified.
They're afraid to go to work, but they have to work.
They don't know what to do.
They don't know how to live day to day because there is this capricious threat looming over
the city, all so that Stephen Miller can hit some imaginary quota set by Donald Trump to
hit a number about criminals, of which there are not nearly enough to capture
to hit these numbers.
Yeah.
And that tweet that you mentioned was in response to a post by the city of Pasadena that they
were canceling public programs because people were too afraid to leave their houses in Pasadena.
And so Stephen Miller takes that as like, well, there must be more illegal aliens than we
thought.
So there was a development this weekend
in the deportation story
that's probably gotten the most national attention.
On Sunday, a federal judge denied
the justice department's request
to hold Kilmar Obrego Garcia in custody
while he awaits trial in his federal human smuggling case.
Judge Barbara Holmes' order was pretty forceful
and it's criticism of the administration,
basically like the case that they've brought the criminal case is
It's got contradictory evidence. Some of it seems like not even possible that it's that it's true at all
Of course
We know that a prosecutor in Tennessee resigned because they didn't think that this case should be brought
The judge also acknowledged that a Briego Garcia will likely stay in custody regardless of what she rules, either
because of the Justice Department's
appeal or because the Department of
Homeland Security will just launch new
deportation proceedings against him to
keep him in custody. So, you know, there's
a difference between immigration court
and immigration legal system and then the
criminal legal system. So, he can't be
held by the criminal justice system, but
he can still be held in detention, in
immigration detention. DHS spokesperson, the one that lies all the time, Trisha
McLaughlin reiterated in a post on Twitter Monday, quote, we have said it for
months and it remains true to this day, he will never go free on American soil.
And then on top of that, just before we started recording, the Supreme Court
issued a 6-3 order allowing the Trump administration to deport migrants to
countries other than their own, including extremely dangerous places like Libya and South Sudan, at least while
the case is still being heard.
That could come back to the Supreme Court later this case.
Why would you want to stop grabbing people and then sending them to South Sudan?
Why would you need to put a hold on that while the case is running through the system before
they even ruled on the merits? Why would you want to put a stop to that? What could go wrong doing that? Why would that? Why would you need to put a hold on that while the case is running through the system before they even ruled on the merits?
Why would you want to put a stop to that?
What could go wrong doing that?
Why would that, why would you, what's the difference?
South Sudan and Libya, places famously easy to return from.
Yeah, and safe.
What do you guys make of all these legal developments
aside from them being fucking awful?
I mean, it was interesting, the judge just shit
all over the government's case and the Abrego Garcia case.
I mean, they said they give little weight
to hearsay testimony,
especially hearsay testimony from currently detained people
that are cooperating to get an early release from prison,
which was obviously the case
when we first read the indictment.
And then the judge pointed out, as you mentioned,
that the testimony provided by the cooperators
said that Abrego Garcia would drive from Maryland
to Houston and back three to four times a week with his kids in the car to smuggle people,
which is, she said, borders on being physically impossible.
That's what it was.
It's like 120 hours a week.
A lot of coffee to be driving thousands of miles
all the time.
Yeah, it didn't make sense.
Yeah, so it's like the government,
like they're obviously prosecuting Abrego Garcia
because they view his case as kind of like
the marquee case underpinning the credibility of their entire
Sending people to El Salvador gulag
nightmare policy and clearly it's unraveling and I think they understand that that would
Sort of unravel their whole argument around immigration
Well, and it's it's they're trying to make a public case here, right?
Because so the government had some options with Garcia, right, Abrigo Garcia.
They could have said, okay, well, we, um, we can deport him to any country, but, uh,
El Salvador.
So we're going to try to deport him to a third country.
Uh, they decided not to do that.
They could also say, um, we want to go back to immigration court and undo the protection,
or try to fight to undo the protection of deporting him to El Salvador, and then see if they could win
that case and then deport him to El Salvador again. Their argument would be, you know, the gang that
they were worried about attacking him no longer exists in El Salvador. They didn't do that. What they did is they just made up an entire case
calling him a sex trafficker, a drug smuggler, all this kind of shit because they need,
in the public's mind, to have people believe that he is a really, really bad guy. They can't just
say, okay, you know what, we made a mistake sending him to El Salvador, putting him in prison,
we'll just deport him somewhere else, which they could have tried to do,
but they are trying to prosecute a fucking phony case
just to make people believe that he's an awful person.
And to make everything that Trump,
Kristi Noem, Stephen Miller, JD Vance, Marco Rubio said
be true when it's obviously not true.
It is just, as we live through it,
like, remarkable how much of what is,
like, how much of what is,
like how much of fascism is a group of fucking assholes
using ad hoc rationales to cover their mistakes
and previous incompetence.
Like how much we're living in this sort of doom loop
of them being kind of feckless and cruel
and then coming up with some new ridiculous power grab
or like a criminal complaint or stretching of the law
to justify it in hindsight, over and over and over again.
Yeah, well, cause they know that they don't have
a legal case to stand on on a host of things.
And so all they care about is trying to prosecute
their case in the court of public opinion.
That's just like, that's what they've learned.
That's what Trump learned
when he was charged himself criminally.
Yeah, and then just to bring it back
to like what we watched over the weekend with Iran
is you have JD Vance go on television and say,
yeah, no, I know people don't want conflicts
in the Middle East, but previously we had dumb presidents
and now we have Donald Trump, infallible,
God sent Donald Trump.
Everybody made fun of- Now we have a president who'sallible, God sent Donald Trump, you know, everybody made fun of-
Now we have a president who's gonna make a decision
on war and peace based on what he saw on Fox News.
And so everybody-
Yeah, so everybody makes fun of Mike Huckabee
for sending that insane and unhinged-
That text message.
Text message to his daughter about like Donald Trump
being like God's chosen one, saved it, Butler,
so that he could, I guess, bring about the rapture.
But like JD Vance is doing an intellectual version of that, basically saying that we
need to trust Donald Trump because he has this wisdom.
And like, so much of what the administration does is basically try through legal means,
illegal means, lying, deception, this ridiculous case, they deported someone and then decided
to charge him criminally ridiculous, is to kind of continue to kind of create the image of Donald Trump as this perfect, godsent figure.
And like the scary thing is not, obviously it's scary that they're doing it.
I think they're starting to believe it.
I think JD Vance is starting to believe it.
Nobody sold his soul for power more thoroughly than that guy.
I mean, JD Vance in 2015 would despise JD Vance of 2025.
Like he knows damn well that it wasn't an issue
of dumb presidents sending people to dumb wars.
It was dumb wars being waged for dumb reasons.
I don't know, George W. Bush might have been kind of dumb.
He was in course dumb, two things can be true.
Yeah, that's right, yes.
We didn't even get to talk about JD Vance's trip
to LA on Friday when he came here to LA
to do an RNC fundraising retreat and then tacked on a photo op at the
federal building that the Marines are guarding for no reason because of protests that were
gone a long time ago and then kicked out local press.
Never let them in.
Didn't let local or state California press in there and then called Senator Alex Padilla,
Jose Padilla and accused him of theater, accused him of theater.
JD Vance, who came to LA to do a,
to throw on a photo op so he could yell about,
uh, you know, ICE raids and protesters that don't exist,
called him fucking Jose Padilla,
the guy he served with the entire time
JD Vance was in the Senate,
one of 99 other colleagues of JD Vance,
unfucking real, that guy.
Yeah, JD Vance, man, theater.
That was his calling.
That's really, you know, theater is what he's doing.
Theater is what is in his heart.
Theater makeups was on his face.
Yeah.
I also, I mean, Jose Padilla was, uh,
post-911, accused of having a dirty bomb,
held as an enemy combatant, denied a trial.
So yeah, pretty insulting mistake
beyond just getting the name wrong.
Ridiculous.
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One last thing before we go. Tuesday's Election Day in New York City. The mayor's
race has been pretty fascinating. A lot of abundance discourse,
a lot of interesting conversations about anti-Semitism,
about Gaza, rank choice voting,
socialism, Andrew Cuomo.
Yep, those are the topics.
Those are the topics.
Was there anything else?
So we've got four non-New York residents sitting here.
Love it, I like to think, I know you like to think that,
you know, you were here New York at some point.
In my heart.
Who wants to weigh in?
Any final thoughts on the race?
Love it, what about you?
You talked to Mamdani and Brad Lander.
Yeah, I came away from a conversation with Mamdani
being just really impressed.
You know, a lot of the debate and public debate
has been around the kind of the top level sentence on these
policies, free buses, public grocery stores, freezing the rent.
When you talk to him, he's just really smart and has, I think, sophisticated views on how
to answer some of the critiques from the right or even from the center left of those policies.
And you think, well, how could somebody who's 33 succeed as mayor?
Well, he's really fucking smart and can build,
as clearly he's able to build a following
and build a campaign.
So that to me was really interesting.
Then talking to Lander, what jumped out at me is,
first of all, Brad Lander's also a really smart guy
and really interesting to talk to,
but Lander made this really persuasive case
about why Andrew Cuomo would fail as mayor.
And I realized in hearing it, it was like the most persuasive case I'd heard and the only like,
and actually the only time I'd heard it, because Cuomo is this, you know, he's he has the the controversy
around the nursing homes and writing a book during the pandemic.
He's a sexual harasser.
He his decisions may be basically personally responsible for, Democrats don't have the
House, he's a bully, he doesn't seem to want the job, maybe he wants to run for president.
There's a lot of corruption around him and there's all these different reasons to not
like Andrew Cuomo, but a lot of them don't really get at the core of whether he will
succeed or fail as mayor in doing the things he has claimed he was going to do.
And it's similar, we were talking this And it kind of, it's a similar,
we were talking this before the show, that it's a little bit like the Trump problem of like,
when somebody got so many problems, did anyone really drill down into the cleanest case for
people that are open to Cuomo? And the fact that Brad Lander's case was the best version of it,
I heard made me nervous. I think if you look at this race from afar, like we were, as you said, we are not New Yorkers.
We don't live there. We don't have to live the consequences of decisions. We don't have a vote.
We're not like dialed in on like policies around trash containerization and all the other things
that like really matter when you live in the state, which is what like a mayor's job is.
This race has been about all these big things, you said. And I just saw a clip where they asked
Mamdani and Andrew Cuomo, their response to the strikes
in Iran, which is interesting, I guess, but totally, it's never going to be part of their
job.
Right.
And I watched what's happening there and whether you like them, you don't like them, you agree
with this policy, you don't agree with this policy, you're concerned about democratic
socialism or you love democratic socialism, you have to admit that what Mamdani has done
is to build a very inspiring
Campaign that has energized young people for a mayoral race in a way in which no one has seen in a very long time
And people are excited about politics and that while that's happening to have
Like you have seen this panic among the Democratic establishment not just in New York outside of New York
You have the you know, there was a headline in Politico over the weekend, which is,
centrist Democrats freak out about New York mayoral race.
You have all these centrist Democrats saying,
you know, this is gonna cost us racism.
We can't have a democratic socialist.
And our friends who we like and respect and work with,
a third way put out this memo about
how radical democratic socialism.
They're not taking a position on the race,
but they're saying how bad democratic socialism is.
Jim Clyburn, who's reaching saying how bad democratic socialism is.
Jim Clyburn, who's reaching down from South Carolina to endorse Bill Clinton, who is in
New York resident endorses Andrew Cuomo.
And you have-
Who's former head secretary.
Who's former head secretary.
But you have that we are creating once
again, the democratic establishment is
circling the wagons.
You have a super PAC funded-
Around the worst candidate of all of them. I'm going to get to that. I'm going to get to that. They're circling the wagons. You have a super PAC funded. Around the worst candidate of all of them.
I'm gonna get to that.
I'm gonna get to that.
They're circling the wagons.
They have a super PAC funded by billionaires,
including Michael Bloomberg, who's put in
more than $10 million in the super PAC,
running just nonstop negative ads against Mom Donnie.
They had a mailer that did not go out but leaked out,
or they darkened his beard to make him look more nefarious
to do that to the potential first Muslim mayor in New York City.
And if you're a young person and you know we're all having this conversation like how
do we get young people to like to stick with Democrats?
How do we win them back?
And then every single time there's a candidate they get excited about, the Democratic establishment,
some members of the Democratic establishment and billionaires get together to try to torpedo
that candidacy.
Like, this is not exactly how history went, but imagine you're a 30
year old in this country, right?
In 2016, you supported Bernie Sanders.
The entire establishment supported Hillary Clinton, including the people
who worked at the DNC during the primary in 2020 Bernie support Bernie Sanders.
Again, he is on the cusp of victory.
Everyone else drops out endorses Joe Biden.
Everyone goes and vote. They all go and vote for Joe Biden to get him elected, in part because they
believe that Joe Biden will be a one-time president. They are begging someone else to run against him,
or for Joe Biden to step down. He doesn't do that. And then here, once again, they are inspired by a
candidate and people from the Democratic establishment. If you live in New York and
you want Brad Lander or someone else, that's fine. But to do that is bad.
To do it for Andrew Cuomo is really unforgivable.
Like this isn't, you're not doing it
for another good Democrat.
You're doing it for someone
that the entire Democratic Party leadership,
including the President of the United States at the time,
wanted to resign from the governorship
because he sexually harassed 11 women.
He abused his power,
involved in this nursing home scandal,
and everyone's getting behind that.
You would rather, the idea that we are more scared
about a democratic socialist as the mayor of New York
than Andrew Cuomo with his record of corruption
in sexual harassment is insane to me.
DOJ, Biden's DOJ found that like,
he was accused of sexually harassing 13 women.
This was in a Department of Justice report. After there was an attorney general report about it,
he doctored a report about nursing home deaths.
Then they later find out that he undercounted them
by 50%, like this is not some like,
oh, is he a little skeezy?
No, this is like bad shit.
I mean, one of Cuomo's former top aides, Howard Glazer,
since you see this tweet?
Uh, a grim and joyless campaign as befits a battle
for a prize never wanted, one long viewed with disdain
and contempt as a trifle that only lesser men
would debase themselves to see.
Did he ask ChatGBT to, like, give me some yates?
Yeah, it was a little overwritten,
but it got to what is bothering me a lot
about the Cuomo thing is the guy didn't really campaign
Because he feels so fucking entitled to the job like you don't like
Mamdani then you know make a case about his policies and how they would affect people so Andrew didn't do interviews
You know we reached out everyone reached out
He did he wasn't doing interviews for this campaign didn't really campaign
Then you see Mamdani just like literally walking the length of New York City trying to talk to voters and meet people. All the
other candidates trying to take campaigning seriously. And Andrew Cuomo is just like,
no, I have the name recognition, I got the money, people know me, I'm owed this job.
It's a step down from governor, but whatever, I'll take it. Like that's the kind of person
you want.
Hasn't lived in the city of New York for 30 years.
That's the person you want fucking running your city.
It's the definition of entitlement. I look as a general matter, I the city in New York for 30 years. That's the person you want fucking running your city? It's the definition of entitlement.
Like I look as a general matter,
I opt out of New York City politics
because I live in Los Angeles
and every other reporter lives in New York
and they talk about it all the time
and I feel like they got it covered.
We got enough issues.
That said, yeah, we got some issues here.
That said, I like watching that Momdani video
this morning of him walking across Manhattan,
like it gave me Obama 2007 kind of feels
and brought me back to what it was like to be young
and inspired by a politician.
I was talking to someone who works on the campaign
who told me that they just like decided to do it one day
and then did that the next day.
You know, it's like a campaign that's nimble and fun.
It seems exciting.
It's like a group of people you want to be a part of.
But I share Dan's utter disdain
with the established coming down on behalf of Cuomo.
Like of all the people to pick. he's such a scumbag,
he's such an asshole, he's such a bully.
To rally around them, like I think if Mom Donnie loses,
like it would be valuable for folks who are in the DSA
to look inward and evaluate policies
that maybe didn't work for them electorally,
or just like, right, but they will absolutely have every right
to be furious at the Democratic Party
for backing someone who is actively shitty.
Not an alternative, just like a bad guy.
Yeah, I think they will say,
Democratic Party, it is worth saying that like,
you've had, you know, Lander and.
Yeah.
Mamdani crossing doors, you have.
That's true.
You've had Adrian Adams and.
Establish him as well.
Yes, yeah, and like, and it as well. Yes. Yeah.
And like, and it's disgusting.
It's disgusting.
I do think that like, this was something that
came up when I talked to Mumdani is I said,
like what he said at the beginning of his
campaign is cause Cuomo jumps in rockets at the
top, Mumdani is like, the more people get to
know the myth of Andrew Cuomo, the better I'll do.
And I think that's like been totally true.
He's been proven absolutely correct about that.
And there's like a lot of misinformation, a lot
of propaganda, a lot of propaganda,
a lot of hateful stuff that has nothing
to do with the job that is going to cost Mamdani in one way
or another and could cost him the race.
But I also think sometimes, OK, there's
a myth that people are enamored of with Cuomo, something
about toughness and competence and what
it means to what you want in a leader.
And it's absolutely true that a lot of that's a myth.
And a lot of his toughness, his bullying and shit
that'll make him a worst mayor and unable to do the job.
But at the same time, I think sometimes we don't do enough
to say, hey, what is it that people want in that myth?
And how can we be sure that we're convincing people
who want that version of leadership
that we have that toughness,
even as we have more compassionate and generous
and like empathetic policies?
And I sometimes think we don't do that.
I think sometimes on the left,
there's a little bit of the left can't fail,
it can only be failed.
And that's not to say if this does, if this,
if Cuomo wins, that that's not a despicable like outcome
of a lot of like unfairness in this process.
But I do think I want that too, because like I want,
like I don't want Andrew Cuomo to be the next mayor
of New York, I think it's fucking Cuomo to be the next mayor of New York.
I think it's fucking awful.
There's a fundamental question electorally
for candidates like Mamdami is,
can they do well enough with black voters to win?
The core of the Democratic primary,
the most important electorate in every Democratic primary
around the presidential primary,
and particularly in New York,
and can he do well enough to win?
And that was-
And increasingly Hispanic working class voters as well.
I mean, just working class voters in general,
and it has become this irony, right,
that more progressive candidates, DSA candidates,
their policies are fighting for the working class,
but in this country, the working class Americans,
first white, then now black and Hispanic,
are voting more conservatively.
So, yes, I totally agree.
It's within the context of a Democratic primary, obviously.
And Bernie had shown some success with Latino voters.
We didn't get a full test of it, but it shows some success with it.
AOC obviously has.
There's, you know, we'll see how this plays out,
and it's probably going to matter a little bit, borough by borough, for Mom, Donnie. But the thing that is prevented, and it's gonna probably matter a little bit borough by borough for Mom Donnie
But the thing that is prevented if Bernie could have done just a little bit better with black voters in 2016 a lot better
With him in 2024. He could have been the Democratic nominee and that has been that just for progressive candidates
That's why Obama succeeded was the first step progressive anti-establishment candidate to win a Democratic primary because he
Could get the college educated support
that is very important in Iowa and New Hampshire
and also do very well with black voters.
Just for the purposes of a thought experiment here,
I do think it's worth separating out
the style of politics from the policy, right?
Because we could have a whole debate about
what issue positions and policy positions
can win a general election.
Do I think a DSA candidate could win a national election or an election in a purple state?
Maybe, but I don't think so, right?
But if you have, like, I think that our party,
you have to have people running for office in our party
who campaign like Mamdani's been campaigning,
who run a campaign like that,
who are like meeting people all over the place,
who are speaking to people's concerns,
who are, like you said, love it.
Like, the strength I think people are looking for
is fight on behalf of people who need a fighter, right?
And to constantly be making about the people
that you want to represent.
And I don't think we've seen that.
Like, if there is a, you know, non-DSA
in some purple states or even nationally,
like center-left candidate
who campaigns like Mondani's been campaigning,
that person could be president.
And if there are people, if there are schmucks
like Andrew Cuomo out there, who the party's gonna continue
to coalesce around because, you know, on paper,
they might be, you know, highest name recognition
and have these, you know, moderate credentials
or whatever else, but they suck,
then, you know, we're gonna keep losing.
I could scream about this for an hour.
On my flight here, I pounded out a message box
that'll be in your inboxes tomorrow on this thing,
because I'm so mad about it.
It's just, it's so stupid for people,
anyone outside of New York to panic
about who the mayor of New York is politically.
Like, we had a lot of problems because
Eric Adams has been under indictment for a year.
Is that really, was that a huge problem
for House Democrats of 2024?
No.
But also like there's something so,
there are other candidates, right?
Like there's Brad Lander, Adrian Adams, Elmer Myrie.
Like they're like, they had platforms,
they're between them basically, you know,
progressive wise, right?
Like you had like a range of options
and somehow you ended up with this sort of like
super polarized vote, right?
And the fact that all this money decided
to get behind
Andrew Cuomo, cause they were so afraid of Mamdani,
when they could have supported Adrian Adams, right?
They could have done it.
There's a lot of things that could have been different
about this.
So there's a way in which it's sort of like
a unique situation, a uniquely frustrating situation.
For voters who maybe aren't as far left as Mamdani,
but don't want to have a harass or a bully in their job.
Yeah, for sure.
But the, one reason I think it concerns all of us,
even though we're not like deep
in the New York City mayor's race,
and like you said, I don't think this one mayor's race
has an effect on the party writ large.
This, a similar dynamic is what I worry
about heading into 2028 again.
And it's not necessarily gonna be like Cuomo, right?
But just this, these candidates that either look good on paper
or the establishment feels comfortable with
or who have name recognition or for some reason
they think is like, that's the safe choice.
And I don't know that that's necessarily the best way
to try to win an election anymore.
So we'll see.
All right, that's our show for today.
If you live in New York and need help figuring out where and when to cast your ballot, go to vote,
saveamerica.com slash vote. And Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday.
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