Pod Save America - Mile High Bribe Club
Episode Date: May 13, 2025It's a bird, it's a plane, it's a bribe! President Trump, just before setting off on a tour of the Gulf states, announces that he plans to accept a $400 million luxury jet from the Qatari royal family... — one of the largest and most brazenly corrupt gifts ever received by an American president. House Republicans finally release details of their proposed cuts to Medicaid, but will their plan to cut the health insurance of 9 million Americans find enough support from moderates and hard-liners? And, of course, there's more tariff news, with the administration announcing a 90-day-pause (kind of) in the trade war with China. Jon, Lovett, and Tommy talk about Democrats' response to Trump's shiny new bribe, Stephen Miller's recent attacks on habeas corpus, and why the president's new drug pricing executive order isn't a serious solution to lower the cost of prescription drugs. Then, Tommy sits down with his doppelgänger, Rob Sand, to talk about Sand's campaign for Iowa governor.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favre. I'm Jon Lovett. I'm Tommy Vitor. On today's
show, we'll talk about Trump's Middle Eastern cash grab, the president's latest retreat
in his trade war with China, the Republican plan to throw 9 million people off Medicaid,
and the administration's threat to suspend more constitutional rights and arrest Democratic
politicians. Then Tommy talks to his doppelganger, Rob Sand.
My guy.
Who is also the Democratic candidate
running to be Iowa's next governor.
Come on, Rob.
Exciting for Rob.
You gotta win, man.
I've known Rob since 2004.
He's a very good guy.
I think he's got a shot.
Off year, governor's race.
He's won statewide.
It's pretty good.
We can do it.
Fingers crossed.
Come on, Iowa.
All right, first we gotta talk about
His Majesty's New Palace in the Sky.
It's the name for a $400 million luxury jet that Donald Trump will accept as a gift from
his fellow royals in the Qatari government, who he'll be able to thank in person when
he sees them this week during the first big foreign trip of his second term, a trip that
will also include a visit to Saudi Arabia, where Trump's family business is working on six different deals with a Saudi real estate firm,
total coincidence, as well as a stop in the United Arab Emirates, where a government-backed firm is
doing a two billion dollar business deal using the Trump family's crypto coin. Oh, and the Qataris
are also backing a new Trump golf club, but the $400 million plan really stands apart.
The palace in the sky will be upgraded to serve as Air Force One, but don't worry, when Trump leaves office,
he gets to take the jet with him as a keepsake.
The plane will be transferred to Trump's presidential foundation.
Now, some of you may think this generous gift from a foreign government that also funds groups like Hamas and Hezbollah raises a series of ethical, legal, constitutional, national
security questions.
But according to Donald Trump, that makes you stupid.
Let's listen.
I would never be one to turn down that kind of an offer.
I mean, I could be a stupid person and say, no, we don't want a free, very expensive
airplane. Mr. President, what do you say to people who view that luxury jet as a personal gift to stupid person say no we don't want a free very expensive airplane
Mr. President, what do you say to people who view that luxury jet as a personal gift to you?
Why not leave it behind?
You're ABC fake news, right?
Why not leave it behind?
Only ABC, well, a few of you would.
Let me tell you, there was an old golfer named Sam Snead, did you ever hear of him?
He won 82 tournaments, he was a great golfer.
And he had a motto, when they give you a putt,
you say thank you very much, you pick up your ball
and you walk to the next hole.
A lot of people are stupid.
They say, no, no, I insist on putting it.
Then they putt it and they miss it.
Remember that, Sam Snead.
When they give you a putt, you pick it up
and you walk to the next hole
and you say thank you very much.
Same thing.
I hadn't heard the putt thing.
Really?
That was news to me. It's a very topical reference to a golfer
who died in 2002 at 89.
When they give you a $400 million putt.
Snag that fucker.
Leave only footprints.
Take on the airplanes.
So is this the most openly corrupt action
an American president has ever taken
or is Mr. Trump just doing taxpayers a favor?
Now we don't have to pay for a new plane.
You want, you want to go?
No, you fire away.
So when I saw this break over the weekend,
I had questions.
I just, I had questions.
Like, hey, isn't it a, like for,
before I even got to the ethics,
I was like, we can't accept an airplane
from a foreign autocracy to be Air Force One.
Yeah, some security challenges there. Yeah, like I just- I think an airplane from a foreign autocracy to be Air Force One.
Yeah, some security challenges there.
Yeah, like I just-
I think they'll do a once over before.
It's an already finished plane.
You'd have to take it apart,
like literally every single panel.
You'd have to, you couldn't, it's not,
I don't think it's possible to secure a plane.
The US government would never leave Air Force One
unattended for five minutes in France,
let alone accept a plane from a foreign government.
And then I was like, okay, then they have to update it.
The air force one isn't just a nice plane.
It's one of the most sophisticated pieces of technology in the world.
It would surely take years to update the communication system, the security systems, all the different
military safeguards and redundancies that are required to make air force one, uh, the
most secure
and robust airplane ever built.
That wouldn't take six months, nine,
that would take literal years.
It's part of why the two planes that Trump wants
aren't ready, it takes fucking years.
And he's only gonna be president for a couple more years
before it's given to him.
You don't know that.
Well, sure.
Yeah, but does any plane have the good bones
of the Qatari plane?
No, look, it's beautiful.
Come on.
The bones are good, the rest don't matter.
That's right.
Right, yeah, no, and then.
I don't know why you're getting hung up on this.
So then I see all this.
Detail guy.
He's like, what about the communication system?
This is the problem.
Air to air refueling.
I just assume.
What are you, a Democrat in Congress?
But then you look into it and like, no,
they haven't thought about any of it.
None of that.
It's just purely just a gift for him.
It's not.
They acknowledge that it would probably
take a couple of years, and it might not
be ready until he's about to leave office.
But this is where the point is.
It's like, they have not given Trump Air Force One.
This will never be Air Force One.
This is just a private jet for Donald Trump's personal use.
That's all it will ever be. That's all it could ever be.
He says he's not going to use it though.
It's funny.
I think ever since Trump got in the crypto business,
we've all been like, what stuff's
happening behind the scenes that we don't know about?
And I'm sure there's a lot of it.
But turns out there's a whole lot happening
right in front of our faces.
Like I was talking to a guy named Casey Michelle, who
runs an anti-kleptocracy program at the Human Rights
Foundation.
And he said, basically, you should just
think about this
as a starter gun for a corruption arms race.
And part of that is because the Qataris in the UAE
and the Saudis don't get along.
The Qataris we can talk about later.
But they play this.
They piss everybody off in their region.
But they just love drama.
Teachers pet these people. Also, are they Qataris or Qataris?
You know what?
Does it matter?
People go back and forth.
I don't know.
Yeah, no, I've gone back and forth.
Qatar, Qatar, I don't know.
We'll pick one for this.
Let's say Qatar.
I just think that they are likely to,
they put this giant deal on the table,
they put this plan on the table for Trump,
and now a match in the Emiratis are gonna feel like,
we're gonna match this.
Or Trump will sit down with Mohammed bin Salman
when he gets to Saudi Arabia and be like,
you know, the Emir just gave me a 747.
What have you done for me lately?
And so-
How do you top that gift?
I mean, part of this-
Well, I mean, you know,
the $5 billion real estate development deal
in Qatar is probably ultimately more lucrative.
So do you remember when Trump toured this airplane?
I forgot about it.
Yeah, it's not like this gift just came along as a surprise.
No, he checked it out first.
It landed near his beach club in Florida in February.
He got a tour and he was like,
oh, this is pretty cool.
Well, at the time, so at the time,
he went on this tour of this airplane
and he used it as like a cudgel to say,
where are the Boeings that were supposed to be happy?
He used it as a way to hit Boeing
for being slow to deliver the new Air Force Ones.
But now in hindsight, you say, well,
this what was it just, it wasn't on a layover in Palm Beach.
They flew this fucking thing
so that Donald Trump could go walk around it and see it.
And yeah, he turned it into a Boeing thing.
But now it was just, this was a long con.
This was a long con about a gift
they were gonna give to Donald Trump.
And it really reminded me of that scene
in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
when the Nazis are bribing some monarch
and they give him the Rolls Royce.
He's like, and it's even in my color.
And this, it's as like brazen or corrupt.
It's unbelievable.
It's unbelievable.
It's also just incredible that it comes after several weeks
where the message from the Trump administration was,
you don't need so many dolls.
You don't need so many pencils.
A lot of pencils in that plane. So it's's fewer dolls for you, bigger planes for Donald Trump.
But that's, I was thinking about the dolls thing.
He's like, you have too many dolls.
Too many dolls.
It's not, he is angry that the two,
so there's a plan to replace the Air Force Ones
that have been serviced since 1990 with these two planes.
There have been, as is the case with everything
American makes these days, cost overruns and long-term delays.
But he's not angry because he's not able to do the job
from the current Air Force One.
Maybe we don't say this very often,
but we've all been on it.
It's cool. It's cool.
It's a very nice plane.
We're just a bunch of bumpkins.
It's an incredible plane.
It's, but we don't have the taste of a Donald Trump.
For us, it's amazing.
For Donald Trump, the accommodations are left wanting.
It's a Hampton into him. And so he doesn't want this because he's not able to do meetings. He doesn't want this because it's amazing. For Donald Trump, the accommodations are left wanting. It's a Hampton into him.
And so he doesn't want this
because he's not able to do meetings.
He doesn't want this because it's like the,
he's not able to get the secure communication system.
He's not worried about what happens in a nuclear bomb.
He just wants a brand new spanking airplane
that he can drive off the lot.
No, this is, he's ordering a giant entree
and putting most of it into go bag.
Yeah, it's like going to the Sizzler and filling,
it's like you order the entree at the Sizzler,
it comes with a salad bar, you don't eat the entree,
you take that home.
We're gonna mothball this thing
and leave it at the presidential library,
that's what you're trying to tell us, Donald,
give me a break.
I know.
This is gonna be your plane for life.
And also we are well aware that you're aware
that the Supreme Court has said
that you have immunity for all official acts
and that the DOJ is no longer going after people
for corruption, whether it's the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
where they've basically given up on prosecuting people
for illegal foreign lobbying.
So he just doesn't care.
It's also such bullshit.
He's trying to say, well, well, Reagan's,
at the Reagan library, there's an old Air Force One.
Yeah, a little different.
A little different to have like an old Air Force One
or other stuff from the White House
and various presidents' libraries,
which just happens all the time.
And the ease with which he's lying and the like,
oh, I'm not gonna use it, it's gonna be decommissioned.
Oh, is it?
Because however many years from now
when suddenly Donald Trump's riding around
on the fucking Qataris plane after post presidency,
just you think he's gonna be,
there's gonna be a succumb to a lot of pressure there?
You mean, no, no, no, I made,
I'm gonna keep my word.
I made a promise to the American people.
It's actually like,
it's the worst of all possible world, right?
It's a brazen bribe.
It will cost as much as the plane costs
to retrofit it if they even do that.
And then the other two planes will still have to be completed
because he says already explicitly, he's taking it with him.
Yeah, he's taking it with him, taking it with him.
Don't you feel comforted though by the fact that Pam Bondi,
Pete Hegseth, they signed off on this,
Pam Bondi and her sharp legal minds that actually,
even though the constitution specifically says,
you're not supposed to accept any emoluments
or gifts from foreign governments,
it's just the Defense Department that's accepting it.
Having a pretend lawyer as our attorney general is not great.
I mean, so she was a registered lobbyist
for a DC based firm called Ballard Partners.
In that capacity, she represented
more than 30 different clients,
including Amazon Uber, a private prison company, nice,
and the government of Qatar.
What?
Which paid her $115,000 per month.
A lot of that work was PR stuff ahead of the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
I'm going interchangeable now. But in particular, I think she was trying to deflect criticism of their workers' rights and human rights violations.
But also, for those who are worried that there's no one watching the Watchers, remember that FBI Director Kash Patel also provided consulting services for the government of Qatar, which he did not disclose to the Senate during his
confirmation process, nor did he register under Farah.
They were a client of his until November of 2024.
No, you can't, you can't fly into Newark anymore.
And I know it's a, it's not safe people.
We are, we're, we don't have enough air traffic controllers.
We're losing radar, but there's one plane,
one plane that's gonna be okay.
Maybe you can fit a lot more people on it.
I never wanted to fly into New York, so.
That's true.
Yeah.
Silver lining.
Teeterboro, but in a rare whim
for the at Democrats Twitter handle,
they did put out, like they pointed out,
this is how, like they said,
like this is how Trump flies,
and this is how all of us fly.
And it was Trump in this, in all of his lavish private jets
versus delays and security issues and near misses.
And it is worth keeping in mind that while Trump
and his cronies fly on Air Force One or fly private,
members of Congress fly commercial all the time.
So my hope is that these Republican members of Congress,
forget the fucking plane for a second,
do start paying attention to the fact that the head,
the transportation secretary is going on television saying,
the system is blinking red, it's a nation of new works.
Well, I think they just gonna get a ride
on the floating palace.
What is it?
What did we call it again?
Not the floating palace.
It's the palace in the sky.
The palace in the sky, yeah, the palace in the sky. That's what he calls his toilet. The floating palace, what is it? We're going to go through it again. No, not the floating palace. It's the palace in the sky. The palace in the sky, yeah, the palace in the sky.
That's what he calls his toilet.
The floating palace.
I was, the last time I flew from Los Angeles
to Washington, DC, I was sitting next
to Washington Post columnist George Will
and Travis Hellwig, formerly of Cricket Media
and love it or leave it, was sitting in front of us.
And as we were coming in for a landing,
Travis just kept texting me things about what it might feel like
to run into a helicopter.
And then things like,
George Will, comma, 80 others die in a horrific plane crash at DCA.
I was like, thank you, Travis. I needed this right now.
I need to read this.
Well, let's talk about the reaction from Republicans and MAGA world,
which has not been as uniformly obsequious as usual.
Various MAGA pundits have posted criticism of the deal, the most notable
coming from Trump's unofficial personnel director Laura Loomer, who tweeted the
following, I love President Trump. I would take a bullet for him, but I have to call
a spade a spade. We cannot accept a 400 million dollar gift from jihadists in
suits. The Qataris fund the same Iranian proxies
and Hamas and Hezbollah who have murdered
US service members.
This is really going to be such a stain
on the administration if this is true.
I'm so disappointed.
Just one stain, that's this one.
Otherwise, unblemished record.
Yeah, that's a stain.
Unless this stain happens to be where some
of the other stains already are.
Is Trump in danger of being loomer-ed?
I don't even know.
What does that mean in this context?
He's been loomer-ed.
He's fired himself?
What do you think Republican politicians say about this?
Love it, you have hope.
You have hope that maybe this will be,
this is the red line.
I don't know if this is,
I don't have hope that this is gonna,
I don't think that, there's no lines,
we're not gonna have any lines.
I just think the stupidity of all of it
and the fact that it's,
I think once it becomes clear that it will be years away
for Trump to use it as Air Force One and so forth,
then it truly is only a gift to him.
I think it starts to be the kind of thing
where it gets pushed up.
My hope is that there's enough internal,
the quiet pressure that we're not allowed to know about
because they don't do it publicly,
is enough to like kind of push this off.
You already have the Qataris saying, well, nothing's finalized, right? Even though it was sort of about to happen. So I don't know, they don't do it publicly. Is it enough to like kind of push this off? You already have the Qataris saying,
well, nothing's finalized, right?
Even though it was sort of about to happen.
So I don't know, I don't know.
Yeah, I think they just forget about it conveniently.
I mean, first of all, Laura Loomer kind of playing
an interesting role in the administration thus far, right?
I mean, she clearly has-
God damn it, what a thing to say that to be true.
I know, she had a personal relationship with Trump.
She got like five or six top national security staffers
fired, including the head of the NSA.
Maybe Mike Waltz, too.
We don't know about that one.
But she's also regularly criticizing them.
It was this.
She went after the Pam Bondi particularly
about the fake Epstein files release.
She's been going after the surgeon general
pick on Twitter all weekend.
In this case, I think we're just seeing her, um, Islamophobia shining through.
Yeah.
Um, Qatar does play kind of a controversial, interesting place in foreign policy.
I mean, a broken Islamophobic clock is still right twice a day.
Yeah, they provided support for Hamas at times because Bibi Netanyahu wanted them to.
They also hosted a Taliban office, which sounds terrible, but was useful because
they gave us a place to negotiate during the Obama years.
Their neighbors hate them because of the role they played in the Arab Spring and Al Jazeera.
But you know, in Trump's first term, the Saudis, the Emiratis, Egypt and Bahrain imposed a economic
blockade on Qatar that Trump initially supported.
And he went out to the Rose Garden and said, the nation of Qatar, unfortunately, has historically
been a funder of terrorism at a very high level.
And now he's taking their plane
and going there on his first trip.
You're gonna go back and delete those comments
from the archive.
You're gonna have to find those.
That's for sure.
You won't be hearing that again.
Get it off of YouTube.
Way to kick a gift horse in the mouth.
You know, it's like, remember the first trip
that President Obama made and I was in this trip,
we went to Saudi Arabia,
and we are at like their version of Camp David
in Saudi Arabia, and we all have our little,
these little places we're staying in,
and Rhodes and I, Ben Rhodes and I,
are like sharing a room, and we live.
It's getting late.
It was more of a villa, there's a couple bedrooms in it.
Oh wow.
Romantic. Throw some petals on the vents.
Giant bathtub.
So we're sitting there.
We're about to go to a meeting and golf cart comes up.
Guys knock on the door and they hand us each a suitcase.
And inside the suitcase is a bunch of gold
and jewels and watches.
And we're like, what the fuck is this?
They apparently, they just give it to government.
And then right behind them in a golf cart
was the State Department attache.
And the couple's ever.
The buzz kill brigade.
And they were like, we are here to accept the gifts
because usually what happens when a foreign government
gives you a gift is it goes to the State Department,
the government does something, they either like,
decorate something with it or they give it back.
You can buy it.
And then you go to State Department, you say, you won't believe what they give it back or they buy it. You can buy it. You can buy it. And then you had a state department
who said, you won't believe what the Qataris got me,
a beautiful suitcase.
And that was it, there's nothing in here.
There's nothing in here.
And then I walk around as jingle jingles in my pocket.
No, this is just, it's wild.
It's shocking.
It's shocking corruption.
They did ask, they caught up with some Republican members
of Congress right before we recorded.
John Thune said,
there's not enough info about this for me to opine.
Okay, John.
And then-
But you need the exit manual?
Yeah, right.
And then John Barrasso, next in line
in the number three Republican said,
oh, this is just rumors, it's just rumors.
It's like Donald Trump confirmed it
on fucking television today. Yeah, I look, rumors, it's just rumors. It's like Donald Trump confirmed it on fucking television today.
Yeah, I think it's impossible to predict the future,
but I can see kind of like, they offered me the thing,
I said, yes, you don't wanna take the plane,
I don't take the plane, we move on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That sort of feels like the direction we're heading.
And then the last state administration,
he takes the plane.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah, well, that depends on us, that depends on democracy.
Well, Democrats are all over this, unsurprisingly.
In the House, Richie Torres is called for an ethics review
in the Senate.
Brian Schatz, Chris Murphy, Cory Booker
will try to force a vote to put every member on record
as to whether they support or oppose presidents
getting $400 million gifts from foreign governments.
Schatz said, you don't need a law degree
to know that this is, quote, wildly corrupt.
And then there was Chuck Schumer's statement on the plane,
quote, it's not just bribery,
it's premium foreign influence with extra leg room.
You guys have any puns or airplane double entendres
to offer up Democrats who might not have put out statements
yet? You guys got any?
Sounds like Trump's flying to Doha,
comfort plus corruption.
I just hope a second statement doesn't hit the Twitter.
Is that what you were looking for?
I think this is just lie flat out constitutional.
Wow.
That's pretty good.
Oh, look at that.
Look at that.
That's the second time we've made a second something hit.
Yeah, it's the mood we're in.
It's the mood we're in.
It's warranted, I think.
Anything else Democrats can do to help keep this
story alive in the news?
One of the reasons though I do think that Trump
will want to just move on from this is,
to Tommy's point, given the scale of corruption
we're seeing, this is Trump change to him.
Like he is making money on the presidency right now
to buy and sell a half a dozen of these fucking planes.
And so he's not gonna, like, I don't understand
why he'd get bogged down in this.
A plane he's gonna use now and again
after he graduates, whatever.
Like he can buy a plane when this is all said and done,
just as nice as this one.
He could buy this one if he wants.
So I do think it's a way of talking about
the unprecedented corruption that will be unfolding
in the next couple of days.
And I do have a little worry that we'll all of a sudden
get a story of like Trump says no to the plane.
It'll be seen as like, oh, look, this was stopped.
We stopped this corruption.
But like what's happening with crypto,
what's happening with these fucking golf deals,
what's happening with what his idiot sons are doing
is as brazen and large a corruption scheme.
Any country on earth, we have the other sort of Putin. Yeah, the idiot sons are doing is as brazen and large a corruption scheme. Any country on earth, we have the other sort of Putin.
Yeah, the idiot sons are just either a couple of days ahead
of them on these trips or a couple of weeks behind
just mopping up cash.
I do think it's so hard to keep a handle on all
the different facets of the corruption.
I know, I know.
I was reading that this morning.
A lot of it's happening in these Gulf countries
where he happens to be going on his first trip.
What a surprise.
But I do think it would be smart for Democrats to... They're setting up shadow ministers
and shadow hearings.
Have a full-time operation just focused on corruption.
Make this digestible.
Make it understandable.
Crank out content on it.
I think it would matter.
People don't want to corrupt the President of the United States.
The challenge is there is this very stupid thing people I think genuinely believe that billionaires
don't want more money because they don't need it
when the reality is like billionaires are billionaires
because they're selfish and venal and want it all,
which is what Donald Trump is,
but I think we can sell this one.
You know, like the debt limit clock
always like keeps changing with the debt.
Like, can we have one of those with how much money
the Trump family is estimated having made
and like where it's coming from?
I don't know, something simple.
Can we get at like the price of gas and eggs underneath it?
Elijah, let's make one of those after this.
Give me a ticker.
It seems crazy.
Let's talk about the rest of the trip.
I mentioned all the deals at the top
that the families involved in.
New York Times has a great breakdown.
Just to trigger Tommy,
the three countries that Trump is visiting
have together pledged
more than 3.5 billion to Jared Kushner's
private equity firm.
They bribed the wrong guy.
You mentioned the Suns, don't forget the Sun law.
What do you think about the trip and specific stops
from like a foreign policy perspective?
Is this the kind of Middle East visit
a less corrupt president would plan?
No.
I mean, remember Trump blew this up the first time,
but like historically speaking, the first official trip
by a president was Canada or Mexico,
literal neighbors, literal allies.
In 2017, Trump changed that
because he went to Saudi Arabia first,
famously gripped the orb.
But then he went to Israel, Vatican City,
Belgium for NATO, and Italy for the G7.
So it was kind of like the weird Saudi thing
tacked onto a normal trip.
This time he's just skipping all the democracies. He's was kind of like the weird Saudi thing tacked onto a normal trip.
This time he's just skipping all the democracies.
He's just doing all the hereditary monarchies.
You call them democracies, we call them enemies now.
That's right, that's right.
Yeah, I was having kind of a moment of just sadness
that the president is far more welcome
in Saudi Arabia and Qatar than he is in France,
certainly Canada, you know,
that he has made himself and made us a pariah nation.
And like I can't imagine the amount of security and protest and disruption there would be
if Donald Trump right now tried to go to like Belgium.
Yeah.
Wealthy autocrats who just want to throw a bunch of money at you to try to influence
policy.
That's like his jam, you know.
Yeah, he loves it.
Some good news.
On Monday, Hamas released Eden Alexander, an Israeli-American soldier captured on October
7th as a gesture of goodwill as Trump arrives in the region.
Alexander was the last surviving American hostage.
Trump won't be visiting Israel or meeting with Netanyahu though.
What do you make of that, Tommy?
It is interesting.
He's blowing off BB on this trip.
You're seeing a lot of background quotes
with people being like, ah, what's
the point of visiting Israel?
Netanyahu has been to DC 700 times.
I think that was in the Washington Post on background.
Trump has also cut Netanyahu out of the Iran talks
that Steve Wyckoff, his golf slash real estate
buddy, is conducting.
Trump cut Israel out of the deal
that the administration cut with the Houthi rebels
that gets the Houthi rebels to stop firing missiles
and drones at US ships, but not at Israel.
So I don't know, maybe they're like,
maybe he's still pissed at BB over the whole acknowledging
Joe Biden won the election thing.
That's seems to be where the problem stems from,
but yeah, it's a weird trip.
Interesting.
Well, one thing about it too though is just,
this trip is about his personal interests.
He has a bunch of personal interests right now
in these countries.
BB doesn't have a plane farm.
Right, and it's a ways off from his attempt
to build a fucking boardwalk in Gaza.
So once we get closer to that,
maybe he'll make his trip to Tel Aviv.
Yeah, no, by the way, it's great news that Aidan and Alexander is out of Gaza.
I think there's 23 more live hostages in the Gaza Strip.
I think this probably creates political challenges
for Netanyahu that, you know,
the US unilaterally seems to have gotten out
the one American hostage
and a bunch of Israelis are left behind,
which is controversial to begin with.
The majority of Israelis want to cut a deal
to end the war, to get the hostages out. They don't support Netanyahu's plan for endless war.
But yeah, I mean, I think it's fascinating to watch. I don't know.
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and using code crooked at checkout. The other big news Monday was that the administration announced a 90-day pause in
the trade war against China after talks between the two countries in Switzerland over the weekend.
I should say it's more of a semi-pause. American tariffs on Chinese goods will drop from 145%
to 30%, still higher than they were before Liberation Day, and
China will drop its tariffs on our exports to 10%.
The markets rallied in response, no surprise there, but beyond that, we don't have many
details as to whether it's possible for the two sides to actually reach a deal in the
next three months or even what the outstanding issues are.
Why do you guys think Trump's already backing down without getting anything in return? And is a 30% tax on everything we buy from China
really a win for anyone?
It just seems like he blinked that he was hearing,
first of all, it's a ton of bad press.
He knows saying kids should have fewer dolls
and the CEO of Mattel going out there saying,
like, you're gonna fuck with Barbie for Christmas
is not good politics.
There's a ton of
Businesses that are based around importing and exporting that were at risk going under of heaven or have already gone under there was no end
In sight he wasn't getting anything
From these tariffs trying to put on their reciprocal tariffs. We were kind of at a stalemate and
So now what happens Trump lowers them to 30% which is still very high and will still be very disruptive. China removes most of the reciprocal tariffs they put on,
but has addressed none of the underlying issues
that led him to put on the 140,
whatever percent tariff in the first place.
And by the way, there's still a 90 day window
to renegotiate tariffs,
which really means 90 days to renegotiate
the kind of trade deals that take months,
if not years, to negotiate.
So it just kicks the can further down the road.
There's no way for anybody to behave with any kind of certainty.
If you were a business that was waiting to make purchases or investment decisions, you
can't make those decisions now.
You have absolutely no idea what's going to happen.
The markets seem to have reacted positively, but that seems to be a classic case of stop hitting yourself in the head because it feels good when you stop and
We're basically just in a weakened position from where we were whatever
40 days ago. Yeah, I mean Trump and Besson both had the same line
Which was like they kept saying tariffs at hundred forty five percent or whatever would lead to a decoupling of the two economies
We don't want that and it's like well, OK, then why did you put them in place?
This is entirely your choice.
I'm with you on it.
Time will tell, but this seems like full capitulation.
He's basically blinked on every tariff he's put in place since Liberation Day, except
for the 10% universal tariff.
My guess is Trump thought he could come out swinging, do his like madman theory bit, get
China to blink, or make some concesscessions and then pocket that as a win.
And instead the Chinese fought back hard.
Trump slowly figured out that this fight
was gonna be politically untenable for him.
And then he used these talks to climb down.
And now he's the arsonists who wants credit
for putting out the fire he started.
Yeah, and it's like, I mean, it's so early.
And so now for the next 90 days,
and keep in mind the original 90 day pause
on all the other countries ends in early July, I believe.
We're just, it's all based on the whims
of whatever Donald Trump feels like
when he wakes up in the morning.
And if someone pisses him off in one of these negotiations,
if China does something that makes him mad,
maybe he slaps the tariffs back on,
then he takes them back off.
Like this, it's just, it's madness.
Well, it's also, it's not about what is,
it's about what Donald Trump can say it is.
He goes and says, oh, we have a deal with the UK,
so what a win.
And then you look, it's like, there's no deal,
there's nothing, there's cheaper rolls, Royces,
and the promise to framework, to start a negotiation
for what a deal could look like.
And all of these countries know
that Donald Trump just wants wins,
which makes us even weaker, right?
Like Donald Trump has been saying to people,
he's going for this to this Middle East trip
because he wants to do a trillion dollars worth of deals.
What a signal to send to all these countries
that they have this one moment
where they know they can get something out of Trump
because he wants to do a press conference
where he declares some fucking deal.
And so all of these countries know that Donald Trump just wants to go in front of the cameras and say he won. And they can find something out of Trump because he wants to do a press conference where he declares some fucking deal. And so all of these countries know
that Donald Trump just wants to go in front of the cameras
and say he won, and they can find a million ways
to help themselves and hurt us and give him that win.
And if you're like MBS, if you're the Saudis,
you'd be like, oh yes sir, we're gonna spend
a hundred billion trillion dollars in the US.
Do you know it's not gonna happen?
One gazillion dollars, put us down, put us down for it.
We're good for it.
Also, like, this doesn't undo the long-term
political damage for him, right?
First of all, there's damage that's already been done,
that people will start feeling supply shocks in the,
in the coming months that has already been done.
Right.
And second of all, like maybe, you know, Goldman
lowered their estimate for recession from 45% to 35% based on this.
Oh, that's, you know, I felt that this morning.
Did you feel that?
I felt that, I felt a little spring in my step.
But it's like, even if we avoid a recession at this point,
you have 10% tariffs on every country in the world,
30% on China, people in this country are still gonna be
paying more than they would have otherwise
at a time when
there were persistently high prices from inflation.
So the damage that people are feeling or the frustration
people feel with the economy, whether or not Trump
announces a deal, doesn't announce a deal,
pause, not a pause, it's still gonna be there.
You still like, he's, you know, I, he's not gonna be able
to bullshit his way out of this one.
No, and then we'll get to it, but, and then on top of that,
they're about to throw a whole bunch of, uh, uh,
healthcare cuts into the mix, which have,
which will have impacts on a lot of the places
where he claims to have been the kind of tribune
of the working man. So.
Yeah. And the biggest fight is still with China
and there's still a 30% tariff in place.
So yeah.
There's a lot of monster impact.
And on the other side of this, now the tariffs
aren't high enough or they didn't make enough deals
to actually change, to do what he set out to do,
which is either bring in more revenue or bring
in enough revenue or bring jobs back and
manufacturing jobs.
Like it's just, it's the worst of all worlds.
It is.
Yeah.
He's a terrible president.
Well, his China retreat wasn't the only big
announcement on Monday.
The president told us he'd be signing quote,
one of the most consequential executive orders in our country's history. Well, his China retreat wasn't the only big announcement on Monday. The president told us he'd be signing, quote,
one of the most consequential executive orders in our country's history,
which then turned out to be a more aggressive version of a policy he already tried and failed to get done in his first term,
instituting what's known as most favored nation pricing for prescription drugs,
which means that the amount our government pays for any given medication
would be pegged to the lowest price paid for that medication by other countries.
So if a prescription costs $50 here, but $10 in the UK, the US government would tell the
drug companies we're only paying the $10.
You can imagine this plan may run into some legal issues, as it did in Trump's first term
when the courts blocked a similar proposal that only involved Medicare.
This did not stop Trump from claiming that drug costs would fall by 30 to 80% quote,
almost immediately.
And by the time he announced the policy
at the White House on Monday, it was up to 90%.
Pretty neat.
What do you think?
Has Trump found the one weird trick
to finally make prescription drugs affordable?
He has not.
It is confounding that other countries pay far less
for drugs that in the US our companies develop them
and then charge us far more for them.
But as Trump knows, as many have pointed out,
this policy won't solve that problem.
It's a way for him to claim he's doing something
before the courts can shut him down
and gives him a rare opportunity
to be on the right side of,
I'm not gonna say right side of a policy,
but the right side of the thrust of an issue
and be, and say, I'm fighting for the working people
in this country, but the courts are stopping me.
They won't let me, they won't let me solve immigration.
They won't let me bring down healthcare costs.
So I don't really like that.
But meanwhile, what's gonna happen
is this thing will get stuck.
And the problem of extremely high prescription drug costs will remain and Trump has been an obstacle to rules like allowing Medicare negotiate for more drugs.
He's obviously does not appreciate the fact that many of the drugs that will start coming down and cost the next couple of years will be coming down and cost because of the Biden administration.
He will either deny that or take credit for that while without helping the policy.
So that's where I'm at.
Yeah, I mean, sir, compliment sandwich.
You're good at identifying problems.
Yeah.
You just gotta work on the solution part.
And as far as I can tell,
Congress is working on a pretty big bill.
There's a bunch of healthcare stuff in there.
You could talk to them about putting into law
things that bring down drug prices
if you wanna actually do it.
Probably help the legal case though
John Thune said it would be very controversial to do this. So he's not sure
No, they don't know they don't want to know they don't they don't want to do this
No, they do not want to do price controls for drugs
They don't even want to do negotiating for lower prices for drugs
That is why we don't have it except for a small number of drugs because Republicans have stood in the way of allowing the government
To negotiate for better drug prices for
fucking ever. Now you think that the President of the United States especially this
one has some sway over what Congress does or doesn't do because he has forced
them, encouraged them, pressured them to do other things that he really cares
about but we'll see we'll see if this one is one of them. Well it is worth
saying that he is after a hundred days, he has signed five bills into law.
He's the least effective legislative opening
to an administration ever.
So he has just kind of ignored Congress where he can
and now Congress is stuck on this,
we'll get to it, this budget bill.
But he hasn't really been able to get Congress
to do what he wants.
Yeah, let's talk about the budget bill.
House Republicans finally released details
on their proposed Medicaid cuts Sunday night,
and the Congressional Budget Office estimates
that their plan would cause nearly nine million people
to lose their health insurance who rely on Medicaid.
Believe it or not, of all the different proposals
Republicans were considering, this was the one
that the more moderate House members supported,
which means that, of course,
the hardliners aren't happy with it.
They want deeper cuts and more people to lose their health insurance. Chip Roy, course, the hardliners aren't happy with it. They want deeper cuts and more people
to lose their health insurance.
Chip Roy, one of those hardliners, tweeted,
I sure hope House and Senate leadership
are coming up with a backup plan.
So the Republicans who support this plan
are trying to sell it as modest,
common sense changes to Medicaid,
because who could be against requiring people
on Medicaid to work and make sure that they're eligible?
Levitt, what's the best response to that?
How should Democrats handle this fight
over the next few months?
They want to take healthcare away from millions of people
to pay for tax cuts for the rich.
They are hiding behind the idea
that they're just doing work requirements.
The vast majority of people on Medicaid already work
or they have a disability or they're in very poor health
or they're caregivers or they're at school.
You're talking about 8% of people on Medicaid that are adults are people that might be subject
to work requirements.
What ends up happening is they are so afraid of the politics of just coming out and outright
cutting Medicaid by tens of billions, if not hundreds of billions of dollars.
They're creating a kind of workaround to do it using paperwork.
What ends up happening is a bunch of people that are taking care of kids, working,
going to and from their job,
maybe don't have great transportation,
maybe don't have internet at home,
get stuck in fucking paperwork.
This is a bill to use paperwork to take away healthcare
from millions of people who are eligible to receive it
so that Donald Trump and his friends can get a tax cut.
And on top of that, they wanna add copays
for the working poor in this country. That's what we need to do.
We need to make millions of people
who are barely getting by pay 35 to a hundred dollars more
to go to the doctor so that they can cut taxes
for Elon Musk, for Donald Trump,
for all of their rich friends.
And the end result of this is not just
that those people get hurt.
The rural hospitals will close,
nurses will lose their jobs,
healthcare providers will lose their jobs.
Millions of people will be negatively impacted by this.
Not for any reason, not to,
and to Chip Roy's point correctly,
not to do any reforms to the program, right?
Not to do any changes in the long-term,
just to create a kind of bureaucratic fuck,
like a bureaucratic cluster fuck.
Just a-
What's a bureaucratic fuck?
Bureaucratic fuck? It doesn't sound too fun.. What's a bureaucratic fuck? Bureaucratic fuck?
That sounds too fun.
Yeah, I don't know, you gotta get in a different line.
The red tape, get out of there.
I'll tell you in the wrong line.
You gotta go to the other line.
Oh, I just got dozed.
But it's awful, it's awful.
Yeah, like, it's just such a sneaky way.
And they'll of course be like, well, work requirement,
it's fine, people should, if they're eligible,
they should be fine.
It's like, well, there's a reason that the CBO scored it,
that that many people would lose their health insurance
and that you'd actually save $800 billion
because it assumes that a bunch of people
wouldn't be able to do the paperwork
and would just be kicked off the program.
And the copays would also push some people
out of the program too because-
Or just won't get the healthcare they need.
Right, and they're thinking of copays for like,
I think it's, you know, if you're between 100%
of the poverty line and like 135 or 150%,
that's the band where they want you to do copays.
Because those are the people, those incomes,
where you're just above the poverty line and working,
those are the people they wanna really fuck.
It's people, it's like, it really is.
That's who they wanna create the bureaucratic fuck for.
It's people that they're basically,
to give hundreds of thousands of dollars
to the richest people in our society,
they want a family that's barely getting by to say,
you know what, we were gonna have,
we're not gonna go out to dinner this month
because we have to do a copay now.
That's it, that's where the money went.
We don't get to go out because Donald Trump
and these group of fucking assholes decided
that the richest people on earth deserve
just a little bit more take home.
They tried work requirements in Arkansas
and almost immediately like 18,000 people lost their Medicaid
who were eligible, who were like,
many of them just couldn't work, right?
Like you said, these are people with disabilities, These are seniors, people who are way past retirement.
It's a terrible policy, but we have to be very careful. It can be sneaky popular.
The work requirements were surprisingly popular and a challenge around the child tax credit, which did not have work requirements.
So it's just a thing I think Democrats should be mindful of, which is just frame this
as exactly what you said, big picture.
It's a cut, throwing people off Medicaid
to pay for a tax cut for the richest people in the world
and not get into a fight about work requirements,
I don't think.
No, that's what I think.
I think you're talking about it in terms of people
with disabilities and seniors,
that this is what they're talking about.
But I know you're absolutely right,
that it just, it sounds like a thing.
It sounds reasonable, it pulls well,
it's just something to be mindful of. I also just think one other, and one other that like it just, it sounds like a- It sounds reasonable, it pulls well, it's just something to be mindful of.
I also just think one other,
and one other part of it too,
is that you'll start to see like rural hospitals,
nursing homes talking about some of these rules
and what it will do.
And rural hospitals, there was a great,
the kind of sort of screed in the times
by somebody that runs a small rural hospital in Colorado,
they are barely able to stay open.
They are the closest hospital within, you know,
a hundred miles in any direction.
They are barely able to stay alive
because this fixed cost are the fixed costs.
Running a hospital costs a certain amount of money.
If a bunch of people that were on Medicaid
no longer have Medicaid,
a bunch of patients they no longer get to see,
hospitals like that will just close down.
Hundreds of them already have.
And that will just leave whole swaths of the country
that by the way, voted for Trump in huge numbers
with even bigger healthcare shortfalls,
with even fewer local hospitals.
They have to go even further to get healthcare.
I think that's part of it too.
And by the way, this is if this proposal is the one
that ends up in the final bill,
because we heard Chip Roy already.
There's some Senate Republicans too, who are like, we want deeper Medicaid cuts.
So it could get worse.
Also we haven't included the push to let the Affordable Care Act credits expire, which
now as CBO said, okay, it's nine million lose their health insurance under Medicaid with
this proposal.
If you include letting the Affordable Care Act subsidies expire, that's another four million
and ends up being 13 million people losing their house care,
13 and a half million.
And there's another, there's a proposal in here
that's also just about making people that are eligible
for Obamacare less likely to get it
through more onerous paperwork.
A lot of this really is just about making life worse
for people who access these services
because they know that people just screw up. We all screw up, we all screw up this kind of these services because they know that people will just screw up.
We all screw up.
We all screw up this kind of forms.
And I know that people will be like,
oh, I don't know, the insurance companies screw me.
So I just, you know, I couldn't get my healthcare
that I wanted and I'm mad and I don't know who to blame.
Right?
That's what they're assuming.
One more, one more populist proposal
that Trump and some Republicans keep flirting with
is raising taxes on the wealthy.
We talked on the Friday show about how Trump floated
to Mike Johnson, the idea of a new tax bracket
for folks making over two and a half million dollars a year.
But he's now once again backed away from that idea,
posting on Truth Social that, quote,
Republicans should probably not raise taxes,
but that he's, quote, okay if they do.
This is like the second or third time he has floated this
or it has been floated and then walked back.
What do you think keeps happening here?
He wants the headline.
He wants someone to report.
Just like the drug pricing thing.
Yeah, and he's never actually gonna do it
in a million years and he knows that.
And like, he also is smart enough to know politically
that all of these Republicans have signed pledges
to various interest groups to never raise taxes.
And so it's dead on arrival,
but he looks like the reasonable guy.
Right, the other, right.
So he can propose this.
There's also ways they could just extend
the Trump tax cuts just for people making
under $400,000 a year,
which might not violate that pledge.
Those groups will score it at base.
Of course, but regardless, like this is a non-starter.
To me, I think the more real proposal like this becomes,
the more clear it will be to Trump
that no bill can pass at all so that he can get the win.
Because as of right now,
it's not clear how these Venn diagrams overlap.
Because you're right,
there are a bunch of people that want steeper cuts.
There are all the people that are not,
you know, you have Josh Hawley in the Times
doing a fucking Tribune of the Working Man thing,
talking about how he's for no Medicaid cuts at all.
So, you know, this compromise proposal
isn't enough for Chip Roy.
It also goes very far for a bunch of vulnerable
House Republicans already.
Yeah, yeah.
And then that's not, and we're not gonna talk about it now,
don't worry, but the people are very upset
with the SALT proposal.
Well, can we talk about it for one second?
No, so boring.
Well, it's not baked yet, so we'll have a couple more bites
at that apple.
Yes, we will.
The only thing that's interesting about SALT to me. The only thing that's interesting about salt to me-
Josh Gottheimer over here.
The only thing that's interesting about salt
is so people understand this is a giveaway
to rich people in high-tech states.
If they do nothing, they go back to the higher salt limits,
which are better for, which is what these Republicans
in these blue states want.
And so they have a lot of power, that's all.
Yeah, it's real salt burn.
Yeah.
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That's squarespace.com slash crooked. One other topic that Trump touched on during his drug pricing
announcement on Monday, his plan to welcome a new group of refugees to America, white South Africans.
That's right, the same administration that stopped accepting most refugees and is currently asking welcome a new group of refugees to America, white South Africans.
That's right, the same administration that stopped accepting most refugees and is currently
asking the Supreme Court to let them strip legal status from hundreds of thousands of
Venezuelans, Haitians, Afghans, and others who fled dangerous places just admitted the
first group of 49 Afrikaners this week.
Here's what Trump said when pushed on this by reporters on Monday.
Why are you creating an expedited path into the country for the Connors but not others?
Because they're being killed and we don't want to see people be killed. It's a genocide
that's taking place that you people don't want to write about. Farmers are being killed.
They happen to be white, but whether they're white or black makes no difference to me.
And the newspapers and the media,
and the television media doesn't even talk about it.
If it were the other way around, they'd talk about it.
That would be the only story they'd talk about.
Tommy, is there a genocide going on in South Africa
we don't know about?
That, the white genocide line used to be like
stuff you'd see on the Daily Stormer,
like the most far right, super racist, agitprop.
And now it's just coming out of the mouth
of the president of the United States,
who seems to think it's real.
Oh yeah.
I mean, these white South Africans we're talking about
are primarily descendants of Dutch colonial era settlers
who then put in place the apartheid system in 1948.
And Trump seems to think that these people
are the real victims.
And now in January, he put forward an executive order
that halted pending and future refugee entries
into the United States.
So the refugee program is just completely stopped
except for white South Africans who,
I think 50 of them just arrived at Dulles
and were greeted by the deputy secretary of state who will then, then they will then get to go meet
with Trump at the White House.
So like literally red carpet getting rolled out
for this group of people.
For the YouTube, just let's just throw up the family guy
okay, not okay meme, anybody know what I'm talking about?
That's what's going on here.
It is unbelievable that we're at the,
like we're at the,
we're at the letting in the villains
from Lethal Weapon 2 phase of Donald Trump's
authoritarian rise.
The same day that there's a headline
that they are repealing temporary protected status
for Afghans, like people who were our allies
in Afghanistan against the Taliban.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's insane.
I mean, white people make up 7% of the population
of South Africa, and they own something like 2 thirds
to 75% of the land.
And according to the World Bank, white South Africans
earn nearly three times the average wage of black workers
in South Africa.
So the proximate thing that seems to have set off Trump is the South African government
passed a law that could allow the government to take land away from people, including without
compensation.
But most experts you see say it's either never used or rarely used and really just kind of
clarifies powers the government already had.
But it is quite obvious that Elon Musk is in his ear whispering about this stuff and has been for a while.
But also this got on Trump's radar in the first term.
I remember Tucker Carlson did a segment on it
and then Trump tweeted something
and he like demanded that Mike Pompeo
launch some investigation and it's now coming back.
And then we figured out, everyone was like,
wait, where'd this come from?
And then people went and saw
that it would have been on Tucker Carlson the night before.
Tucker primetime.
It's also just like, it's a small group of people.
Fundamentally, this is just a signal
to like the worst elements of our society
that Donald Trump is on their side,
that he hears them, he sees them,
that he has their back and they should have his back.
You storm the Capitol if you're a white South African.
Absolutely.
Exactly, it's the same thing.
Meanwhile, like I think we talked about this last week,
one of the people they sent to CICOT
was like someone whose refugee status
had already been certified by the United States.
They were already a settled refugee.
Yeah.
It's weird that Elon Musk has just kind of gone away.
Yeah, I was just thinking about that.
He was omnipresent for what, two months?
And now he's just gone.
I think he saw the, I thought about this the other day
and I started scrolling through his Twitter feed.
Is he still posting?
His tweets aren't... He still posts them,
but it's much more about, like,
Tesla, Starlink, Rockets,
and then he retweets, like, MAGA stuff once in a while,
but not a lot of original MAGA-like politics posts from Elon.
I'd love to know why.
I think he's probably like these people...
I saw the writing on the wall in terms of, like, his popularity.
I'm sure that call with Tesla where he's like,
I'm gonna be focusing more on Tesla,
like that company's there.
Yeah, but he's lied on every earnings call
for like a decade now.
He'd be like, self-driving cars are coming tomorrow,
self-driving robot car, helicopter cars,
you know, he's just full of shit.
But I wonder if Trump or somebody slapped him down
and told him to stop being so publicly out there
because his unfavorabilities had gone up so much.
Yeah, that's possible.
He also was burning the candle at both ends.
Yes.
It can only go on for so long.
That's very true.
He needs a rest.
One of the other big storylines on immigration we haven't had a chance to talk about yet,
White House is considering suspending habeas corpus, a person's right to challenge their
own detention, which has been considered a basic human right since the time of the Magna Carta.
The Constitution says that habeas can only be suspended when the country faces invasion
or rebellion, though it still doesn't say who can do it.
And it's only happened a few times in our history, most notably during the Civil War
and during the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.
But Stephen Miller told reporters on Friday that Trump is considering it based on quote,
whether the courts do the right thing.
In other words, if the courts keep upholding
people's challenges to their detention,
the president might just stop letting them go to court at all.
I mean, this feels both constitutionally egregious
and just hard enough to understand
that maybe it doesn't break through.
And also, is it a threat?
Is it real?
How does this work?
I don't know, what do you guys think?
Yeah, he did it on Friday.
It does sometimes feel like they do this
sort of chum in the water thing.
I also, it's not a comfort to think,
oh, they're not actually planning to do this.
They are using this to threaten the courts
to kind of keep the courts more in line
or to second guess their decisions to kind of keep the courts more in line or to second
guess their decisions to push back on the Trump administration by saying that if the
courts go too far to try to limit Trump, they will ignore the courts altogether, which is,
you know, like a very old dance.
But just the idea that one of the chief principal advisors to the President of the United States
is going out to the cameras and saying,
everyone will be a Kilmar-Brayo-Garcia
if you're not careful.
It's like very dangerous.
It's very scary.
Yeah, I mean, on the merits, Trump keeps telling us
that border crossings are down 99%.
So the invasion is not going so good.
This isn't D-Day.
I'm not landing on the beaches here.
Our intelligence community,
Trump's intelligence community said
that the Maduro government does not in fact
direct or control Trenderagua.
So the entire pretext for the Alien Enemies Act
has been shredded.
Which was confirmed by a Trump appointed judge
in Texas already.
Yeah, and it was, they declassified the assessment.
So I can't tell if this is like Stephen Miller
doing his fascist dirty talk, you know?
He's just kind of getting revved up
for a big night out on the town.
But if they suspended habeas corpus,
it would be the end of our democracy as we know it.
Yes, and I think they know that.
And I think it is a threat to the courts.
And also they have to know that in the original decision,
the five four decision on CICOT and the Alien Enemies Act,
the Supreme Court said, you know, all nine of us, of course,
know that everyone has habeas.
And it's just a question of where they can exercise their habeas rights and is it in
the wrong jurisdiction.
That was the only split in the court, like should it be in Texas or DC.
But they all agreed that everyone has habeas.
So by suspending habeas corpus, now keep in mind the historical times when they've done
this that I mentioned, in every instance instance Congress came behind the president and said, okay, we're going to vote on this
and say that it's okay for you to suspend habeas corpus because there's a little gray
area whether the president can do it or whether Congress needs to do it.
So you would have, if this happened, you would have Trump do it.
The court has already said it's wrong.
Congress would not rubber stamp it.
So it would be the end. I mean, it would be the end of democracy. And at that point, you'd have to say like, law enforcement,
military, like it would be up to them. Do you want to actually abide by this unconstitutional order?
I mean, that's just, it's the worst it can get.
The interment of Japanese Americans, also a moral stain in our country. And the civil war,
I would consider extenuating circumstances.
The courts are open, the courts can handle
what is going on in this country, right?
habeas corporate, the courts are functioning,
the courts can handle what is happening.
There was a bill in Congress to make the immigration courts
work faster and more smoothly by hiring more people
and reforming the system, which Trump personally
stopped from passing.
They have stood in the way of having the courts work
even more effectively to deal with this problem.
I also, there's one part of this that I don't think,
I haven't seen people talking about enough,
which is how dangerous suspending habeas corpus is
for law enforcement.
That if you send a signal to the country,
that if you are arrested,
there's not a guarantee that you will get to go
before a judge, that you will get to the benefits
of the American judicial system, of our constitution,
that raises the stakes for every single arrest.
It makes it more dangerous for police.
It makes our whole country a more dangerous place.
And they are playing with this shit
because they have no respect for it.
They don't care.
They've never lived in a world without habeas corpus,
but they are, Stephen Miller is just a little-
He's just read a lot of books.
He's just, maybe. But he's just they are, Stephen Miller is just a little- He's just read a lot of books.
Maybe, but he's just, you know, he's like a little punk.
Well, all the wrong books.
Yeah, yeah, right.
We've all read books, he's read different books.
He's read different books.
He's an actual fascist.
He is a threat to democracy, for sure,
and the existence of this country.
Last thing on Executive Branch Power Grabs,
on Friday, Newark Mayor, Roz Baraka,
was arrested outside a new ICE detention center
Run by a private prison conglomerate and expected to house up to a thousand migrants at a time
Three Democratic members of Congress from New Jersey went to the facility as part of their oversight duties
While Bacara has been raising concerns that the lockup is operating illegally because it doesn't have a valid certificate of occupancy
Other New Jersey officials were raising the same concern. So the three representatives had
scheduled a tour of the facility, which they can. It's part of their oversight power, and they were
allowed in after waiting for an hour and a half to get into the facility, but they were allowed in.
Baraka was not allowed in. He was told to step outside.
He did like he was asked to a public area
outside the facility.
And at that point, he saw some of the federal agents,
some of whom were masked on the phone with someone.
And then they came outside and they arrested him.
So newly minted US attorney for New Jersey, Alina Habba,
formerly Trump's worst personal lawyer, it's quite a contest, confirmed and essentially celebrated the arrest in a post.
Baraka was taken to a separate ICE facility in Newark and released a few hours later.
Tricia McLaughlin, the spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security,
then the next day on Saturday said that members of Congress who were there could face assault charges for what she called attacks on ICE agents,
that the actual video footage,
including the body cam footage
that was on the federal agents,
doesn't show the agents being assaulted
by the members of Congress,
one of whom, Bonnie Watson Coleman, is 80 years old.
Antifa super soldier Bonnie Watson Coleman.
It seems to me like, my take on this
is that the administration has been looking
for any excuse to arrest democratic politicians
They decided to make their move here
We heard Tom Homan talk about this last week when someone asked him and he's like just wait just wait to see what's coming
Because they he was asked if are you gonna arrest democratic officials? So that's what it seemed like to me
What do you guys yeah, they want and they want to fight with
Liberals they want to fight with sanctuary cities. They want to fight with Democrats.
I do feel like this was quite an overreach.
I mean, Trump might want this fight.
It does seem like they're leaning into it,
suggesting you're going to arrest even more members
of Congress, reflects that fact.
But just like the mayor, he was just on the sidewalk.
Was in the facility.
The guy was just chilling out.
Yeah, so when the mayor was interviewed about this,
he basically said, you know,
he went there with these members of Congress
or he was meeting them there.
They go in, he is not allowed to join them,
but he is invited inside the facility,
like on the other side of the fence,
and he's just waiting there, right?
And then at some point they did ask him to leave,
and he said they asked him several times, which I respect,
and then he walked out.
He's not, he wasn't inside the facility when they decide to arrest him.
And they keep saying,
and then all these right-wing kind of goons are saying that,
you know, they're doing it ironically,
but not ironically,
that this was an attempt to storm the facility.
But the members of Congress had already been inside
as they are legally required to be,
to do their oversight duties.
And then we're leaving.
I do think there's just a, I do want to just,
there is a kind of in the way that Fox News
and others have been putting out the body cam footage,
they've been really focusing on the Monica McIver.
And I do think what they're counting on is
there is a black woman who is furious
about what is happening.
And they are like all these headlines like,
oh, she was like bullying her way into the facility.
And they're kind of basically counting on like,
oh, there's a group of angry black people
and therefore they must have been doing something wrong
and that their audience just won't like seeing it.
And even then you can hear her say,
he just assaulted me, he just assaulted me
because the ICE agents put hands on her as well,
as well as Bonnie Coleman.
But I think it's extremely dangerous
because this is how they want to escalate things,
because so it's peaceful,
then they decide they're going to arrest the mayor of Newark
and there's a bunch of protesters anyway,
and then the members of Congress are like,
why are you arresting the mayor?
And so then there's chaos and there's,
and then there's people pushing
because they've got the mayor.
And so then there's the protesters.
And so they're counting on the fact
that when they overreach like this, there's going pushing because they've got the mayor. And so then there's the protesters. And so they're counting on the fact that when they overreach like this, there's
going to be a response and the response is going to be either yelling, screaming,
moving, trying to protect the mayor like they did, and then they're going to get
footage and whether people believe the administration story or not, because
they're just going to lie about it, they're going to confuse enough people.
So people are going to be like, nah.
And you saw this in some of their initial
headlines, it was like arrested at a protest.
And it makes you think that there was like a
protest inside the facility and they shouldn't
have been there and maybe they were just having
a sit in or something.
And then you have to, you have to really
unspool the story to be like, it wasn't a
fucking, it wasn't even a fucking protest.
And you have to kind of dig into it.
They were already inside.
They were leaving.
They were trying to get out of there. Yeah, right. They were fucking leaving.
And the lies that Trisha McLaughlin,
she is fucking terrible.
Everything she says is a lie.
It's relentless, it's constant, she is just,
it's out of control.
I mean, I think this seems like it's going to result
in a lawsuit.
I hope Baraka sues the hell out of them for this.
Hopefully we'll get to the bottom of who made the phone call
or the decision to arrest him and why and what email
or text traffic there might've been.
But like, I'm, I agree with you
that this is incredibly racialized,
especially the way it's being aired
in the kind of Fox News media, the sort of mega media.
But I don't think anyone wants to set a precedent
of arresting members of
Congress or elected officials for just doing like lawful oversight.
It seems like a real problem.
And I just, you know, there's also news this weekend that Trump is trying to get another
20,000 ICE agents and he's just gonna start pulling them from other departments and other
parts of the federal government.
And you know, you worry about an agency here
that's got a bunch of federal agents
that, you know, Trump has pulled
from different parts of the government
and they're wearing masks and, you know,
taking students off the street in Tufts
and now they're arresting members of Congress.
Like it's not, it's not good.
And now you don't support COVID protocols?
Well, I'll do the man's thing.
Like they just tried to take away federal funding
from Columbia, from Harvard.
One of their demands is to stop allowing mass, right?
Because they view it as such a kind of security threat
to have people in mass at these protests.
There is no justification
for having masked police officers at this facility,
masked federal officers at this facility,
other than to provide impunity
for either unlawful or deeply kind of troubling conduct at best.
I mean, there is a moment where this officer just gets in MacIver's face, and she's clearly
shocked that a federal official would treat a member of Congress this way.
And Benny Thompson put out a statement
which I thought was good.
He said, this is how they treat members of Congress
when the cameras are rolling.
Imagine what they'll do.
He goes on to say, imagine what they'll do
when it's just a normal person
and the cameras aren't there.
And it's happening all over the country.
All right, when we get back from the break,
you're gonna hear Tommy's conversation with Rob Sand,
the Democrat running for governor in Iowa,
really important race.
But before we do that, a reminder,
our friend Amanda Littman's great new book,
When We're In Charge, The Next Generation's Guide
to Leadership is out now from Crooked Media Reads.
The book is a manual for leadership on your own terms.
No fluff, no gatekeeping, no losing yourself in the process,
just real tools, honest lessons, and the kind of clarity
that younger leaders actually need.
Get your copy of When We're In Charge
at crooked.com slash books now
or wherever you get your books.
Also, Love It or Leave It just added new live show dates
in LA from June to October.
So if you're in LA, come say hi.
Grab tickets at Crooked.com slash events.
Also, a tease for listeners in DC.
Oh yeah.
World Pride's coming up.
And if you'll be there, mark your calendars for June 6th.
We are working on a great event that you will not wanna miss. That's right. World Pride's coming up, and if you'll be there, mark your calendars for June 6th.
We are working on a great event
that you will not wanna miss.
That's right.
More to come.
Keep an eye out for event details
and how to get tickets.
It's a tease, but it's a good one.
It's a tease.
It's a tease, but it's a good one.
It's a tease.
It's a tease.
It's a tease.
It's a tease.
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Download the Rocket Money app today and tell them you heard about them from our show. My guest today is the only Democrat currently holding statewide
office in Iowa. He is also, as of today, officially running for the governor of
Iowa in 2026. Rob Sand, great to see you. Good to see you too, Tommy. Thanks for having me.
It's a blast to have you and we'll talk about how long we've known each other
and how exciting this is.
So Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds, she's decided to not run for reelection. She had a long
career in politics. She leaves office though with the highest disapproval rating of any
governor in the country. At the same time, Democrats haven't won a governor's race in
Iowa since 2006. We haven't won a Senate race since 2008. Why are you the guy who can change all that?
Bottom line, I think, is people get to know me.
They like what they hear.
They like what they see.
They like what they say.
So for folks who want to learn more, it's RobSand.com.
But look, I think most people in the United States right now,
if you're like, OK, there's a candidate for office
who was born and raised in a small town where you had
to go a long way to get anywhere bigger.
They like to hunt and fish, they own guns, including handguns, and they're in church
every Sunday and it really means something to them.
I mean, what percent of people would say, oh, that's a Republican?
That's me.
Like, I just described myself.
And so I think that that matters to a lot of people in the state of Iowa.
We have a good chunk of our population that's in rural areas, in small towns.
They want to know that their lives are understood by the person they're voting for.
But it's bigger than that too because a lot of people slice and dice, they're like, oh,
they're too judgmental of those voters.
We are not going to get them back as though, you know, we're all different. But a lot of the people in bigger cities in the suburbs in Iowa came from those small
towns and they, some of them were not excited to leave.
They left because of economic opportunities that were better somewhere else.
But they too want to know that somebody like understands that part of small town Iowa.
Tom Vilsack was the last candidate for governor in Iowa
who was a Democrat who had real small town roots.
He had been a mayor in Mount Pleasant.
And so I think that that is an indicator
that that does make a difference for people.
And then I wanna talk about your job currently.
So you're the state auditor.
That means you're the only Democrat who's managed to win
a statewide race in Iowa in a while.
I want to talk about how you did that, how you won,
but also just start with, give us a quick overview
of what an auditor does.
Like is it, are you dozing your way through the state house?
What does this mean?
Do you create as much chaos as possible
for a few months and then disappear?
I think that's what dozing does.
Good question.
So in this, it's actually a really good question
because most states have a auditor,
but it's not necessarily the same job in every state.
In the state of Iowa, we are the taxpayer's watchdog.
We audit state government every year,
a financial statement audit.
We also do public corruption investigations,
which is how I got interested in the office
because I had been doing most of Iowa's public corruption prosecution.
And then we also, as of 2019, in my first term, we do government efficiency promotion.
So we have a government efficiency program that is so good at actually saving money that
it has been copied into other states.
Pretty good.
Pretty good.
Yeah.
And it's really about, at the end of the day,
actually helping the people who are there in cities, counties, and school districts
find new and better ways to save money, which I think is an effective way to save it. You
need a little planning. You need a little thoughtfulness, a little bit of working ahead
to try to get people into the place where they can have
an impact by giving them some ideas and trusting them to do the right thing to some degree.
So you don't just like storm into government buildings with a bunch of like 19 year old
coders take over everything, maybe fire some people, kick them out. That's not how it goes?
Not yet. I haven't done that yet.
Okay. Sorry, big balls. You're not moving to Des Moines. Okay, so Rob the the the change in Iowa politics from
You know when we met in 2004 or even 2008 when Barack Obama won statewide 2012 we won
We beat Mitt Romney in Iowa to Obama did
To sort of the political landscape now. It's kind of hard to wrap your head around
What do you think changed that shifted Iowa from,
you know, blue to red and how have you managed
to buck that trend and how will you do it again in 2026?
Sure, so I wanna challenge the premise of your question,
if I may, a little bit.
Challenge away.
And let's answer this question instead,
because let's acknowledge, Iowa is one of the slowest
changing states in the entire country, right?
So we have just a population base that is incredibly steady.
It's getting a little bit older.
We are not doing a good job of bringing new people in.
And at the same time, we are losing some younger folks, but it's all very slow.
And so it's like, Iowa didn't change overnight.
It's the same people.
And so the question that is better asked to describe what happened in Iowa is how were Barack Obama and Donald Trump the same? And the answer
to that question is pretty straightforward. They were both outsiders who challenged their
party's establishment and said, I'm going to do politics differently. And keep in mind that the
Democratic Party in 16 and 20 and in 24 nominated the opposite of that.
Whether or not you think that was a good thing or a bad thing, the nominees of the Democratic
Party for the last three presidential elections have been people who are insiders, for lack
of a better word.
There's a good chunk of Iowans, and this is actually, this is the rural area that I come
from in Northeast Iowa.
It's the driftless area of Northeast Iowa, Southeast Minnesota, Southwest Wisconsin.
It is the biggest hub of Obama Trump swim counties
in the United States of America by far.
And Iowa had twice as many of those counties as
any other state.
Second place was Wisconsin.
We had like 30, they had, I think about 20, 15 or 20.
So I just think that, and this is the bottom line on so much of this and so much of why
I do this, there are a lot of people out there, and I count myself in them, who don't want
to be forced to be a Democrat or a Republican.
They look at this country, they look at what we learned about in public school growing
up and they look at the contrast with our politics right now and they're
like, wait a minute, I thought this was supposed to be about grand compromises and moving the
people forward and solving problems, not just tug of war. And what it feels like so often to
so many people right now is it's just tug of war. That's the heart of the idea in my announcement
video. I say, I don't want Iowa to be bluer or redder.
I want it to be truer and better.
Like, what are we doing here?
Why does this have to be a fight
about what color hat you wear?
It should be about what's the right thing to do
and can we do the right thing?
Yeah, I mean, I'll never forget waking up
the morning of the 2016 election
and looking at a map of Iowa and the counties that shifted.
And you're right, the counties you're describing,
sort of the eastern edge of the state,
the river counties that were pretty reliably democratic,
completely switched to being Republicans.
And you're right, it's not like everybody moved
and they were replaced with more conservative,
like alternative versions of themselves.
They were persuaded to vote a different direction.
I think you're right.
That's an opportunity there that we can get them back.
I do also agree that people constantly
talk about politics in terms of kind
of like an ideological left-right continuum.
I agree with you that like Barack Obama,
even though we think of him now as a two-term president,
he is someone who ran against the traditional politics
of Washington against Hillary Clinton, by the way.
And Donald Trump, you're right, he was like the consummate outsider who was someone
who is seen as so outside the system that people actually mocked it and then
voters said to us actually we hate the system as much as he does that's right
we're gonna vote for him now yeah they were literally like oh all of you hate
him thanks that's all I need to know you know why would I why would I spend more
time paying attention to politics it's awful I'd like know, you know? Right. Why would I spend more time paying attention to politics?
It's awful.
I'd like to go hang out with my kids.
All of you who have never done anything for me
hate this guy.
Perfect.
I'm all set.
Right.
He's my guy.
So let's talk about Trump for a minute.
So his entire economic policy in Trump 2.0 is tariffs.
The size of the tariffs, the countries he's tariffing,
like that changes by the hour.
But it is his primary focus is to put in place trade
barriers. What do you think the impact of a
protracted trade war with China or I don't know,
name your country, would be for Iowa in
particular?
Brutal. I'm with Chuck Grassley. He is the only
member of Congress that has had the guts to say
it from Iowa out of the two senators and the four
that we have. He said, hey, if this works, I'll be saying amen, hallelujah. I don't think it's
going to work. The United States exports agriculture. That is a huge piece of it. You really can't
answer in a trade war without putting tariffs on agriculture. China understands this. We've had a special relationship,
Iowa agriculture, we, has had a special relationship
with them for a long time.
But in the first Trump administration,
they realized the volatility here
and they built what is now the single largest new port
in the world in Peru to ship Brazilian agriculture products
as a substitute for American agriculture products.
They literally build it from scratch.
And so in the first administration, they
basically built this spigot.
Now all they got to do is turn it on.
And so the threat to Iowa agriculture here is a
much larger threat I think than it was in the
first Trump administration, where it was kind of
like, well, what are you really going to do?
Take the Brazilian exports all the way down
around Tierra del Fuego and then up? Like, we feel good about where we are. It's
a different question now. That has an impact too in Aberdeen, Washington. It has hundreds
of jobs in their port. That's where most of American agriculture, corn and soybeans from
Iowa flows through, or pork as it's on its way to China right now. That ramification isn't just going to be confined to Iowa, it's going to be nationwide.
The other sort of broad economic challenge I hear a lot about Iowa is that a lot of Iowa
businesses are really struggling to hire workers and then retain those workers. Why is that? And
what do you think the governor's role is in kind of fixing that problem?
There's a couple things there.
Number one, you know, Iowans are pretty welcoming people.
They don't really care much about, at the end of the day, they're not particularly concerned
with who you are as long as you treat people, I think, decently and you're trying to be
productive, trying to give something to society.
But our state laws lately have not been welcoming to people. It's been the opposite of that.
It's hard to grow a state when you tell a good chunk of people, like you
aren't welcome here because it's not just those people that you're making
feel unwelcome.
It's also people who, you know, like if, if you're concerned about how the
gay community is treated in the state of Iowa, well, if you're someone who wants
to have kids someday and you're not Well, if you're someone who wants to have kids
someday and you don't care about who they love as
long as they treat people decently and they're
trying to be a productive member of society, you
might think twice about being here.
I think that's crazy.
We need people in the state of Iowa.
And I think most Iowans agree.
We need people in the state of Iowa.
And I don't think that they like the way state government sort of picks and chooses there.
So I think that's a tremendous piece of it.
I think the other piece is that we aren't doing a good job of really building the state.
State government is not doing a good job of making the state attractive.
We are 49th for public land.
We are 49th for the economy.
It's hard to get excited about a place where the economy is not doing great.
And hey, to boot, if you're not doing great economically, it's also hard to go out there and enjoy the outdoors.
Yeah, absolutely.
A couple more political questions and I'll let you go.
Forever, not forever, for several years, decades, The Iowa caucuses kicked off the presidential primary process.
Then the Biden team made a bunch of changes.
They switched things up.
South Carolina went first last cycle.
We don't know what exactly the schedule is going to look like in 2028.
Do you think there's any chance that on the Democratic side,
Iowa might get back to its cherished first place in the process or is that something that people
are moving on from?
You know, I don't know.
I am not well connected to the DNC.
I've never been to a convention before.
I would sure hope that they would do that.
I think that would be smart.
I think by removing Iowa, they said to a great
number of people outside of the state of Iowa
that we're less interested in your opinions.
Right? And they did it. It was so weird Iowa that were less interested in your opinions, right?
And they did it, it was so weird because they were like, oh, well, we want
states that are more competitive and more diverse, but South Carolina is
less competitive and New Hampshire is less diverse.
So what is it really?
Um, I, I don't know the answer to that question, uh, but I know that in
Iowa we're going to follow state law and I think it would be smart for the DNC
to, uh, put Iowa back in charge on that.
Yeah, well, I definitely think, I'm not sure,
maybe they'll do some sort of rotation, you know,
get a first four, maybe move stuff around.
Yeah.
But I agree, like, you know, my experience in Iowa
was people took it very seriously and it was fun
to go there and watch the process happen and I hope
it's a part of that process in some way.
Rob, people have been confusing us, um, uh,
making jokes about us looking alike.
I was wondering if we were going to go there.
Yeah, we're going to have to, because people are
going to go there for us.
Uh, I've been tagged in your announcement video
about 6 trillion times today alone.
Sorry.
Sorry for, you know, honestly, I should have
told you that this was it.
Cause then you would have known like, I just
not, not going to open Twitter today.
Right.
Go to, could have been helpful. been this is here's my question given that fact if you win can I be governor for one full
day we could announce it or we could do like the movie Dave and you just get a
day off let me get let me give that some thought and get back to you on that I
can't make any promises today I'd want to think through the legal ram. I also wouldn't want to promise you something that for some reason the Iowa
Constitution says we can't do. I think you'd have to be Lieutenant Governor first.
That works for me. Is that an offer? Am I your running mate now?
You're going to move to Iowa?
Sure. I love living in Des Moines.
Then we can have like two candidates at the same time out there and just say all of them
are me. Like, hey, this is Rob Sand. Where's Veeder today no he's the he's the other guy in
the other place. Rob now you're cooking with gas here buddy. Final question for
you what's your plan to win this thing how can listeners help like what can we
do we got a bunch of people who care a lot about politics the state of the
country some of them might live in Iowa a lot of them don't what can they do to
help out? Look robsand.com is the place to go. You can donate. Here's my plan to win. We're going
to need volunteers later, but right now we certainly want people pitching in who care
about the state of Iowa who want to see us break the trifecta here. Plan to win? Letting
people know who I am. My plan has always been do what I was told to do when I was growing up. Be yourself. I do a hundred town halls every single year.
They are advanced notice to the public so that everyone can come, everyone can
ask me questions and get answers from me.
We're going to do those again.
I like to do a hundred because for those who really know your Iowa geography, I
do every county seat and Lee County has two county seats.
So while most elected officials in Iowa do the 99 county tour, because I'm
competitive and I like bad jokes, I like to say, well, I do a hundred town halls
and that way I'm the hardest working elected official in the state of Iowa,
which is kind of fun.
But I'm going to be out there.
I'm going to talk to people because I thought that's what democracy was about.
Sorry, if I misunderstood, I thought you're supposed to literally go meet
people and say, Hey, how are are you and listen to them and answer their
questions. I think that that works because I've been doing it so far and
it's been working for me. I think I think it'll work too. Just a final point of
personal privilege here. Not everything about getting older is cool but it is
very fun now that I've known you literally since 2004. We've worked
together, we've been friends, we've hung out. It's great
to know that there's people in politics that are genuinely good and decent and in it for the right
reasons and care a lot about the job and you just know that they would do an incredible job. So
that's just my way of saying to people listening, if you want to get involved in a campaign and you
want to back someone who will make you proud, check out Rob's campaign. Thanks, Tommy.
That's really nice of you.
I appreciate that.
Of course.
I'll tell one little story about that.
Cause I think that everybody, all of us, whether we're running for office or not,
we sometimes we tell us, we tell ourselves stories about ourselves.
And sometimes they're accurate and sometimes they're not.
But in 2022, I had a physical reaction to
something that helped me understand actually
why I do this and it's not for me.
On election night, my reelection was super close.
So we had an hour and a half where we were like,
ooh, on pins and needles.
And then we had a half an hour where we were
like, it's over, we lost.
And for that half an hour, I felt great.
I felt fantastic.
I was like, I'm like, I'm free.
I'm free.
And it made me realize, like I had a physical,
I felt three inches taller.
I felt like lighter.
All the weight was off of my shoulders.
And that reaction literally helped me realize like,
no, I think I should be glad that I won
because half an hour later, when the weight came back, I wasn't honestly happy about it. But it did make me realize I should be glad that I won because half an hour later when the weight came back,
I wasn't honestly happy about it.
But it did make me realize I should be happy that I won
and I should keep trying because that reaction to me
told me like, no, I know I'm not doing this for me.
I know I'm doing it to try to make a difference.
And you can't fake that kind of feeling.
So I appreciate you feeling that way too.
Absolutely.
Well, I'm hoping that crushing, crippling weight
remains on your shoulders for many, many years to come.
And thank you for coming on the show.
Hope to do it again soon.
Appreciate that.
Happy to.
That's our show for today.
Thanks so much to Rob Sand for coming on.
Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday.
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