Pod Save America - Trump Promises Free Speech Crackdown
Episode Date: September 16, 2025In response to the murder of Charlie Kirk, Donald Trump vows retribution against his political opponents, JD Vance asks Americans to snitch on anyone criticizing Kirk's politics, and Stephen Miller pl...edges to "disrupt, dismantle, and destroy" left-wing organizations. Jon, Lovett, and Tommy react to these new threats, then break down the latest news about Kirk's killer, Kash Patel's mishandling of the FBI's investigation, and the bleak future of TikTok and of one the legacy media organizations it's supplanting: CBS News. Then, Sen. Chris Murphy joins Lovett to talk about how Democrats should stand up to Trump's impending crackdown on free speech. Get tickets to CROOKED CON November 6-7 in Washington, D.C at http://crookedcon.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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a deal to save TikTok, who thank God, Trump's war on the legacy media, and the split among
New York Democrats over endorsing the party's nominee for mayor, Zoran Mamdani. Then Lovett talks to
Senator Chris Murphy about his latest warning that, quote, something dark might be coming. No shit.
Speaking of which, let's start with the fallout from the assassination of Charlie Kirk, which right
now is the central focus of the president, the White House, the Republican Party, right-wing media,
and the MAGA movement. The suspected killer is set to be charged in court on Tuesday,
More on that in a bit.
But before the FBI had any idea who killed Kirk or why,
Trump promised to go after any organization that has contributed to any of what he calls,
quote, radical left political violence.
What does he mean by that?
We still don't know for sure, but Trump has expanded on his remarks.
He did it over the weekend and then in the Oval Office on Monday afternoon,
as did Stephen Miller on Monday when he appeared on Charlie Kirk's show,
which was guest hosted by Vice President J.D. Vance.
Let's listen.
Well, the problem is on the left.
If you look at the problem, the problem,
The problem is on the left.
It's not on the right, like some people like to say on the right.
The problem we have is on the left.
You know, they're already under major investigation.
A lot of the people that you would traditionally say are on the left.
They're already under investigation.
Already under investigation.
With God is my witness, we are going to use every resource we have at the Department of Justice, Homeland Security, and throughout this government
to identify, disrupt, dismantle, and destroy these networks and make America safe again for the American people.
It will happen.
do it in Charlie's name.
Do you plan on designating Antifa, finally, a domestic terrible organization?
I would do that 100% and others also, by the way, but Antifa is terrible.
We have some pretty radical groups, and they got away with murder.
And also, I've been speaking to the Attorney General about bringing Rico against some of the
people that you've been reading about that have been putting up millions and millions of dollars
for agitation.
These aren't protests.
These are crimes, what they're doing.
still very terrifying two senior administration officials told the New York Times on Monday they're working to identify organizations that funded or supported violence against conservatives the goal they said was to categorize left-wing activity that led to violence as domestic terrorism what's been your reaction to the threats coming out of the administration Tommy my takeaway watching that whole live stream was Stephen Miller J.D. Vance like a lot of the Magal World they're they're seething they're seething with rage
and they are looking to punish a big group of people well beyond this sick individual that
murdered Charlie Kirk.
And I think on a human level, like I get their rage as someone shot one of you guys.
I would be raging too.
But I think everyone should watch J.D. Vance's like full closing statement on Charlie Kirk's
show today because I think it gives you the full roadmap for what's coming down the pike.
So Vance starts by being, he talked about this article in the nation that he says took Charlie Kirk
out of context and was not just unfair, but he claims was an attempt to justify Charlie Kirk's murder,
which is absolutely not true.
Like I read the article, it was extremely harsh.
There's a correction appended, so clearly they got something wrong.
But the article concludes, I won't celebrate his death, but I'm not obligated to celebrate
his life either.
It's clearly not justifying his murder.
But Vance kind of, he builds his outrage to this one article into a bigger argument against
what he called a pyramid or structure that includes donors, activists, journalists, and
politicians, so the big group of people.
And then he says asserts as a fact based on some polling that I'm not really sure,
where he's pulling it from that liberals are the real problem when it comes to political violence because
liberals believe it's okay it was a it was a single you gov online poll that came out the the day
after the assassination oh good okay so just so classic just very strong data set from one online
poll got it fielded the night after the the assassination of good okay so that usually works out
gold standard yeah um so then he ties together not just actually violent people but also some
who yelled rude things at him and his family when they were at Disneyland, and then people
who Van Says have lied about Charlie Kirk, and it builds to him saying there can be no unity
with people who fund these articles or pay the salaries of what he calls terrorist sympathizers.
So my takeaway was they're going to go after these media organizations who write things they
don't like. They're going to go after the tax exempt status of progressive foundations that fund
organizations they don't like, including the media. They're going to organize the mob to cancel
random people who say terrible things on the internet, and they don't care that it's all kind
of antithetical to the principles of free speech that Charlie Kirk talked about, or all the anger
and frustration at cancel culture that we've heard over the years, including at TPUSA events.
And again, they refer to these groups as terrorist organizations, which to me is very significant
in the wake of the administration, just deciding that it can murder suspected drug dealers
because they've been designated a terrorist organization by the White House, including a second
military strike on a boat today.
Yeah, I watched the whole thing, too. And one thing I think it was worth watching it in full, too, is because you see lots of clips of it going around, right? But you would never know that inside of what he said is he actually does acknowledge that he received a lot of personal notes from Democratic friends and former Senate colleagues. And he makes a point of saying that the vast majority of Democrats do not condone political violence. But it's almost an aside to get to his main point.
which is the crackdown.
Like he doesn't see saying that as a kind of,
I don't know, entree into a better kind of conversation
that recognizes that this is not a partisan problem, right?
Like he's referring to a single study
that shows Democrats are more accepting
or tolerant of political violence.
Meanwhile, Cato Institute is not exactly a left-wing organization,
looks at the data and shows that that right-wing,
actual right-wing murder and mayhem is tilted towards the right.
But like, even in this, there's this competition
to prove that it's a problem of the left
or a problem of the right.
And meanwhile, like, you have a set of political assassinations
and attacks.
They are clearly run the gamut across the ideological spectrum.
We've seen all kinds of attacks on Democrats.
We've seen two attempts on Trump,
this murder of Charlie Kirk.
There are also mass shootings that are similar
and that these are all people wanting to go out
in some kind of a blaze of glory,
the ideology of which is,
if it's legible at all is often incomprehensible
and strange and derangeable.
ranged and it's all along a kind of smooth curve of motivations. And you look at it and you say,
okay, we do have a really serious problem. And to understand it requires not looking at it with
this like political valence of trying to compete to which side is going to own most of it.
And meanwhile, we have this toxic political culture that that he is, of course, contributing to by
saying they're going to target the broad left and foundations because there was an article in the
nation he didn't like an article nobody read he uh yeah he said at one point it's a statistical fact
that most of the lunatics in american politics today are proud members of the far left that is
not a statistical fact the fact that the vice president of united states is saying that is just
unbelievably irresponsible you know we mentioned there's like a you gov poll there's also a huge
poll large sample um from uh earlier in the trump administration march or april has the
ideology of killers like 20% of Trump supporters agree that Americans may have to resort to violence
to save the country. 10% of people who don't like Trump agree with that. The Anti-Defamation League,
which as you know is not some liberal bastion these days, you know, has data from 2013 to 2022
overwhelmingly right-wing and since this is a violence, the FBI's own statistics, DHS own statistics.
Like it's not. And again, this is not to say that, you know, left-wing political violence
to the extent that it happens is not a huge fucking problem.
but like the statistics tell a very different story.
And at the least, maybe if you're the vice president of the United States and you're
trying to bring the country together, you don't just jump up there like you're a poster
on social media and decide to lay it all at the feet of the left incorrectly.
Right. And two little things on that.
I mean, one, I think broad-based, you can ask people like, do you support violence to
advance some political agenda? They might say yes.
When you get more specific, okay, would you support assassination?
Would you support physically harm?
The numbers go way down to down and down to it's, right?
So it's like 7% or something.
It's again, it's too many, but it's small.
And then also the most important thing, though, is I think when you look at kind of the body of research, studies find that Americans are more likely to support political violence if they think the other side also holds those views.
So if one party says they're coming for us, it's only a matter of time, that is going to lead that party that feels attacked to support political violence.
So that's why J.D. Vance and Trump's message and Stephen Miller's message of like rejecting unity in targeting.
the other side before they get us is quite scary and dangerous.
Yeah, that's from that G. Eliot Morris has a subsec about that, which I really would encourage
everyone to read because there's an actionable item out of it, which is the more you share
and let people know the fact that there's only, you know, a tiny, tiny percentage of Americans
who actually, you know, support political assassinations or violence like that, the more it
helps sort of reduce both sides, you know, support for that kind of thing.
Yeah, there's also a morning council poll came out, and it showed that, like, there's basically
unanimity around people blaming political rhetoric, generically, social media, and mental
illness of any kind of a killer.
But then you get into the details, and Democrats blame Republican rhetoric, Republicans blame
Democratic rhetoric, Democrats blame Trump, and on and on and on.
But you see in that that, like, people instinctively understand that we have a huge problem
with rhetoric.
And you do have to have, like, two ideas in your mind that are a little bit in conflict,
and one of which is, like, undoubtedly, like, heated political rhetoric kind of contributes to, like,
create a medium in which these kinds of things can emerge. And also, no, we should not, unless there's,
like, clear evidence, like, tie the actions of random murderers and maniacs to entire movements,
in part because that gives those murderers and maniacs more power. It suggests that they were
successful in yoking control of our politics, which is what a person who does this is ultimately
doing by like declaring their views and their desires and their dominance like their their
worldview more important i was trying to figure out what the how this is going to go how the sort
of like legal attack from the administration on these groups could unfold so i was like asking
around if you noticed miller stephen miller in the oval on monday when trump was asked about
this and then millister like what NGOs you're talking about what's what's the specifics you know he
said um he mentioned uh ice people who are like doxing ice and handing out gas masks at protests
and it sounds like from what miller has been saying and even what jd vance has been saying
that they were planning something like this prior to the assassination especially because miller
says that like kirk's last text to him was like go after these left wing organizations you know
make sure you do that and um you can't there's no law that would allow the president or authority
law the president to to designate a domestic group as a terror organization you need to have some
kind of like foreign ties to that that seems more like one of his you know sign an executive order
that doesn't really have any force of law or maybe he just labels them that you know they've been
thrown on rico a lot rico is you know that's the racketeering law it's used for conspiracy
it's hard to do a criminal riko case unless there were like direct connections between organizations
and people who have committed violence.
One thing they have done before,
the government has done before in history,
is there's like a,
you can bring civil RICO cases,
and you can do civil forfeiture.
And so what you do is basically freeze the assets of a group
that you think is part of a conspiracy,
and they can sue to get those assets back,
but it basically ties them up for years in court.
And this is what happened with a lot of Muslim charities
after 9-11,
is they basically, they were bankrupted through forfeiture,
even though there were no conviction.
and eventually were found to not have, you know, supported any kind of terrorist groups.
So it is, it's a campaign of intimidation.
It's a campaign of like perhaps we could seize assets and money and power, which also
Miller said over the weekend.
He's like, we're going to take your power away, take your money away.
And then if you've broken the law, then we'll take your freedom away.
And it's like, well, why are you taking the power and money if they have to go to the law
first.
Yeah.
Yeah, there, it does seem like, look, I mean, the thing that is so worrying to me about
it is, in part, we've seen so many major organizations capitulate just on the threat of action
by the Trump administration. We'll get to some of the media examples later, but like we have not
seen people, not seen like kind of mainline groups show a lot of kind of grit in the face of
intimidation tactics by the administration. You know, I talked a little bit about this with,
with Chris Murphy, and John Gans wrote a great piece about this, just about what a crackdown could
look like. And we've talked about this before. There are parts of like America's kind of culture
that give us advantage, one of which is this is a big, complicated, fractious country with a lot of
layers of government. And, you know, he talks about this, that like it's virtually ungovernable.
That's been true throughout our history. And that is a protection. But you only have to target a few
places to have like a real chilling effect across three streets. Organizations afraid to get
involved in protest organizations forget to forget afraid to get involved and say uh fighting on behalf
of immigrants uh for fear of being tied to some action of some disparate group and then that coming
back to them because they were involved in a meeting or a different meeting or a protest or whatever
i will say back to that um nation piece that made him so mad not only did he like mischaracterize
the piece itself he said that you know and the nation is funded by you know george sorris's open
Society Foundation and the Ford Foundation and both Open Society and the nation were like,
no, that's not true. There's no connection between us whatsoever. Yeah, but step one is going after
the Soros Open Society Foundation and the Ford Foundation and stripping their taxes and
status, which will make it impossible for them to operate. Yeah, and it'll be like a Harvard thing, right,
where they'll sue, obviously, and maybe they don't have a, maybe the administration doesn't have a
like to stand on, but it'll tie them up, you know. So anything else from the, the J.D. Vance hosted,
I know I watched most of it. I watched.
I thought Tucker Carlson's part was pretty interesting. It was the most low key of the thing, which is surprising that it was Tucker. But he focused on the intra-maga split on foreign policy in the Republican Party and Charlie Kirk's role and pushing back on the neocons and opposing war in Iran. And then this is where it got interesting to me. Tucker says, quote, I don't think it's helpful for people, particularly foreign heads of state to jump in and say, he lived for my cause or whatever. That's disgusting, actually. It's also literally untrue. That is almost certainly a reference to Bibi Nanyahu.
The Israeli prime minister who, even before the killer had been IDed, went on Fox News, and he blamed Kirk's assassination on, quote, a combination of radical Islamists and ultra-progressives.
So just linking the progressives with the Islamists.
and it's all even weirder because Netanyahu's got to deal now with this far right part of the Maga world that has been asserting that Israel was behind Charlie Kirk's assassination, which the first time I saw this was like from someone at Info Wars, but it kind of like blew up on the right to the point where Netanyahu was asked about it during a TV interview. And there's zero evidence for the claim. Frankly, I find it insane on its face. And it's like, you know, the latest kind of anti-Semitic trope you might hear. But it is, it was just a bizarre subtext that kind of.
came out today. There was a political assassination. It does have underlying causes. And we're going to
learn more of what the motives are in the specific cases. But like there is rising mass shootings,
political violence. There are a lot of like underlying reasons that it's happening. And the fact that
we're going to now be dealing with a kind of partisan debate over a crackdown on the left when that is
such ancillary and like unrelated part to what's actually kind of driving this from like the
the depths of the internet and like what's broken on our society means even as we're trying
to figure out where the where Stephen Miller is going to find his next target, there may be
more deaths, there may more attacks, right?
There may be more mass shootings and shooting in Minnesota, the random attacks happening
all the time.
And there's going to be no attention on that, right?
Because we're not going to do anything like to have an actual helpful national conversation
about what to do to like figure out what is driving these kinds of like blaze of glory
murderers.
And like that will, then there will be another.
will do the same thing where we race around trying to figure out who can own the motives if those
motives are even legible and it's like it's it's it's sad and scary because it just means we're
going to spiral down uh because if we're focused on like a fucking online lefty magazine that wrote an
article that you didn't like we're not focusing on the actual danger uh that is very real and by the way
threatens democrats and republicans alike so there's the the government crackdown there's also
mega influencers and supporters who are just going after anyone who's posted comments that range from
celebrating Kirk's murder to joking about it to condemning the assassination while still criticizing
Kirk's politics and past statements. After some person tweeted a public spreadsheet of target
names, Elon Musk responded, quote, they are the ones poisoning the minds of our children.
And here's what Vance said in his closing remarks on the Charlie Kirk Show Monday.
So when you see someone celebrating Charlie's murder, call them out and help him out.
call their employer. So I guess for J.D. Vance and Elon and the rest of MAGA now,
free speech is out. Cancel culture is back and it's good now, right? What do you guys make of the
naming and shaming and I guess trying to get people fired campaign? Remember when Elon bought
Twitter, as he said it was because he was a free speech absolutist. Generally absolutist would entail
speech to defend you. It does show how dumb and hypocritical the debate has been all along. I mean,
there are some very principal defenders of free speech out there. And then there's a lot of people
who just mean like free speech is speech, I believe, in are like.
And I think we've always known that Maga was full of shit on this,
that Trump was full of shit on this,
because last month he had an executive order about prosecuting people
who burned the American flag.
That's been a test case for decades for free speech.
Before that, they were arresting foreign students
who were critical of the war in Gaza.
Now we're getting people fired for saying shitty things about Charlie Kirk.
I'm not defending any of those comments.
But, you know, when people complain about cancel culture,
I think they're very rarely talking about
anything a political leader or politician did, it's usually just online mobs, and now these guys are
creating spreadsheets, and Elon Musk is helping unleash these online mobs on the platform that he purchased
to be a free speech absolutist, and it's just like, it's absurd. Yeah, you know, it's like, you know,
Epstein turned all of us to conspiracy theorists, and now, like, the right is turning themselves
into a bunch of narcs, the way they said that the left had become a bunch of fucking narcs.
And like I am like there is like a real like hardening and like viciousness online and there's a lot of kind of performative indifference and a lot of kind of performative effort to like that somehow you demonstrate your political bona fides by not caring about a political murder or like I think it's like depraved and it's also stupid especially like you don't have to you can despise Charlie Kirk if you don't feel terrified about where this leads like you're just not paying.
attention, but like a culture in which people are policing each other online and then
Googling and searching through records to find where they work and and call them.
Like, you may get a nurse fired who said something heinous, right?
You may get a teacher or administrator or a college out of their jobs.
Like, that's absolutely true.
But like, is this the collectively, are we all happy with that world?
The government doesn't need to crack down on free speech because we built a panopticon
where everybody vents their spleen and then goes around trying to figure out who they can
hurt by it, like I go and find the way in which to make them pay for that thing I saw online
that I didn't like, turning the whole country into one little tiny village where everybody's
watching each other through the window. Is that a good world we want to live in? By the way,
I would have said this when this was policing people from the right or from the left. I think we
did. I think we did. And I think we did. You know, it's the reason the legal standard, again,
for free speech, we have a pretty broad one here in America, you know, for speech must be directed
to inciting imminent lawless action and be likely to produce such action, right? That's the
standard. That's the Supreme Court has decided on free speech for not to be constituted as protected
free speech. So beyond that, the reason that you sort of have a big broad definition of this is
because people start with someone saying, oh, I'm, you know, this person posted, I'm glad he's dead,
or this person posted, you're next so-and-so, right? And now we've gone to all the way down to
someone who's saying i condemn violence but but let's and i and i think it's awful that he was
assassinated but i also think he said some bad things now now now the right is including that which is
what that nation article basically said yeah i just like i'm sorry but like it's a you have the
point where just people posting quotes out of context right that the out of context quotes now we're
gonna go after people the um and then it just got in it sort of veered and it was you know making me
angry and then at some point in the last 48 hours 72 hours i had to laugh you know so it was veering into
the absurd and unfortunately the chairman of the oakland county republican party in michigan he did it
for me he made me laugh he decided to drive around all weekend and um and post pictures of
private businesses with flagpoles demanding that they lower the flag even though president
trump's order to lower the flag is for federal buildings only and so it he you get tweets like this
from this guy hey chase bank why isn't your barclay circle branch in rochester hills complying with
federal and state orders to lower the flag
in honor of Charlie Kirk you've had
since Wednesday.
You think the...
I know you're mad, man, but there's got to be a better way to spend
your time. You think the bigwigs at Chase H.Q
are going to come down heavy on the
Barclay Circle branch?
It's so, it's such an...
You know, there are people pointing out that
like after Kennedy was killed,
there were like little... There were reports about people
celebrating it and that leading people to say,
hey, it's not social media. But like,
I don't doubt that there's this part of us that has like a schadenfreude and kind of a lack of care for political opposition that can get pretty vile and that it's always been there.
But like there is it just so obvious that that being exposed to so much of it and exposing ourselves to so much social media, it leads people to really like it.
Like I felt it myself just this weekend kind of reading about this stuff.
Like I felt myself like getting this sort of like anger and then you feel it and there's nowhere to put it, right?
Because you're just reading things on the internet.
And so you want to like, you like have to do something with it.
And so he's going to point it at that chase branch.
Like there's so many people I disagree with.
And they're all out there saying these things all the time.
And like people don't know what to do with that energy.
And it's just so fucking toxic.
Yeah.
And that's not even like I disagree with the chase branch.
That's like the chase branch probably not even crossing the manager's mind that they should lower the flag.
I mean, come on.
So here's what we know about the alleged killer as of Monday afternoon.
when we're recording this, we may know more by the time you're hearing it.
The suspect is 22-year-old Utah native Tyler Robinson, who agreed to turn himself in
after his father recognized photos released by the authorities.
Robinson comes from a family of Republicans, but Utah Governor Spencer Cox said over the weekend
that Robinson himself held a, quote, leftist ideology.
Six sources familiar with the investigation also told Axios that Robinson was in a romantic
relationship with his transgender roommate, who they said is being, quote, extremely
cooperative with the investigation
and Cash Patel and Dan Bongino
the podcaster's running the FBI
fucking all dream
I said on Monday that Robinson
had a quote obsession with Kirk
that he sent text messages before the shooting
saying he had a quote opportunity
to go after the conservative activist
and that he was going to quote take it
and Robinson had been linked to DNA
evidence found at the scene
speaking of Cash Fox News reports
that his job may be in jeopardy
in a story source to 10 sources
in the Trump administration.
Apparently, Pam Bondi and Todd Blanche
have, quote, no confidence in cash
and, quote, Pam in particular, can't stand him.
Live tweeting incomplete information
about the investigation from Reos and Manhattan
didn't exactly help.
Rayos?
Rios.
You got it.
I don't know.
I'd never heard of it until I read about him going there.
It's Rios.
It's Rios.
It's 100% Rios.
Cash is going to face a Senate hearing on Tuesday.
I'm sure that will be fun.
But until then, he's been doing the rounds on Fox
to defend himself to the network's most important viewer,
let's listen. Could I have worded it a little better in the heat of the moment? Sure, but do I regret putting it out? Absolutely not. I was telling the world what the FBI was doing as we were doing, and I'm continuing to do that. If you go back and look at historical cases like Luigi Mangione and the Boston bombing, how long did it take the Bureau to release information to the public? We're not doing that. Those two manhunts took five days, and they happened in downtown major metropolises. We apprehended our suspect in 33 hours because we were transparent and open. So anyone that thinks that the FBI,
is not on top of its game
and that me and the deputy
and everybody in leadership
and our Salt Lake City field office
in Quantico is doing anything politically.
I'm not having it.
And if you've hearing anything else about it,
they are lying to you.
Not having it.
For those watching on the YouTube,
you'll notice that he's doing something
you just cannot do if you're doing TV,
which he's looking at the monitor
above his camera at himself,
constantly, which just makes you look so shifty.
What I was doing was telling you all
what the FBI was doing as it was doing it,
which is what every FBI
director is famously supposed to do, right?
When law enforcement is conducting a law enforcement
operation and investigation, you're
supposed to just keep people abreast of every detail.
Bob Mueller used to tweet, got one, just
getting clear. He
said something in another, maybe it was
this interview about the DNA evidence
that they collected from the crime scene, and it's
like, why? It's, it's, do you
understand why you share information, right?
Like, is it to help, it's to help people, either
to protect their communities or maybe
to find somebody. No, you weren't, it wasn't
like you, like, I'm not overrule you guys.
I think we should put the guy's picture out there.
Dude, he was saying that, though.
He was talking about how, like, he gave a TikTok of the key events, and one of the key events
was what time he and Dan Bongino landed on the ground in Utah and that they decided
to release the photo.
And it's like, do you think that that was the first time the FBI's released a photo?
That doesn't make any sense.
It was crazy.
He's like, we apprehended the, the father turned him in.
What did you do?
Exactly.
What did the fuck did you do?
Yeah, he tweeted this is what happens when you let cops be cops.
Like, no, the dad turned him in.
you were you were there to receive the information from the dad oh yeah also he said like he's like
what i worded it differently sure buddy you tweeted misinformation about your own investigation
yeah there's also like i did there's a there was an axiose story and it wasn't that remarkable
but it was it said uh that they're about it was about the transgender roommate and how it might
lead to motive and there were quotes by cox in there but cox who by the way seems to just be behaving
honorably and responsibly throughout this uh but at the end of that story
It said somebody just hadn't seen in this kind of tone before.
It said it's pretty clear that Robinson's roommate knew a lot and didn't say anything after the killing.
So they're a person of interest officially in cooperating.
A second official said, we want to keep it that way.
That is a really strange story to come out of law enforcement to Axios, right?
So weird.
Especially since, yeah, one of the sources said the person was extremely cooperative and made it sound like they're really happy to have that cooperation, which is why.
they didn't release the name or identity of the person. And then that official at the end,
I thought that was weird. And so I don't know, I don't know who this official is. Maybe it's a
career person and maybe just a strange quote. But throughout this entire couple of days,
we had the Wall Street Journal reporting incorrectly about the bullets. We had a guardian story
that had some incorrect information that they had to withdraw. And then you have these kinds of
stories. And because we have someone like Cash Patel, who's a mix of kind of partisan loyalist
to Trump, plus also a deeply strange incompetent, you don't know what the balance is.
and you don't know where these quotes are coming from.
Like, is this a story that's because they're just trying to prove they know stuff
and get stuff out there in a kind of unhelpful and kind of ham-fisted way?
Is it because they're actually like wanting to put it out there into the world that there's
this transgender person connected to it?
As you have Elon Musk seeming, there's like a transgender terror cell operating despite
the fact that there's that Cox has said this roommate is cooperative.
So I just found myself reading this and saying, oh, I'll never know.
It's hard to know because we have a couple of partisan hacks.
that aren't prepared
running this department.
Caputale is grossly
unqualified for the job.
He was a low-level prosecutor at DOJ.
Then he was an aide to Devin Nunes
before he got into the Trump world
where he was like a low-level NSC guy
before getting some garbage time gig
at the DOD.
It's enough for me.
So no like law enforcement experience.
He's talking about how he walked
to the crime scene in Utah.
It's like, buddy, I'm sorry,
did you learn about that on Capitol Hill?
Like where, what value did you add?
What training allowed you to walk the crime scene?
Did you put a pair of black light glasses
is kind of like, what are you talking about?
Someone on Twitter tweeted that Patel permanently has the facial expression of someone walking
through Dubai customs with a brick of cocaine.
So funny.
And then, like, Tim Dillon said, comedian said he wouldn't trust Cash Patel to investigate a dispute
with DoorDash to get him a $10 credit.
So, like, that Fox story is sort of hopeful, right?
According to Fox, the White House, the AG, the deputy AG all have lost confidence in Cash Patel.
I would bet big money that the rest of the bureau,
doesn't like him either because of the way he's politicized the place and pushed out people.
So the one interesting thing is the White House just installed a new second deputy director
because he always has a backup deputy director who a lot of people think is in place
so that in 90 days he can take over because under the federal vacancies Reform Act of
1998, you can fill in for the director if you've been in the job for 90 days.
This is like that Missouri Attorney General, I think, the fake rap.
Yes.
So someone said he'll get Billy Longed, which is the IRS commissioner.
It was now the U.S. ambassador to Iceland.
A story we didn't even talk about
because it's just one of 20 things that happened that week.
Speaking of that, I know you talked about this last week,
but Cash is also being sued by some former agents for firing them.
Yeah, three career agents say they were wrongfully terminated.
Like the one story that just blew my mind,
so there's a guy named Brian Driscoll.
He was a career agent.
Like, when you read his bio, it's like absolutely incredible.
Like he kicked down the door, took out some ISIS guy himself,
save the five-year-old. You're like, holy shit, this guy's a hero. So during his vetting,
he's asked questions like, these are verbatim from a 29-year-old White House liaison. Who did you
vote for? When did you start supporting President Trump and have you voted for a Democrat in the last five
elections? Cash Patel told him, as long as you haven't given to Kamala or posted on social media,
you'll be fine. So that's so seriously they're taking this. So Driscoll was supposed to be
installed as the deputy acting director, basically like keep the trains running until Cash
Patel is nominated or confirmed. But the White House made like a clerical error in the press
release and they announced him as director and when they called over to be like yo do you want to
fix this they're like no we're good the white house refused to fix the error they didn't want to admit
their mistake and what's wild about this is if you go back to the original story about driscoll in the
times when he was kind of there was a funny he has a funny picture his picture what the mustache
and he kind of has like a weird smirk and everybody thought it was like it was like there was like
the hipster FBI guy in that story they joked about how him being acting director felt like
some kind of mistake it actually was a mistake yeah it was a mistake incredible
Also, it sounds like Stephen Miller's like really running the show. No surprise, but which at DOJ and FBI at DHS, at ICE, everywhere.
Busy. Just one thing like that story about like Driscoll, like, there was a part of the end of it where Cash Patel fires a seasoned veteran of the FBI while his wife is dying of cancer for not being sufficiently loyal.
And it like, I do think it's like as we talk about some like abstract and imaginary.
version of what a crackdown could look like it's both like i don't know if it's a mix of kind of
i don't know like hopeful but terrifying that people as incompetent and cruel as this are going to
be running it because like cash patel has alienated a ton of people it's probably why they need to have
somebody in the in the wings to replace it but it is like worth remembering like these are not
some crackdown like it's going to be run by pan it's not going to be run by other people it's
be pam bondie and dan benjino and cash patel trying to figure out how to go after people and
these guys are fucking bozos yeah i wish stephen miller was too but he is not he is not
So Trump's taken off for a working visit to the UK on Tuesday.
I was going to get a whole welcome by King Charles, sorry.
Yeah, yeah.
And Camilla.
But he's going to be back in the States for Kirk's funeral and memorial on Sunday.
The Queen was there.
They'd be rolling out all the stuff.
Any sense of what's on the agenda for the UK trip, Tommy?
Yeah, he meets with the King and the Royal Family.
They do like a carriage procession and the state banquet at Windsor Castle.
And then he had in Keir Star, we'll hang out over at Checkers, one of the countryside residences.
What I think is interesting about this trip is how much Jeffrey Epstein is in the background of all of it because...
Not literally, everyone.
The British...
I thought it was Andrews Plus One.
To the dinner.
Well, that's exactly right.
The British ambassador to the UK, this guy, Peter Mendelsohn just had to resign because this cash of Epstein's, like, his Yahoo inbox became public.
And Bloomberg News got a hold of them.
And there's hundreds of emails back and forth between Epstein and Mendelsohn, including long after he had been prosecuted.
Peter Menison was, like, staying at his house.
a very senior person under Tony Blair and now the ambassador to the US. And then obviously,
as you mentioned, like Prince Andrew was a big Epstein buddy and a creep. So that's always kind
of lurking in the background. So I wonder how much this will kind of blow up over there.
Those Mendelsohn emails are like bananas. It's not just that they take place after. Like he's like,
God, I can't believe they're doing this to you. Yeah. I can't believe this is happening to you.
Crashing at his house. It's crazy. I'm sure though, I'm sure all of the Brits, whether,
however they feel about the assassination will be tripping over themselves to offer Donald Trump condolences and
doing moments of silence and all that. It's very, yes. I mean, not to make Tucker's point, but like the
international sort of shows of solidarity among sort of global right wing populists all over the
world has been interesting to note. Yeah, but even like, I think it was like the European Parliament
had a moment to sign. Like, I mean, I think they're taking their cues from Trump about sort of how
serious and important. Obviously, it is very
serious and importance. It's a scary moment in the U.S.
in the political climate. But
yeah, I think this will be a big topic
of conversation out there. There's also just, it's coming
at a time when the Labor
Party is a disaster. Like
Kirstarmer keeps tripping all over himself.
He just had to fire his deputy
prime minister into this huge cabinet reshuffle
and the Nigel Farage's party
is leading in the polls. So like
things are not looking good for
a lot of the kind of progressive
left internationally.
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alaskan company for sponsoring this episode and for pundit for making a bunch of noise during this
time in the wake of the assassination governor cox of utah called social media a cancer
uh there's been a lot of discussion about the role of these platforms and both radicalizing
people and just making us the worst version of
ourselves. Well, the Trump administration's
responding with the big announcement. TikTok is
saved. Nice.
The deadline for ByteDance selling the app
is Wednesday, but after
multiple extra legal
extensions by the White House
in violation of both the law and a Supreme
Court order, but whatever.
But then Trump... Whatever. Whatever, right?
Trump posted on Monday morning that, quote,
a deal was also reached on a certain
company that young people in our country very much
wanted to save. They will be very happy
I will be speaking to President Xi on Friday.
Scott Bessent basically confirmed this news,
saying that the two sides had agreed on a framework of a deal
that would transfer ownership of the app to the U.S.
He also said, quote,
we are not going to talk about the commercial terms of the deal.
It's between two private parties,
but the commercial terms have been agreed upon.
So I assume our America first president
would never cut a deal
that leaves TikTok users vulnerable
to any kind of influence or data collection
by the Chinese Communist Party, right?
Yeah, I don't think he gives a fight.
but I think we have no idea, right?
We just have no idea what's about to happen.
Like whether or not the deal is that China will still be kind of in control the algorithm or not?
We just don't know.
Do we know?
It seems like they, it seems like the Chinese side of the negotiations did mention something about licensing the algorithm, which was something that was first floated, I think, by the White House back in April on this.
So basically, the Chinese continue to have control of the algorithm, license it out to whoever buys it in the U.S.
and it's so so that the the privacy data collection concerns are somewhat ameliorated i guess supposedly
but the uh you know chinese communist party in control of the algorithm and turn it on and off
for the propaganda purposes like that that does not seem like it is um it is fixed by that kind
of arrangement if that's what the arrangement may be okay good because i don't want to stop seeing
those cool uh chinese folk songs sung by all kinds of people i love them yeah so the data
privacy thing like I it makes me worry but also there was this giant hack called salt typhoon which
apparently means the chinese have had like a decade of access to all of our communications so i think
we're kind of ships kind of sailed on that one uh them licensing out and get you a good deal on an
algorithm that we're seeing chinese communist parties turning up and down the dial on like how we all
feel about the world 170 million americans using this thing a month also what do you want to bet that
either the government u.s government has a stake in ticot now 100% or or or or and
like a bunch of Trump
close allies. There was
some kind of a deal there about
the, I mean, who the fuck knows what they said?
It is either going to like a giant
billionaire Trump fan, like a Larry Ellison
type, or like someone backed
by 1789 or whatever the hell, Don
Jr.'s VC thing is called like, it's going to
be a political ally Trump, which I think we should
have to step back and be like, okay, so
that means Trump will have a huge say over
TikTok. Elon Musk owns
Twitter. Mark Zuckerberg
will do or say anything Trump wants to
avoid regulations, so see you later, Facebook and Instagram.
I guess we can fight it out on LinkedIn, guys.
We got a rump state over on Blue Sky where we can, if we end the Civil War there,
we can maybe, you know, mount a counteroffensive.
Not a place.
Everybody from Blue Sky is about to get fired for their posts about Charlie Kirk, so I don't
really know.
The whole thing, yeah, I feel like there's a lot of like concern about the algorithm
and the data.
Then I look and it's like, I don't know, like the Twitter algorithm is wholly owned by
by a capitalist and it's a fucking nightmare.
Instagram's a nightmare.
These places are already a nightmare.
Like, I,
I can get worse.
I can get a lot worse.
Well, we're going to about,
we're going to talk about the legacy media organization
that TikTok and other platforms are rapidly replacing.
Outlook continues to be pretty bad there as well.
You'll remember that in July,
CBS's parent company agreed to settle Trump's absurdly meritless lawsuit over 60
minutes to the tune of $16 million so that the administration would approve
its merger with Skydance, which is owned by the son of Trump.
Trump ally Larry Ellison.
The merger closed in early August.
After the head of CBS News resigned, the executive producer of 60 Minutes resigned, CBS
canceled Stephen Colbert's show, and Paramount's General Counsel pledged to hire
an embudsman to monitor CBS News coverage for any hints of political bias.
And a surprise to absolutely no one, they selected Kenneth Weinstein, a Trump donor who he
originally nominated back in his first term to serve as ambassador to Japan.
This comes as rumors...
There's no news experience, by the way.
No, of course not.
Why would he have a news experience?
Just a conservative think tank guy.
Hey, listen, it's time we say Sayonardo, woke.
Jesus.
He didn't actually serve as ambassador to Japan.
It didn't go through, but anyway.
This all comes as rumors swirl that Ellison is close to appointing conservative media commentator,
Barry Weiss in a leadership role at CBS News as part of a broader deal to absorb her startup,
the free press, and as Trump continues to toy with the idea of revoking the broadcast licenses of CBS's historical rivals, NBC and ABC.
What do you think, guys?
I would think of our new corporate media overlords.
I think it's worth noting that Disney paid a settlement for a frivolous lawsuit by George
Stephanopoulos in the same way that CBS did.
They seemed to have gotten no credit for it.
They didn't really seem to get very much for that George Stephanopoulos payout if now they're
coming after their license anyway.
And I had actually thought that that, I'm like not surprised would not be the word, but I thought
that Trump understood that he needed to demonstrate that there was some value at first
to these kinds of capitulation so that he could get some more of them, but that seems to be
out the window now. So, you know, he says he goes after Columbia. Columbia strikes a deal,
then all of a sudden they're going to be coming after them again. ABC thought they could get
out of the barrel. They're still in the barrel. And so any capitulation really doesn't get you very much
at all. I mean, at the New York Times said they want to make Barry Weiss editor-in-chief or co-president
of the network. So that's a big gig, along with his ombudsman. The free press in its founding documents
Bill. Yeah, right. It's right. Yeah. I think they're written by Publius.
They build itself as this bastion of like heterodox opinion, truth telling. But they're just
the establishment at this point. And their primary focus is attacking anyone critical of the war in
Gaza or anyone who like wonders aloud if it's a good idea for the United States, keep funneling
arms to BBN Yahoo. You know, there's like an indiscriminately massacre civilians or periodically
starve the population of Gaza. And so, you know, that includes like repeatedly downplaying the
famine in Gaza. There was an article in May that was headlined the Gaza famine myth, subtle.
There was a video from the free press suggesting that it was unfair. They do this big piece about
how there had been images in the news of starving kids and that news publications were bad
because they didn't mention that some of those kids, I think most of those kids in the story had
preexisting conditions. And then they made a video kind of responding to their reaction to that
piece and it was tweeted out by no other than BB Netanyahu himself. So again, we're just sort of like
helping out the powerful here. And, you know, I think what's so weird about it is what Barry
Weiss has built at the free press, I think is the opposite of what CBS wants to be, which is down the
middle, nonpartisan, to the point of feeling tortured at times, kind of old school, just the
fax man, boring-ass reporting. And she is a partisan actor whose primary skill seems to be
ingratiating herself with the most elite billionaires who are like really mad at the left and
want to fund this kind of stuff.
And, like, I had a little dust up with the, you know, they called Ben Rhodes Hamas because
he was critical of their piece the other day, which is nice.
And then I had my own little dust up with, um, uh, the free press the other day.
Because I tweeted, on the day Charlie Kirk was assassinated, I tweeted that it was
sickening that that video of his assassination was getting pushed into our feeds all day long
over and over again.
And the reason that bothered me was because there was clearly an algorithmic incentive for
Elon Musk to make this snuff film go around.
And also there are influencers.
on Twitter who get paid per view, right?
So you have something inflammatory or horrifying that could scar his friends or family or anyone
or kids who were on Twitter that day.
It's disgusting that Twitter is just like pumping that shit.
And Barry's partner, Nellie Bowles, wrote this piece attacking me among others and saying,
well, it's far more ghoulish to slaughter a polite conservative than, you know, to talk about
the algorithm, like suggesting that I hadn't criticized the assassination itself.
And she goes, funny to see where their outrage goes.
Like, she had ignored that my previous tweet was saying what happened to Charlie was horrific and indefensible and condemning political violence, right?
So it's just like it is that kind of partisan hackery bullshit that CBS is acquiring for $200 billion and making the sort of editorial lens for the network.
They also, they clearly think of themselves not as partisan hacks, but like center right thinkers, you know, like Tyler Cohen had a piece there today.
about how the cancel culture on the right is just as bad as when they complained about it on the left.
But, like, that requires Barry Weiss & Company to constantly be attacking the straw man of the left that they have in their mind
and that maybe was, you know, justified for some people at some time.
And so, you know, the left always has to be a liberal for the free press to continue.
And so that's what I think is going to be like the real CBS thing, right?
It's like, I'm going to pick out crazy things that Trump does here and there so we can continue to report on that.
But then the left, just look at all the things they're doing.
And if there's a nurse in Colorado somewhere who didn't properly, you know, mourn Charlie Kirk, they're going to go after.
Yeah, it's also like it's sort of an outsider insider thing.
Like, the free press, like, we're going to tell you the truth, right?
Like, they have done an amazing job of building a brand.
Even the name is excellent, right?
And like, I just, they have built a kind of like parisocial relationship with their fans and,
because, like, hey, if you support us, if you're here, it's because you're a truth teller
and you're not afraid of a truth no matter where it comes from. Like, you can handle it. And the
left doesn't think you handle it. And even some people on the right don't think you can. But we
know you can. But like, that is a definition about being on the outside, right? But if you're
about to take hold of like a storied mainstream giant media institution, by the way, one on
decline, as is every other mainstream institution, right? Like, I don't know what exactly you're
kind of like hoping to build in the kind of slowly,
Enjoy ruling over the ashes.
Right.
But then it's like, okay, you're in charge now.
You're not covering, you're not like, you're not covering how CBS should be doing the news.
You're doing the news.
And in reality, the news is kind of boring.
The kind of news that CBS does for the most part doesn't actually get a lot of attention.
She'll spice it up.
Well, sure, but like it doesn't get a lot of, like, the stuff that you don't talk about is just the day-to-day coverage that you have to provide.
And like, I don't know how different that looks.
How different is your storm coverage?
You know?
I don't want to know.
Well, let's find out.
I don't want to know.
I'm excited to find out.
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All right, before we get to love its conversation with Chris Murphy,
we just want to mention another Democratic senator who seems to understand the gravity of the moment,
Chris Van Hollen, who talked to Tommy for the show last week.
Van Hollen spoke at the annual Polk County Steak Fry in Iowa over the weekend.
And during his remarks, he said that the hesitancy of New York Democrats like Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries to endorse Mamdani is spineless and said they need to, quote, get behind him and get behind him now.
On Sunday, after the New York Times covered Van Hollen's remarks, New York Governor Kathy Hokel endorsed Mamdani in a Times op-ed, leaving Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jephries, and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand among the prominent New York Dems that have yet to endorse.
Jeffrey's spokesperson, then weirdly told the times, quote, leader Hakeem Jeffries will have more
to say about the general election well in advance of November 4th. Meanwhile, confused New Yorkers
are asking themselves the question, Chris Van Hu? After Hockel's endorsement, Trump again posted
Truth Social about the need to beat Mamdani and in his mob boss way, seemed to float pulling federal
funding from New York. What do we think? So, Chris Van Who?
Chris Van Who? So I saw that over the weekend.
end, and it really annoyed me, in part because it's like, okay, Chris Van Halen has criticized you.
They also served in the house together.
He's quite familiar with Chris Van.
You're not responding to the actual substance of what he's saying.
You're saying you're going to have something to say about this in the coming weeks, but you're going to come back with like a dig that feels like it's from another era of political media where it's like, ha ha, got them.
But it's like, you know, who's seeing this?
This is for no one, this comment.
It's for no one, right?
like people who want you to endorse for me it's not an argument you're not making an argument
to anybody you're not making an actual point you're kind of treating people like they're stupid
and then you think okay you're going to get to this in a couple weeks what's going to happen in a
couple weeks mom dani's not going to fundamentally change his views on anything if you're not
going to endorse that's a huge fucking problem if you are why are you going to be dragged to it
being dragged to it doesn't help anybody first of all it's embarrassing for you it makes people
feel like you're you're not doing it for any other reason than political expediency you're not
actually helping him because you're making it look like it's reluctant and by the way you're
still going to get the same blowback from Trump and every other person. So it's just bad
politics to me. And then you look at like and then Hockel comes out and she does it. Great.
I don't know if she was pushed by the Van Hollen thing or not. But then it's really a long and kind
of empty op-ed that really has nothing to say other than what every Democrat who wants to endorse
Bumdani but is little nervous about it is going to say, which is we don't agree on everything.
We don't see eye to everything. But I think he's going to do a good job in affordability in Cuomo's
worse, which is not that hard to fucking say. So just say it.
Yeah. Like, look, I don't blame Hakeem Jeffrey's spokesperson. You're doing their job. You're
pushing back, right, like defending the boss. But it was a bad quote. And I also think, like,
Chris Van Hollen has shown a lot of political courage this year. Like, he went down to El Salvador
to get his constituent back from a foreign gulag. He's been just got back from Israel where he was
on this show where he talked about what's happening there and called it. Uh, God's a ethnic cleansing,
right? So he's like saying and doing some gutsy things. And I think that, uh, he is absolutely right,
that it is cowardice to not endorse mom done me. And it's, you're, you're right. What's the point
of waiting a couple weeks? What's going to happen?
in a couple weeks. And like I've heard from people who are sort of inside this world that
in private meetings, you know, leadership will say, well, we have a lot of donors who are
concerned about Mom Dani. And it's like, that's kind of what this smells like. It's such
stupid politics. I mean, it's just, I just don't understand it, right? And like, if you were
going to not endorse him and you're going to make them, and that's your final decision, then should
have articulated why earlier, you know, the fact that we're dragging out the song, you're right,
you get no credit for endorsing.
You still get all the criticism that you got, rightly so, I think.
And so what was the purpose?
That, like, later, when someone attacks you for the endorsement, you could say, like,
well, I didn't do it until the very end, and everyone knows I was dragged kicking and screaming
into it.
I also, by the way, that's going to help you?
Yeah, I also don't love that it's like, oh, well, you know what it is.
It's those donors, which is like, okay, like, you're a coward, so you let's blame the
the fucking Jews.
Like, that's, that's sort of what it boils down to.
That's not how this all went out of any way.
I'm not saying, or is that what they said.
I'm not saying what you're, you know, the religion.
these donors okay i don't know what you're not i know you're not saying that i'm saying that like
this idea that like oh they're hearing from the donors they're hearing from the donors and this is
new york politics i i know what that means and it's like okay so you think if you if you endorse
mom donnie you're going to have a big fundraising problem once you endorse mom dani i have a
feeling you're not going to say that so i'm not i'm not suggesting that you're saying that
at all of course not i'm saying that like i feel like that's like the implication well it's like
there's a lot of jews that are pretty concerned about mom dani meanwhile he's doing well with
Jewish Democrats. He's like done everything he can to address concerns about that. And the other thing
that's interesting about Mamdani is like he keeps having these meetings with business leaders and
others that are like kind of instinctively opposed to him. And he's kind of like charming the fuck out
of them because he listens and he's curious and he's actually receptive. So I don't know what these
conversations that are going on behind the scenes with like people like Jeffries and Schumer,
but if it's going to result in an endorsement two days before the election, like fucking do it.
Meanwhile, there was a local TV news reporter in New York today that,
reported that according to two sources, Adams is probably going to drop out by the end of the
week. So we shall see if that comes to pass, but that was the report today. Your choices are
Cuomo or Mamdani. Pick. Yeah. Pick soon. What about Curtis Lewis? Well, I'm guessing that
Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer are not going to vote for him. But Katz and Gracie Mansion,
no. Okay. When we get back from the break, you'll hear Love It's conversation with Senator
Chris Murphy, who's been sounding the alarm about just how bad the Trump cracked down on the left
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Senator Chris Murphy, welcome back to the pod.
Thanks for being here.
So I want to talk to you, obviously, about the murder of Charlie Kirk and the reaction to it coming
from the right. You talked about this on social media over the weekend about the ways in which
this could lead Americans to unite to confront political violence, but that we're seeing
something else that's really worrying from the right. Can you talk a little bit about what
you're worried about? This awful tragic assassination could have been this moment where
Democrats, Republicans, the right, and the left come together and decide that we're going to do a
set of things communally to draw a line in the sand on political violence specifically and mass
violence, public violence writ large. Obviously, we're all shaken by the fact that more and more
political figures are the targets of attack and there's a system of radicalization that exists
online. Some of it political, some of it frankly non-political that puts us all at risk. But
predictably, Donald Trump is doing the opposite. He has been
likely looking for a pretext all year in order to supersize his efforts to try to use the legal
system in this country, which he now controls out of the White House in order to destroy his
political opposition. And, you know, we now have growing confirmation that that's the conversation
that's happening inside of the White House, that they are, you know, going to just create this
mythical world in which the only threat of violence comes from the left, which is not true.
There's radicalization in both the right and the left, but if you really want to do the counting,
there's far more violent radicalization happening on the right than on the left.
They're going to tell this false story in order to empower the DOJ and the FBI to shut down
democratic organizations, to harass and lock up more democratic political officials.
And what has already been a pretty dark year could get a lot darker.
And I just think we have to name what they are talking about doing now so that when it happens,
you know, they have a lower likelihood of getting away with the stated reason versus what is
the actual reason, which is their political agenda to try to seize power and allow Trump and
his family to rule forever.
Yeah.
So J.D. Vance guest hosted the Charlie Kirk podcast.
And he focused on this article in the nation.
was very critical of Charlie Kirk, and from there, extrapolated out to a need to go after
a lot of left-wing institutions. But there are two parts of it that jumped out at me. One is,
at first, I only saw clips of it. And when I saw clips of it, I saw clips of J.D. Vance saying
that the left is statistically more likely to be lunatics and that he's going to go after
left-wing institutions. But what I didn't see in anything shared on social media was in that
speech, J.D. Vance makes a point of saying that he heard from Democratic former Senate colleagues
and Democratic friends who want to unite against political violence. And he says that he thanks God
that the vast majority of Democrats do not contone political violence. And it struck me that
even in this set of remarks about the need to take on political violence, we are all kind of subject
to like the algorithmic feed and how it radicalizes us.
against one another. And I wonder if even this kind of debate about the proportion of which
direction the political violence comes from is almost beside the point. Like, okay, we claim it's
further to the right. Vance claims that the left has lots its mind and is celebrating a killing.
But like, is there any hope to collectively talking about this as a cultural and internet-driven
phenomenon? Of course there is. But it does require leadership from the top.
And you're right that there's going to be a tendency to cherry pick, anything that the vice president says or anything that the president says.
But, you know, there's also confirmation today that there is an effort underway right now in the administration to name and target and prepare plans to shut down and disrupt only political organizations on the left.
So, yeah, I appreciate the section of the vice president's speech in which he says what we all know, which is that, you know, inside the sort of broad political mainstream, there is no tolerance for political violence, whether it comes from the right of the left or targeting the right of the left.
But that kind of talk may be masking the plans that he is actively engaged in, which is an effort to try to, you know, go after somebody like George Soros, right, who, you know, probably is the most notable funder of kind of generic political opposition to the president in this country has zero connection to violence.
In fact, has dedicated his entire life to fighting violence, condemning violence.
But, you know, he's been named by Donald Trump as someone who might face criminal charges.
and that likelihood that mainstream Democratic figures and funders get targeted has probably
greatly increased, notwithstanding, you know, some of the pieces of Vance's speech that didn't
get covered. So there are obviously Republicans that are saying the right things here.
Governor Spencer Cox has been a model of trying to demonstrate responsible leadership in this
moment. I saw your colleague Senator Lankford saying, what looked to me,
to be far more responsible than what I've heard from President Trump, obviously.
In the Senate, in Congress, everyone is aware that the number of threats has gone up dramatically
against Democrats and Republicans.
That's like, that's not a Twitter thing.
That's a real thing, right?
Is there any hope that because of the actual reality of this confronting both Republicans
and Democrats that without someone like Donald Trump doing what's right here and showing wisdom,
which is obviously impossible to imagine,
that there will be voices outside of those
that could have some purchase?
I mean, listen, I wish I could be the bearer of good news here.
You are right that there are responsible, thoughtful, Republican voices,
but they tend to be the same ones over and over again.
This is not the first time Spencer Cox has said something
full of all sorts of thought and common sense.
James Langford continually steps up
and tries to make the Senate a more functional place.
But by and large, there has been no willing,
to stand up to the boss, to President Trump, when he does exactly the opposite, when he
lionizes and endorses violence when it happens on the right and when he invents a world in which
the only threat of violence comes from the left. Now, we have an opportunity to do something
right now. We're going to confront the budget for the coming year. And, you know, the president
has made it clear that he wants to turn the DOJ even more.
more so than it exists today into an operation to hunt as political opponents.
We could put constraints on the DOJ in that budget.
We could require it to have a level of independence that it historically has had.
But I just don't think aside from the few Republicans you name, there will be enough that
will actually try to, through law, put constraints on the president's instinct, which is to use
the assassination of Charlie Kirk for political ends.
So what are the constraints? What are the levers to slow or stop that project? You know,
Cash Patel has not exactly shrouded himself in glory in the last couple of days, which actually,
to me, kind of, you know, the imagination of what a kind of unchecked Republican administration
that's hell bent on cracking down on its opposition would look like is far worse than what
you're kind of seeing in practice. America is a pretty big and complicated, fractious place
with a First Amendment.
Like, it's a hard project to crack down on dissent in this country, isn't it?
It is a hard project, but you don't need to be universally successful.
And this is, I think, the reminder that I'm constantly giving folks.
You know, if you go to countries that are today very illiberal democracies, places like Hungary
or Turkey, you will still see dissent.
There are still elections.
The opposition party can win, but they can never win at the country.
national level. There's never allowed to be enough dissent and enough support for the political
opposition that they are able to win at the highest levels in contests for the president and for
parliament. And so I don't want our sort of measure for success in this country to be that dissent
has not been completely eradicated. What we have to look to are, you know, the places where the
political opposition gets its main oxygen? Are donations being curtailed? Are they trying to
consolidate control of the media in a way that only the regime story is being told? Are they targeting
just enough people with the criminal justice system to convince a lot of would-be volunteers or
activists to stay indoors? I think we are reaching that point where they've done just enough
to frustrate dissent, not to eliminate it, that they are going to be able to be able to be.
to keep the Democratic Party so weak that we'll be able to compete but not win in elections,
which is why this to me is a really decisive moment. When they are contemplating, ratcheting up
their attacks, we need to show that it's not working. We need to actually see in the coming
weeks and months there being bigger protests, there being more people signing up for activists
and mobilization efforts than ever. And if we do that, then you will sort of prove to folks who
may be thinking of sitting on the sidelines now that the times are getting darker, that
there's safety, that there's sort of safe space to still remain involved in our democracy.
So I'm almost reluctant to raise this in part because I do see such an asymmetry.
I see like this mannequin language about a killer be killed civil war that's from like the highest
echelons of Republican politics, whether it's an elected leader or very powerful people,
Elon Musk, others, right?
It's a very, those are, these are people in positions of power, and that is often set against
random people on the internet spouting off, right, performatively indifferent or justifying
or celebrating a murder.
And I view that as depraved.
I really do.
But at the same time, there's value in being, you know, confident in the truth.
And there is a strain of that on the left, isn't there?
And is it giving in to the argument from Trump and Vance to talk about that?
Or is it worth confronting it as real to demonstrate our actual democratic values?
No, I think it's absolutely worth acknowledging it and confronting it.
Of course, it's different when it's, you know, just run-of-the-mill political voices,
lionizing and endorsing violence on the left versus the president of the United States of America doing it.
But that doesn't mean that we don't have an obligation to try to shut it down and keep it as fringe.
Absolutely, we need to call this phenomenon out when it happens on the left.
There are people who are celebrating these acts of violence.
We saw that with the assassination of the health insurance CEO,
that there were, frankly, a lot of people online who were making the case that the system
was so badly rigged that their only recourse was to resort to violence.
That is simply not true.
There is no justification for violence.
The energy should be put into fixing a broken system.
And the system is absolutely not so broken.
Our democracy is not so badly rigged that it cannot be fixed.
And so when you see this endorsement or excuse of violence happening on the right or on the left,
I think it's just kind of a job requirement for all of us to call it out.
Part of this, too, is what people are exposed to, right?
what they're seeing. And there is a kind of way in which social media feeds a cynicism and a
sense of powerlessness as well as like this idea of, forget celebrating violence, but like
kind of performing indifference to the death of Charlie Kirk or or justifying the death of
Brian Thompson. And it speaks to a kind of a depravity that flows from being exposed to to content
that points to Republicans as an enemy as someone that's coming after you, that is targeting you.
And there is some truth to the fact that Republicans are in power and there are people that feel as though they're coming after marginalized groups.
But there is something really toxic that has kind of creeped in in both directions.
And I just don't know how we get to understanding and tackling it when it is so politicized, especially when it's coming from Vance and Trump.
So I hear what you were saying, right?
We live in this world in which each side believes the other is an existential threat to the survival.
of the nation. And when you believe something like that, then you start to believe that any means
are necessary in order for your side to prevail. I mean, I will caveat what I'm about to say with
this. For a lot of Americans, this administration is an existential threat to their survival.
I mean, they're about to throw 17 million people off of their health care. People are going to
die because of that. The way in which they are targeting the immigrant community is deeply
immoral, but that does not mean that any of the sort of non-conventional, nonviolent means are
justified. Here's, John, what I think one of the most important projects we need to be involved
in is, is to convince people that the lines that are perceived to divide us right now, black and
white, good and bad, true versus evil, are kind of not the only lines that matter. So yes,
We are divided on, you know, issues of taxation and guns and climate and choice, but we're not divided on many other issues, like the way in which our economy works only for corporations and not for regular people, like the way that our local communities have become so unhealthy, like the way that our internet perverts our families' conversation, our kids' existence.
There's a realignment that could happen in this country where we decide to actually unite social conservatives.
and social progressives around a project
to dismantle consolidated corporate power
to hold tech companies accountable for their crimes.
But we're so addicted to the way that we divide politics today
along these kind of static lines of division
on mainly social and cultural and hot button issues
that we can't find that other realignment.
So I just think that project of kind of finding
that hidden realignment that exists
is probably more important,
especially in the wake of this political
violence than ever before. Yeah, I saw a video going around of, of, of, of, of Charlie Kirk denouncing brain rot caused by Nick Fuentes. And that was brain rot that radicalizes people against the Jews. And I do, I feel like there are these two ideas that have to be held in our mind at the same time, which is there is a really dangerous right wing project that is coming after core American values and is trying to change this country in a way that is really dangerous. Well, at the same time, like we have a collective.
fight against the ways in which we have rotted our own brains and hardened ourselves to each
other, even when some of our concerns and justifications are real.
Let me say just one more word about on the topic we're just closing out because I think
it is important. There is an ability to unite a lot of elements of the right and left
around a revitalization of the idea of the common good in America. People are really sick and
tired of an economy that is driven by a cult of profit in which we sort of don't value anything
else other than making a dime. This is sort of a virtuous economy, a virtualist society anymore.
Trump has exploited that erosion of the common good, that erosion of communitarianism,
but there is an ability to sort of reunite the country around that conversation in which
we say, what are the six or seven things we can do to incentivize us to care about our neighbors
again? And I think you'll find strange bedfellows if you sort of start with a conversation of why
we have been kind of torn away from each other, from our neighbors in a way that feels very
unfamiliar. Before I let you go, Donald Trump just posted about the continuing resolution,
the CR, this is about the funding of the government. You've been outspoken. You've been
often a lone voice, even in committee, about why Democrats should not be going along with
Republicans on the funding fight. What's the status of that? What's happening right now?
Where are your colleagues? Yeah, on the specifics of this shutdown, this is going to be a hard
fight because I just don't believe that the Democratic Party has an obligation to fund the
destruction of our democracy. And if we're going to lend our votes to a witch hunt operation
against progressive organizations or colleges and universities or our fellow citizens who are undocumented,
I think that ultimately becomes a real moral stain on our movement.
So I know we always have this instinct as the minority party to be responsible,
but we need to start drawing lines in the sand about what kind of government we're willing to fund
and what kind of government we're not willing to fund.
And to me, that means trying to stop the health care disaster that's about to, you know, be visited on our communities and building some protections into this budget that make it harder for Trump to get away with his lawlessness.
I think this is a moral moment for the party.
And I think the country is going to be looking to see what the price for Democrats is of putting art and premature on a budget that could potentially fund the death blow.
to our democracy if we're not careful.
So I agree. I agree it's the moral moment, but then all of a sudden, the government shut
down and everybody's trying to figure out what it looks like to get it reopened.
What you're saying is you think that there are winnable fights if we hold the line on
Obamacare funding plus some other protections that you believe if Democrats held together,
they could win that fight and get a vote that includes them and forces them into the budget?
Well, I think my vote is really easy to get because all I,
want is for the president to obey the law, implement the budget we write, and for premiums to
not go up by 75% later this year. I don't need some big new social program. I'm not looking
for Obamacare too. I just want premiums to not go up and for the president to obey the law.
And you ask a common question, which is like, can you win those fights? Well, that's a question
of whether Republicans are going to be reasonable or not. I mean, they're in charge. They know
that in order to pass a budget, they need Democratic votes. And what we're asking for is not the
moon. And if their belief is that unless Donald Trump can act lawlessly, we're going to shut down
the government, I'll take that case to the people. Yeah, it's two things, right? It's why the Republicans
will be reasonable, but also it's with Democrats are going to hold together, have a clear line,
make that case to the country. That's not up to Republicans. That's up to you. And do you feel like
you and you and your colleagues are ready to make that fight, draw that line of the sand and hold to it?
Well, listen, I can only speak for myself, and I think I can win that fight.
I think I can say to the American public that Republicans were so committed to the president
being able to act illegally, and they were so committed to raising your premiums by 75%
that they decided to shut down the government, that that's all we asked.
And that we have an obligation, a moral, ethical, and representational obligation to ask for
those simple things, and they wouldn't do it.
And thus, as the party in charge, they decided to shut down the government.
I think we can win that argument.
Senator Chris Murphy.
Thank you so much.
Appreciate it.
That's our show for today.
Thanks to Chris Murphy for coming on.
Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday.
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