Pod Save the World - Was Jeffrey Epstein an Israeli Asset?
Episode Date: July 16, 2025Tommy and Ben discuss Trump’s Ukraine policy announcement and try to unpack how much of it is style vs. substance. They also talk about the massive layoffs at the State Department, Trump’s bottom-...of-the-barrel ambassador picks for crucial posts in Southeast Asia, the investigations into Pete Hegseth’s top aides at the Pentagon, and the president’s excruciating meeting with African leaders at the White House. Additionally, they dig into Trump’s vendetta against Brazil, explore the evidence behind the claim that Jeffrey Epstein worked for Israeli intelligence, the defection of some of Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition partners, the murder of an American-Palestinian man in the West Bank by Israeli settlers, and the latest Cuba fumble from Marco Rubio. Then, Tommy speaks to Matt Duss, executive vice president of the Center for International Policy and a former foreign policy adviser to Bernie Sanders, about how Democrats must reshape foreign policy for the Trump era and beyond.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
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Welcome back to Pottae the World.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Ben Rhodes.
Ben Rhodes in the flesh.
It's good to see you.
Back, yes.
You remember English?
You've been speaking so much French.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Austria, Czech Republic.
Pan-European languages.
Pan-European.
Well, I mean, the reality is it's interesting to be in Europe with your kids because on
the one hand, you know, they notice everybody speaks English.
You have to communicate to them that that's like a real privilege.
Yeah, it really is.
that people from those countries have to learn other languages in ways that we don't.
It's always embarrassing, actually.
I know.
I wish I never feel dumber than when I'm just running around the country and I have no idea what I'm saying to anyone.
Yeah.
Though I do think probably AI will solve this problem for all of us, which is kind of cheating.
Yeah.
It's good for you to learn a language.
Yeah, I guess.
You know, I guess at the end of the day, like there'll be some, you know, automated, well, already, I guess you could Google translate, but there'll be some chip where you just suddenly speak a different language, I guess.
Look at like a sassy Nazi version from Brock.
That's depending on where you are.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, actually, yeah, we won't know exactly what it's saying.
Maybe that's a dangerous thing.
Yeah, exactly.
Ben, while you were gone, some big things happened.
None bigger than the Pentagon pulling all of its speakers from the Aspen Security Forum.
I know.
Because Jake Sullivan is attending, and they're worried he might hurt their feelings.
I saw that, and it was simultaneously like the most, I mean, I have to assume that
part of this is that Pete Higgseth probably didn't get invited to the Aspen Security Forum.
That was my theory of this.
See, I thought it was a troll.
It felt like they, like, they agreed to have, like, 15 people speak.
And then the last minute pulled the plug.
Yeah.
And, like, look, I say this with all due respect to the Aspen Security Forum.
Yeah.
Mostly because I'd love to get invited and dick around doing that soon for a week.
But, like, who fucking cares about who's speaking in this thing.
But, like, crying about Jake Sullivan attending the same conference as you,
it's some of the softest shit I've ever heard.
Well, that was, I mean, it was funny because their initial statement was like,
this, these people are evil globalists who hate the President of the United States.
Did you see that one?
I was like, oh, that's a little over the top.
And then they came out again.
They're like, and Jake Sullivan's going to be there.
You knew what this organization was when he said yes.
Yeah, yeah.
Did you not Google it?
Oh, God.
Well, it's, you know, you get to go to Aspen.
It's nice.
Yeah, it sounds great.
Yeah.
why some of Trump's ambassador nominees are having a tough time, why the walls are closing in on two of Pete Hexeth's top aides at the Pentagon, and we'll get it to the Trump administration's incompetence and how it's harming efforts to free political prisoners in Venezuela.
We will cover the low lights of this recent forum Trump did with African leaders at the White House.
I try to make sense of the latest tariff news.
And then we're going to dig into the claim that Jeffrey Epstein was an agent or asset of Israeli intelligence because,
it's like the biggest story in the right wing world.
And because you need Epstein content in every crooked media platform, which I totally support.
So, yes.
It's just like amazing to watch this story just balloon and grow and get worse and weirder.
Yeah, it's like one of those like balls that gets shot out and it's just ricocheting around, you know?
Like there's so many different angles.
Yeah.
I opened Twitter like right before to see if anything happened.
And because I guess I had looked at some Epstein content, the first thing was like a Kevin Spacey tweet.
and like release the Epstein files.
I was like, we need to hear from that guy?
Like, I don't think that's the voice we needed on this.
Kevin Spacey.
Everybody's got an opinion about Epstein.
That's the thing.
Yes. And they're all like just firmly held.
So we're also going to take an opportunity to look at the latest news from Israel.
And then I'm going to try to trigger Ben by asking him a very basic question about Cuba policy.
I hope you're ready for that.
Our guest this week is our friend Matt Duss.
You guys have heard Matt on the show before.
He worked for Bernie Sanders for a long time.
He is one of the smartest.
most unabashedly progressive foreign policy thinkers in Washington. And we talk about what the Democratic
Party's foreign policy should be for the remainder of the Trump era and then also going forward.
So good big picture conversation with that. Yeah. Now I'm looking forward to that one.
All right, Ben. So let's turn into Ukraine because it's been a headspinning couple of weeks for
people in Ukraine and then anyone trying to understand the Trump administration's policy.
Last week we covered this, I think it was last week, this weird freezing and then unfreezing of
weapons ship into Ukraine. Okay. So then a Monday.
Trump welcomes NATO Secretary General Mark Ruta to the Oval Office, and they bill it, like in the preview stories, is it like a major Ukraine policy announcement?
Here's a clip of Trump and Ruta talking with the press either before or after the meeting.
We're going to be doing secondary tariffs.
If we don't have a deal in 50 days, it's very simple.
And they'll be at 100%.
And that's the way it is.
That can be more simple.
This whole deal is also about missiles or ammunition, so it's broader than it.
I go home, I tell the first lady, and I spoke with Vladimir today. We had a wonderful conversation.
She said, oh, really? Another city was just hit. We fooled Clinton, Bush, Obama, Biden. He didn't fool me.
Yes, sir. You're the only one who clocked this guy, this Putin guy. So bad. I initially thought this was a huge policy change. The more I dug into it, the less I was sure. Okay. So clearly Trump's tone has changed, right? I mean, I talked about this a little with fabs on Pats of America. In 2022, Trump called.
the full-scale invasion genius. He called it savvy, and he refused to say it was illegal. So that
sort of sounded pretty Putin-friendly. We all watched the infamous Zelensky meeting the Oval
Office in February when Trump and J.D. Vance humiliated him. But these days, it does seem like
Trump is increasingly angry at being lied to and humiliated by Putin, who apparently makes Trump believe
he's about to get a peace deal done and he launches like 500 drones and missiles at Kiev. It's
interesting that Melania apparently is in Trump's ear on this one, like good on her, I guess. But in
practice like what does this mean starting with a weapon shipments piece i think what trump is saying
is that if european countries send ukraine weapons we will then sell those countries replacement systems
but he wants to do it via nato and he wants to make europe pay for it i think that's significant when
you're talking about like big ticket systems like the patriot missile batteries right because like only
the u.s can make those and you're not going to give it away if you can't replace it however it's
going to take years to fill those orders and then like it's just not clear what this change means
for offensive weapons like artillery shells, is the U.S. going to facilitate Germany sending
their long-range missiles that could strike within Russia? There was just this Financial Times report
that said Trump privately encouraged Zelensky to step up deep strikes on Russian territory
and even asked if Ukraine could hit Moscow with the U.S. weapons, which would be quite a surprising
change because when Biden allowed Ukraine to hit targets in Russia, Trump accused him of trying
to start World War III. And then there's the sanctions piece, which is even thin
in my opinion. Like Trump says, Putin now is 50 days to cut a peace deal or get sanctioned.
That would include like 100% sanctions on Russia and then secondary sanctions on countries
that do business with Russia. But like the U.S. and Russia have gone from doing $53 billion in
trade in 2021 to $5 billion last year. Some more sanctions from us does nothing. And I'm
skeptical that Trump is going to sanction like India and China on behalf of Ukraine. But I don't know.
What did you make of this with like a couple of days to digest?
I do think it's worth just pointing out, for the record, the absolute absurdity of him thinking that he's declaring himself a genius because he's figured out Vladimir Putin is a liar.
I mean, every single person in the world knows this.
And frankly, all the criticisms that people like us have heaped on Trump are because he was so closely taking Vladimir Putin at his word.
And let's just clock now.
Completely credulous, yeah.
Now, here's the thing.
There's a shift in tone and there's, yes,
it would be marginally helpful to Ukraine if the U.S. actually delivered some of the weapons that are in the pipeline.
Like some of these weapons shipments that they've announced are literally just Biden-era presidential drawdowns is what they're called.
So there's weapons sitting there that he's been withholding from sending to them.
And yes, it would be helpful to backfill the Europeans in some way if they're providing more of these systems to the Ukrainians.
The Patriots are really important to this because given the missile bombardments that have been,
the director of Kiev and other parts of Ukraine, they desperately need defensive systems like
patients. Now, part of the problem, as we talked about, is U.S. Patriot Reserves are vastly depleted
because of how many we've shoveled out the door to Israel or to deal with threats from the
Houthis in Yemen. And so there's a broader problem across the NATO alliance, even if you had a
normal president, there's a lack of these systems. So like that's something he's going to have to
kind of help regenerate. And frankly, some of these Europeans, if they're talking about
defense spending, this is an area where they need to focus. Here's my bigger problem. My bigger problem
is, and I alluded to this last week, but Vladimir Putin has a strategy. It's very clear. It has been
consistent since the beginning of the full-scale invasion. After, you know, they got beat back,
it was like, I'm going to fight a war of attrition, I'm going to grind down the Ukrainians,
I'm going to cannibalize more and more land, I'm going to bust and evade these sanctions,
given my relationships, given the oil and gas I have to sell in the market. And I don't really
give a shit, you know, what the Americans do, because they're episodic. You know, they surge weapon
shipments, but then put the brakes on Ukraine. And this, the problem is this shift is not, there's no
strategy behind it. Like if people wanted to know what would be a case of a strategy, well, if the
U.S. and Europe actually came together and we're like, you know, we're going to take all the frozen
Russian reserves, the hundreds of billions, most of which are in Europe, by the way, and actually
would make those available to Ukraine, that'd be a pretty big game changer. Or we're going to have a
methodical multi-year effort that we announced to provide them with both defensive systems and other
systems. And we're going to say to Russia, if you don't come to the negotiating table, here's the
three-year plan for the defense support to Ukraine. That will get Putin's attention. This is not a change in
the war. This has been the same status quo ante. He's just going back to the Biden policy.
With a fake deadline. Biden policy with a fake deadline and a lack of a real commitment, at least
with Biden, you kind of knew he was going to stick with it.
And so, I don't know, it's better than where things were, but it's not like a shift in strategy.
And actually, the thing I want to ask you, Tommy, to bring the Epstein thing into this for a second.
Oh, yeah.
But if you're MAGA, you know, or even like, you know, all-in pod MAGA, TechBRO MAGA or Banam MAGA, you know, there's also the matter of, like, you bombed Iran, you flipped on Ukraine.
They're furious.
Not releasing the Epstein file.
I was like, what, so much for Trump being this kind of new guy with a different vision of
global politics. He's a guy whose vision didn't work on all these things. And so now he's just
reverting back to like, you know, what anyone would do. Yeah, I mean, the banon is quite clear.
Like he told, I think it was Politico, he said, we're about to arm people. We have literally
no control over. This is not the global war and terror. This is old fashioned grinding war in the
bloodlands of Europe and we're being dragged into it. So he's real pissed. And as you said,
it comes on the heels of the Iran strikes, the Epstein stuff, like all of it. You're right,
the all-in pod types, like the shadow secretary of state, David Sachs, like his big
thing was that the Russia-Ukraine war was a disaster and it was going to start World War
3 and he's not going to be happy about this. I mean, one of Trump's advisors told Politico on
background, the president's view is Russia is going to win. It's a matter of how long it takes.
Russia has the bigger economy, has the bigger military, has more than enough bodies to throw
at the meat grinder and just doesn't care. So it's like that's an analysis I think a lot of
experts would agree with, but you're also kind of signaling to Putin there that in the long run,
like we know you're going to take this thing, so we just kind of want to ceasefire.
There is this other issue of like the Senate is working on even tougher sanctions.
Trump said at that meeting, like he didn't need them yet, but he kind of sounded like he wanted
them as leverage.
Lindy Graham says stay tuned for a plan about going after Russian assets in Europe.
So maybe that's something they have in the offing, but like we don't know.
But Ben, did you notice who's going to be coordinating this effort?
Did you catch that?
I didn't catch that.
Do you remember Matt Whitaker?
Oh, yeah, of course.
Of course.
Of course, who could forget Matt Whitaker.
Acting Attorney General from 2018 to 2019 once was on the board of a company that sold big dick toilets.
Toilets, masculine toilets for well-endowed men.
Because frankly, we've all been there and it's one of the last kind of bastions of legal discrimination.
Well, yeah, I'm sure that prepares him to deal with like Patriot systems, right?
Yeah, no, for sure.
But this is a relevant point, though, because, look, this is what's so frustrating is the short-termerism of his.
his approach to everything in a world where people like Putin have very long-term views of
things. It just doesn't allow for strategy. And also, like, the Ukrainians, everybody's
so desperate to get Trump's approval that everybody else is, you know, the Ukrainians are
making huge shakeups to their own government, for instance, and people should watch that space.
I think more is coming. They yanked their ambassador out of D.C. because she was seen as too
friendly to Democrats. You know, Mark Ruta, you know, calls Trump daddy just so he'll do this, right?
Sesey's texts. But there's this kind of desperate, like, desire to get to Trump because, to your
Matt Whitaker point, who is running the policy in this administration on Ukraine? You know, we ought to
pause, apparently because of this guy, Eldridge Colby at the Pentagon. But really, Pete Hegseth signed off
on it. Yeah, yeah. But maybe Trump knew about it and is just screwing Hegs F. Like, we don't know.
And that's the thing. Mark O'Rubio is the Secretary of State and the National Security Advisor,
Who are the top people in Ukraine and the government?
Like, it's just people trying to get Trump's attention so that the thing he says at the next pool spray or the next weapon shipping can get out the door.
You're not going to have a coherent strategy for how to deal with, like, Russia's invasion of Ukraine that way.
I mean, the episodic nature, the different personalities kind of parachuting it out of this thing, like the NATO alliance having to spend in the Ukrainian government, how much time do you think they spend just figuring out how to kiss Trump's ass to keep the world?
to keep the weapons shipments flowing.
That's time they should be spending, figuring out what is like a long-term, what's their
negotiating position, what's the long-term security guarantee for Ukraine.
That's what's so damaging about this.
It's just trying to get to the next month in a war in which Vladimir Putin, you know,
knows very clearly what he's doing.
Yeah, well, Steve Wickev tries to negotiate every deal and your diplomats are sidelined.
Speaking of them, it has been a tough week for folks at the State Department because last
week. I think over 1,300 people were laid off. It was like 1,100 civil servants, 250 foreign service
officers. This is part of Rubio's goal of shedding 15% of the State Department's, 18,000 domestic
employees. So some of the departments that were hardest hit include the Bureau of Population
Refugees and Migration Office, which resettles refugees in the U.S. So I guess like no
surprise they're getting laid off since we don't, we only accept white South Africans now. The Bureau of
of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, because we don't care about that stuff anymore. The
coordinator for Afghan relocation efforts. So like just going to leave quarter million Afghans waiting
to resettle here in limbo, which is inexcusable. The Office of Global Women's Issues,
the Bureau of CyberSace and Digital Policy that the Washington Post says that Bureau handled
U.S. engagement with partner countries to prevent China from prevailing an AI and 5G wireless
technologies and global data policy. Seems important. Seems like the kind of stuff Trump would care about.
All this stuff seems important. Yeah, no, for sure. But like that one seems like a very like Trump
focus thing. They got rid of some bureaus within the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs.
One that deals with like ASEAN, like multilateral institutions, the other that deals with the quad,
which for non-dorcs is like Australia, India, Japan, the U.S. They also fired like the post says
they fired two experts in quantum technology, a scientist with a PhD in quantum physics,
three experts in AI. So like again, like all things that seem future focused. Ben, I have conflicting
views on this. Like I feel horrible for the individuals getting fired. They deserve to be treated
better, like obviously. It also seems weird to constantly talk about pivoting to Asia and then fire a bunch
of bureaus full of experts focused on Asia. But I also think anyone who's worked at the State
Department would agree that the structure is a little unwieldy. It can be random. It can be
redundant. Reform might be a good thing. But I don't know enough about these reforms to kind of like
evaluate them. I was talking to someone today at state who said, you know, the structural changes
to the Bureau of Asian Affairs made sense to this person. But I don't know. What was your takeaway on
sort of seeing what they've done? It wasn't Doge.
that it was like two weeks, at least was a process.
Well, I mean, first of all, what they're signaling is like a complete retreat from any
values-based proposition in American foreign policy.
So they're deliberately getting, every bureau they got rid of is basically one that either
interacts with the international multilateral system or anyone that works on a values proposition,
right?
Like, DRL, democracy, human rights and labor, like, those are the people to advocate for dissidents.
Those are the people that, you know, pressure countries and human rights.
It's like, so if you couple this with the doging of USAID, this is now a completely valueless
foreign policy.
Like we, and people might say to me, well, then it's always been that way.
No, it, like it was hypocritical, but you had people that were out there advocating on certain
things.
And within the system, within the U.S. government, if people want to know, well, why do you
need these people in these own bureaus, it's because their equity, they're there to argue
for these things.
We need to pay more attention to human rights.
you get rid of that.
Nobody's job.
No one prioritizes it.
Yeah.
It's nobody's job to raise those issues.
So that's, that's, I don't like to see those things go, even if I think you probably
could have consolidated some of them.
Right, right.
Move some pieces of it.
More efficient, yeah.
The other thing is, I think there was an, talking to people at state, this is kind of done
like, for instance, some of the foreign service officers that work in those bureaus, they rotate,
right?
So, you know what I mean?
Like, they're not like, they're not in the bureau for life.
So if you happen to be rotated, it's like a musical chairs game.
Just bad luck.
Yeah.
You might have been in the East Asia Bureau that everybody says, okay, but you might have been
at an embassy last year and you were rotated through one of these other bureaus and then you just
got a good point.
So even though it was all sensibly done with some forethought, it actually wasn't from a personnel
basis because in talking to people, you just drew the short straw if you happen to be currently
posted somewhere that, you know, that Trump administration didn't like, you know.
Yeah, that sucks.
Yeah.
That really sucks.
I thought of it in terms of like kind of removing like kind of boxes on an org chart.
I didn't think of it in terms of the rotation.
Yeah.
That's just terrible.
And so you don't know, there's no talent evaluation.
It's not like, you know, performance evaluations.
It was literally just like, how can we give this whole agency a State Department a haircut?
And look, I think the U.S. is going to suffer from being valueless and losing a lot of those people, even if, yes, you could have done a more coherent reorganization of state department.
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Speaking of not prioritizing talent, Trump is not sending America's best when it comes to a lot of his
ambassadorial nominees.
Let's talk about two today.
Let's start with Dr. Anjani Sinha.
It's a Florida-based orthopedics and sports medicine surgeon.
He's Trump's nominee to be ambassador to Singapore.
His confirmation hearing didn't go great, I would say.
Here's Senator Tammy Duckworth of Illinois asking Dr. Sinha some basic questions about the job and his answer.
What year is Singapore next schedule to be the ASEAN chair?
This year is Malaysia.
I didn't ask you about this year.
When is Singapore going to be the ASEAN chair?
I don't know when, but this year...
2027.
Can you name one thing that will be of critical importance to Singapore as ASEAN chair?
A role.
There are many things.
Can you name one thing?
Defense, economics.
Those are very broad.
Name an issue.
Trade.
I don't think, no.
Please, I'm trying to help you here, but you've not even done your homework, sir.
I just feel that you are not taking this seriously, and you think this is a glamour posting,
that you're going to live a nice life in Singapore.
What we need is someone who's going to actually do the work.
Pop quiz, bitch, and you failed that stuff.
BBC says the clips in that hearing have gone viral in Singapore resulting in comments like,
quote, not sure which is a worse insult.
The tariffs are having him as an ambassador to Singapore, and this guy is more ambassador than ambassador.
or Zing Ben.
And then we have influencer Nick Adams, who is nominated to be a U.S. ambassador to Malaysia.
Adams is a former Australian politician who was suspended from his party for verbally abusing a journalist.
He then foisted himself upon America and became a naturalized citizen in 2021, a process he documented in a book called Green Card Warrior,
my quest for illegal immigration in an illegal system.
Now he just seems to spend all of his time on Twitter doing what I think is a bit, but like the
line between satire and reality is not always clear. Here's a sample tweet, quote,
I go to Hooters, I eat your stakes, I lift extremely heavy weights, I read the Bible every
night, I am pursued by copious amounts of women, I'm wildly successful. I have the physique
of Greek God. I have an IQ over 180. I'm extremely charismatic. They hate this. Can't confirm.
He does not have the physique of a Greek god. Adam's appointment has rustle ruffles and feathers in
Malaysia, predominantly Muslim country to which the U.S. usually sends seasoned foreign service.
officers, yeah, not people who sort of tweet Islamophobic things. Ben, did Trump name like a parody
Twitter account to be a U.S. ambassador just to troll the libs, like to a country of 35 million
people? It's pretty clear that the people in charge of personnel in Trump administration
prioritize kind of trolling, owning libs, rewarding, like the most dead end MAGA people.
I just wanted to connect these too. People should know, and most world those obviously do, but
ASEAN, these are the 10 Southeast Asian countries, if there is one region in the world that is most
important to this question of the U.S.-China competition, to the future of dealing with issues like
climate change, right, to who's going to buy Chinese AI or American A? We can go on down the list.
Will a war start in South China Sea? That's the kind of thing that you want Singapore,
sharing the ASEAN thing, to be addressing things like the South China Sea. It's easy to kind of
Snicker, I guess, and troll assigned trolls or weird donors to these places.
These are really important countries.
Like, Singapore is our hub for how you engage all of Southeast Asia, right?
And Trump talks about China all the time, but he clearly doesn't give a shit about
having any kind of coherent strategy for how to think about China.
This is how he deals with some of the most important countries in Asia in Singapore and Malaysia.
That's what jumps out to me.
And how can Mark Arruvio see?
we're actually taking seriously this effort to kind of revitalize the State Department
and then make the face of the U.S. State Department in a really important part of the world,
these fucking clowns.
You don't think the hooters guy is going to do it?
And look, we could add, Tommy, we've talked about this before and we'll piss off some
people we know.
But like, one way Democrats could show an alternative that cares more about the Foreign Service
is to commit to making it the norm to appoint Foreign Service officers ambassador at all these places.
Yeah, no, really make a list of what the politicals would be and just end it there.
I totally agree with that.
It should be an exception. Yes. There are some, it doesn't mean that there's not, we know some people who are great ambassadors to, you know, certain countries who were, yes, they were donors or they're, you know, political people, you know, but the norm should be foreign service officers.
Yes, for sure. They're experts for a reason. Yeah. Then a couple updates on two stories we've covered a bunch. One is Signalgate and the administration sending Venezuela and men to rot in prison in El Salvador. So first, the listeners probably remember Signalgate. I don't need to summarize it as the administration was.
conducting airstrikes on the Houthi rebels in Yemen via the commercial app signal, which is a big
no-no, especially when you add a journalist to the chat like Jeffrey Goldberg. Politico reported
that there are now two investigations into Pete Hegeseth's Secretary of Defense's staff over at the
Pentagon. Investigation A is being conducted by the Defense Department Inspector General's
office and is looking into whether a Hexseth staffer named Ricky Buria set up this separate
internet line that was kind of unburdened by the Pentagon security protocols that allowed him to
use signal in his office. Investigation B is run by the Air Force Office of Special Investigations.
They're also investigating Buria and whether he was leaking information. And they're also looking at
whether Hegset's personal attorney, Tim Parletore, attended meetings above his security clearance level.
Politico called them, these are like Pete's two most trusted guys. So this is a big political
problem in crisis for him. So we'll keep watching this one. And then on the Venezuelan sent to
El Salvador by, you know, Stephen Miller and the Trump administration. According to,
to the New York Times, both Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, and then sentient Twitter
troll turned Special Envoy to Venezuela, Rick Grinnell, were trying to negotiate the release
of political prisoners in Venezuela at the same time with the same interlocutor in Venezuela,
but they didn't coordinate with each other. And they ended up offering like different incentives
to the Venezuelans. Rubio offered the release of these dudes in El Salvador. Rick
Grinnell offered a license to allow Chevron to export oil from Venezuela, but Grinnell apparently
didn't even have, like, authorization to make that offer.
Because that's the most corrupt thing possible to be offering, right?
Some oil interests that he probably has, you know.
Great work, everybody.
Yeah.
To connect these two, they're both about the kind of chaos.
Again, like, there is a cost to having completely unserious people like Pete Hacks
running the Pentagon.
The culture there is going to reflect his personality.
It really is.
It filters down.
And the people he chooses, the actions he takes, as long as he's at the Pentagon, you're going to have this kind of error of chaos and incompetence around him.
And we'll see if Trump sticks that out.
But across the board, there's nobody running a process.
Like, you can laugh at the National Security Council and, you know, the jargon.
Geocracy.
Yeah.
But like, you need a meeting where the State Department and the Defense Department and the Intelligence Committee are sitting at table being like, what is our plan to get the political prisoners out of defense?
Right. And when Hags, it's like, are we all good with me freezing weapons ship into Ukraine?
Yeah, exactly. You guys are cool? Can we just double check that? Yeah. And I love how this reflects the kind of personal prerogatives, right? Grinnell has this whiff of corruption. Like everything is about some money interest, right? There's a real estate interest in the Balkans. And then there's a oil interest in Venezuela. Rubio loves to kind of horse trade with his friend Buckele. Like, but these, there's no strategy behind any of this, right? This connects to the Ukraine thing. It's just to what is this all adding up to?
Yeah, like did we send these dudes to El Salvador with the goal of eventually trading them for American political prisoners?
Like, why would Venezuelans want these dudes?
Like, they all try to seek asylum in the U.S.?
I mean, none of it really makes sense.
Well, and also, again, there's always been hypocrisy part of American foreign policy.
But, like, we advocate for, like, the release of prisoners in Venezuela while adding prisoners in El Salvador.
Like, we're sending people to gulags run by a dictator in El Salvador while demanding the dictator in Venezuela, you know, abides by, quote, unquote, human rights.
You know, like we clearly don't give a shit about it.
Yeah.
Yeah, actually, I think your life as a prisoner, you have fewer rights, illegally speaking,
after the state of exception was filed in El Salvador than you do in Venezuela.
So things are actually worse there.
Then we also wanted to highlight one of the cringier moments Trump has driven us recently.
So last week he hosted the leaders of Gabon, Gini Bissau, Liberia, Mauritania, Senegal at the White House.
They were discussing, as Trump put it, shifting from AID to TRAD, like I think he's trying to make a
USAID to trade, aid to trade.
After Liberian President Joseph Bokai spoke, Trump had this to say.
Well, thank you.
It's such good English, such beautiful.
Where did you learn to speak so beautifully?
Were you educated?
Where?
In Liberia.
Yes.
Well, that's very interesting.
It's beautiful English.
I have people at this table.
Can't speak nearly as well.
So, for the record,
Liberia's official language is English.
The country was built by freed African-American slaves.
Their capital is Monrovia, named after James Monroe.
So this was quite racist and embarrassing.
The meeting also showed how these foreign leaders have gotten the memo that Trump likes flattery and bribes.
The president of Senegal literally said, quote,
I know you are a tremendous golf player.
Golf requires concentration and precision qualities that also make for a great leader.
So perhaps an investment could be made in a golf course.
in Senegal, that would be an opportunity for you to show off your skills on the golf course.
Ben, thoughts on this innovative approach to the continent of Africa?
It's just, I mean, again, the common theme here, right?
This is like the cringe, like it's impossible overshould how insulting this is to not just people in Liberia,
to everybody around the world, basically, including, by the way, to the block community in this country that has deep ties to
to Liberia.
Not that Trump gives a shit
about any of this.
Like every now and then
you have to be reminded
that this guy
is clever,
but he's a fucking moron.
Yeah.
You know,
like,
like,
there's been this effort to kind of,
I don't even say,
to kind of smart wash Trump,
right?
I mean,
Liberia's not a tough one.
Like,
like people who don't know much
about the history
of the continent of Africa.
If you're American,
you kind of know about Liberia.
Like,
you probably learned about it in school.
You probably learned about in school.
The flag looks like our flag.
Right.
It's not a whole.
part one. The briefing memo, what kind of prep is he getting, right, to not even have someone,
you know, prepare him that these people speak English? Like, so that's one thing. But the other thing is
there is a huge, I think, in MAGA spaces, and I think it bleeds into the mainstream media,
too, because these people kiss his ass, there's, well, maybe he's on to something. He's,
nothing is changing. They just flatter him, right? Or they just give him like a fairly corrupt concession,
like a golf course. A U.S. interests are not being advanced here. China has a Africa strategy
that they've stuck to for a long time. They know what language people speak. They know what kind
of investments they want to make. Like Trump, even if he has a strategy, it's like we want these
critical minerals. China has been working out, not just China. I don't want to just make this
like a Cold War kind of thing, but Europeans do too. Like the Indians do. The Emirates do. Like,
people take Africa very seriously because it's a very serious place. Right. Growing population.
Yes.
Like a lot of resources.
But also, I mean, I'm sure Trump walked out of there.
He was like, huh, do I want a golf course in Senegal?
Maybe we'll send Eric.
No, and he walks out there and thinks, like, I'm a genius because they all kiss my ass.
But they're kissing his ass to just get through the fucking meeting and to try to avoid tariffs.
They're not making like meaningful deals with us.
It's, it's in this is the short-termism of Trump.
It's like, it's, I need to get through the next meeting.
I need to get through the next day.
I need to get through the next week.
But there's no U.S. strategy informing any of this.
It's just all Trump's own impulses.
Speaking of no strategy informing decision making, let's talk about tariffs.
There you go.
Like us, the entire world, are trying to understand the Trump tariff policy.
One example I think that highlights what you were just talking about, which is like kind of the incoherence of it all, is the administration treatment of Brazil.
So last Wednesday, Trump threatened Brazil with a 50% tariff because he's upset about, quote unquote, the witch hunt against Jaira Bolsonaro, former president of Brazil.
Bolsonaro is being prosecuted by Brazilian courts for conspiring.
to violently overthrow Brazil's current democratically elected government.
So obviously Trump sanctioning them over this is nuts.
And you could tell that ABC News's John Carl thought as much.
And he interviewed Trump's economic advisor Kevin Hassett on ABC News on Sunday.
And it was a very, very painful listen.
Check it out.
Here's a clip.
Brazil had a $6.8 billion surplus last year.
In fact, the U.S. hasn't had a trade deficit
with Brazil since 2007, I mean, almost two decades.
So why, why, why are we putting a punishing 50% tariff on Brazil?
Well, bottom line is the president has been very frustrated with negotiations with Brazil
and also with the actions of Brazil.
In the end, though, you know, we're trying to put America first.
I don't understand how you're saying it's about America,
because the president has made it quite clear that what he's upset about
is how the Brazilian Supreme Court
has handled the criminal case involving former president Bolsonaro.
I'm agreeing with you.
What I'm saying is that what I've been saying with most countries
was that it's really about us getting the tariffs in order.
And I think that this tariff for Brazil is a lot higher
because of the president's frustration with Bolsonaro.
And the fact that Bolsonaro himself, you know, anyway.
On what authority does the president have
to impose tariffs on a country
because he doesn't like what that country's judicial system?
is handling a specific case.
Well, I mean, how is that...
If he thinks it's a national defense emergency
or if he thinks it national security threat
that he has the authority under Aipa.
So how is it a national security threat that,
you know, how Brazil is handling
a criminal case against its former president?
Well, that's not the only thing.
That's not the only thing.
No John Carl lunch for him, huh?
Yeah.
That was a very long clip on purpose,
just to show it painful it was,
and we cut it in half.
Yeah.
It went on for so much longer.
So remember, the initial Liberation Day tariffs
were like seemingly all
based on the U.S. trade deficit with these countries.
And as John pointed out there, we've had a trade surplus with Brazil since 2007.
Ben, bigger picture, though, to your point, like, does Trump think that crushing the Brazilian
economy is going to somehow benefit Bolsonaro politically?
Doesn't that seem, like, illogical to you?
This is all illogical.
And the reality is what Trump enjoys is this capacity to just turn the dial up and down on tariffs,
on each country based on his whims.
Sometimes it may be a personal corruption interest,
like I want a golf course.
Sometimes it may be that he just heard
about something that they were doing to Bolsonaro
and he's like, I'm going to tariff them, right?
Sometimes it may be some trade strategy,
but the point is nobody fucking knows,
and that's a hell of a way
to be the largest economy in the world.
And Brazil is a hugely, hugely important economy.
What they're going to do is they're going to try to figure out
how to US proof their economy
from this kind of insanity, right?
So put aside the fact that this is insane that we're basically interfering in their politics on behalf of a guy that tried to January, literally tried to January 6th, the election result and wanted there to be a military coup in that country.
So the interest we're claiming under these dubious authorities is that we want to support the anti-democratic right-wing autocrat in his efforts to get off for having tried to perpetrate a coup.
That's what we're interfering in their politics.
National security emergency.
So the rest of the world sees that.
And how do you think they're going to take lectures from Marco Rubio,
anticipating your Cuban question about like democracy anywhere in the Western
hemisphere when we're interfering on behalf of the autocrat?
But more profoundly, Brazil is going to plug their economy into China.
They're going to plug their economy into India.
They're going to plug their economy in Europe.
They're going to do everything they can.
This huge important country, like this biggest country in South America,
like huge exporter of commodities.
Lots of those natural resources, Trump says he wants.
They're going to, they could make deals with China to report.
place American soybean producers, putting a lot of American farmers out of work, right?
Like, all these interests are going to suffer because Trump is, wants to personally kind of turn
this dial up and down based on the last thing he heard from somebody.
And like, Bolsonaro, the plot was to like kill Lula, like the current president, to kill the head
of the Supreme Court in Brazil.
It's pretty serious shit.
Yeah.
And this guy's just like a scummy thug.
Yeah, but he's tight with like Don Jr.
Yeah.
Right.
list autocrats that that fucking suck, you know?
And we're like interfering in their politics on their behalf everywhere.
And Lula will probably run on it and, you know, stoke nationalism and probably go up in the
polls.
As he should.
As he should.
I'm rooting for Lula.
Like, do you go at me all you, MAGA people?
Like, because why is it in America first interest to like help this fucking loser in Brazil
have a military coup?
I don't think that's in America's interest.
I think that's not America first.
It is not.
It is not America first.
All right, Ben.
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returns, quince.com slash world. Our listeners have probably been following this MAGA coalition
meltdown over Jeffrey Epstein, the now deceased financier who had all these powerful connections
that he used to get away with sexually abusing underage women. If you want more details about
the case and kind of like what Trump's base is saying, why there's some ad, check out any of the
400 Pod Save America YouTube's that Favreone I've done in the last week or so. Yeah, it was just
it was impossible not to do it. The gist, though, is that Trump and his team, they promised to release
the so-called Epstein files and details about Epstein's like kind of co-conspirators. And now we're saying,
actually, there are none. None will be forthcoming. But today we wanted to dig into why this has
become an international incident. And why, and that is stemming from this belief in conservative
circles that Jeffrey Epstein was either an Israeli intelligence agent or an asset or, you know,
financing or some connection with Israeli intelligence. Here's Tucker Carlson kind of laying out the
theory at the Turning Point USA summit in Florida last week. And I think the real answer is Jeffrey
Epstein was working on behalf of Intel services, probably not American. How does a guy go from being
a math teacher at the Dalton School in the late 70s with no college degree to having multiple
airplanes, a private island, and the largest residential house in Manhattan.
No one's allowed to say that that foreign government is Israel because we have been
somehow cowed.
Like, what the hell is this?
You have the former Israeli prime minister living in your house.
Were you working on behalf of Mossad?
Were you running a blackmail operation on behalf of foreign government?
By the way, every single person in Washington, D.C. thinks that.
I've never met anyone who doesn't think that.
So obviously an explosive claim.
And just, you know, with the caveat that some people kind of pushing this line are,
have a tendency to blame the Jews for everything, like all the time.
No kidding.
We want to take the charge seriously.
Kind of look at the evidence and try to understand if it's even like logically possible
if the Mossad would use someone like Epstein.
So forgive me for the sort of the length of this.
But there's basically like three pieces of evidence that are usually pointed to to support this claim.
The first is that Robert Maxwell was the father of Epstein's.
former partner accomplice, Gleine Maxwell's dad.
Gleine Maxwell's currently serving time in prison.
She got 20 years in this case.
Well, this is well-earned 20 years.
Well-earned 20 years.
Yeah, Robert Maxwell is rumored to have worked for the Mossad himself.
He also was rumored to have worked for the MI6 and the Soviets and others.
But even Mossad was sort of like the thing he was often attached to in the press.
Maxwell, he escaped the Nazis.
He fought for the British during World War II.
Afterwards, he built this powerful publishing and media conglomerate that at its peak
had like 16,000 staff. He served in parliament in the 60s and 70s. And then he, so he's a powerful guy,
but he died under what many people consider suspicious circumstances in 1991. After he fell off his yacht,
the Lady Galane, which is off the Canary Islands. Some people believe that the Mossad killed him.
That theory was featured in a book called Robert Maxwell Israel Super Spy. After his death,
it came out that he had stolen around $500 million from his company's employee pension fund
to prop up his business empire.
So obviously that could be a reason.
Other people might want to kill him.
Off yourself.
Yeah, or he killed.
But when he's alive, you know, Maxwell strongly denied working for the Mossad and he threatened
legal action against those who said he did.
Though, you know, after he passed away, his funeral was attended by Israeli, you know,
heads of state.
He was buried on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem.
So it's like there's a lot of like kind of fodder people point at and say, look at connections.
The second piece of evidence is that former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak frequently met with
Jeffrey Epstein visited his properties, flew in his jet, received investment money from his
foundations.
The Wall Street Journal reported a lot of these details in 2023, but some of it was known back in
2019 around Epstein's arrest.
And then the third piece of evidence, which Megan Kelly in particular is kind of like touted,
is that while being vetted to serve as Trump's first term Secretary of Labor, Alexander Acosta
allegedly explained away the unconscionably lenient plea deal gave to Epstein back in 2007,
in 2008 when he was U.S. Attorney in Miami by saying that he had been told to back off of Epstein
because Epstein, quote, belonged to intelligence. Now, I believe that quote was reported in one
place. It was the Daily Beast. It was hearsay even then the journalist who reported at the time,
as since said, she doesn't think that Epstein was tied to the Mossad. But Acosta didn't exactly
help himself when he was asked about this. And he gave this bizarre answer to a reporter at a press
conference. Were you ever made aware at any point you're handling in this case if Mr.
Epstein was an intelligence asset of some sort? So so so there has there has been reporting to
that effect and let me say there's been reporting to a lot of effects in in this case,
not just now but over the years. And again, I would you know, I would hesitate to take this reporting as
fact. I can't address it directly because of our guidelines. But I can tell you that a lot of
reporting is just going down rabbit holes. A few more questions. That clears it up.
So Taylor made to perpetuated a conspiracy theory. Exactly. Exactly. And I get he probably
like was how to made all kinds of agreements where he couldn't talk about evidence in the case,
but still that was disastrous. On Monday, the former prime minister of Israel, Nafali Bennett,
it tweeted this long Twitter denial of the accusation that EPSC had worked for or ran a blackmail
ring on behalf of the Mossad.
He called it categorically and totally false.
He sickled out Tucker Carlson for spreading it.
I'm not even to get into the claims that people were making on Twitter about FBI director
Cash Patel's girlfriend.
They're saying that she's part of the Mossad because it's so...
Because it's a conspiracy that has to keep growing.
Yeah, it has to keep growing.
It's just clearly baseless, though it is very funny that the argument essentially is
why would this hot girl date this ugly guy if it wasn't a honeypot?
That is like the gist of what they're saying.
Sorry for the long wind up.
Ben, what do you think?
What's your take on these series?
Like, is he Massad, is he MI6, CIA, triple agent?
Like, do we think that like, would this, what a person like this actually be valuable to an intelligence agency?
It's just because he had money, because he had connections.
Like, I don't know.
How do you think about it?
I look, I don't know. And I don't want to hazard a guess. What I'd say is this, based on what we know about Epstein, just from what's been in the public record, if this man is operating a, you know, massive child sex trafficking operation with, you know, seems like, I'm not,
only is he having sex with young women, underage women, but he's making them available to rich
and powerful people. He's got an island, all these things. And there are people, very rich,
powerful people, politicians, you know, global figures, I mean, just to take the people whose names
are always out in the open. Bill Clinton. Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Bill Gates,
Ehud Barak, you know, intelligence agencies, any really good intelligence agencies,
would know that, right?
Because they'd be monitoring these people, right?
And yes, part of what intelligence agencies do
is they try to gather incriminating personal information about people
so that they might be able to blockmail them,
so that they might be able to go to a powerful person
and say, hey, we know that you were doing X at Jeffrey Epstein's Island.
If you don't want that in the press, like, I don't, again,
I'm answering your question of like hypothetically,
what might be the interest. Right, yeah, of course. And that would be the interest. Clearly,
none of us knows. We're just speculating. But that would be the interest. And that's an obvious
interest. Of course, intelligence aid, that's what they often do. They try to get information on people
to turn them or try to get them to do things, right? Or to just try to have a way to make people,
you know, you want them to back off something. You know, we're investing something about you.
Hey, if you guys keep poking around here, we could put this stuff out about you. That's the game of
intelligence here. And this is actually why, to kind of join the weird course of voices here,
like, there needs to be more transparency. Like, the whole world does know that there were a lot
of powerful people who were connected to something very odious here. And it doesn't, these pieces
seem to add up to something more than what we've been told. And so I actually think there really is a
great interest here in transparency, right? And it may or may not validate your preferred conspiracy
theory, but there's something that the more you seem to back off this thing, the more you're just
going to feed and fuel these conspiracy theories. Yeah, I think there's a great interest in getting
more information. Historically speaking, we know that kind of like a honeypot or like sort of
sexual-based kind of blackmail or operations has been something that a number of intelligence
has done. And I'm sure by the way, and I'll just say it, I'm sure the Mossad has done it.
Yeah. And I'm sure others have done it too. Russian intelligence has certainly done it. Oh, for sure. For
sure. But I think your bigger picture point is the important, like there has to be more transparency
just because people that are kind of steeped in this stuff, like just have a lot of reasons not
to trust the U.S. government. Like, I don't know the truth here either, but like literally this
week, the Washington Post reported on new documents unearthed by the House of Representatives
about the JFK assassination. And these documents prove that the CIA has been lying about its
connection with Lee Harvey Oswald for 60 years. And a lot of this was suspected and reported. And
reported on, but these documents prove that a CIA officer based in Miami in 1963 was helping
finance and oversee a group of students opposed to Fidel Castro. And the CIA lied about the
existence of this guy to the Warren Commission in 1964, to Congress in 1978, and to a special
commission on assassinations in 1998. And even shadier, Ben, in 78, this same guy who was
running these students in Miami was named the CIA Lee.
liaison to the congressional committee trying to dig into the Kennedy assassination and get documents
from the CIA. And then he stonewalled them and was obstructing them. And then he was given an
award by the CIA, like a lifetime achievement award by the agency in 1981. So like clearly,
like it's not just that these aren't like ancient sins by the CIA. This like, yes, this shit
happened in the 60s, but the lying about it has been until present day. Yeah. And this connects to the
Epstein thing in this way, which is that there's kind of two different reasons why you stonewall
information being released. Sometimes it's because there really is a conspiracy. There's something
really nefarious that you're trying to cover up. Sometimes it's because you're just embarrassed,
you know? Exactly. And so with the Oswald stuff, some of this is, it's pretty embarrassing
that this fucking guy, like, was able to shoot the president of the United States, like, right after he,
you know, walked into the Soviet and Cuban embassies in Mexico. Like, why wasn't anybody kind of picking
this thing up. But that's not a good reason to cover shit up either. And it perpetuates this. I imagine,
if I had to guess, that part of the stuff in the Epstein files is it's fucking embarrassing for
everybody involved. Maybe the Mossad. Maybe Donald Trump. Maybe Bill Clinton. Maybe, you know,
list your person. I don't know because I haven't seen the documents. But not having transparency
because something is embarrassing is what makes people cynical. It makes people think that powerful
interest in institutions don't give a shit about them. One other thing I want to say,
was interesting that Tucker clip, just build them what we said last week, the inability to have
the conversations about this stuff, the crowd kind of went nuts when he said Israel, right?
I know.
Like, if you don't allow space to talk about, like, the real stuff, you're going to have more
and more conspiracy, whether whatever the issue is, whether it's Israel or whether it was the
fucking Kennedy assassination.
Like, you know, covering stuff up because it's embarrassing or because it's politically awkward
to talk about, like, it dries people to extremes.
Yep, absolutely. All right, let's actually talk about some news happening in Israel itself. First of all, it's just worth noting, Ben, that, you know, despite all the spin about Bibi Netanyahu's visit to Washington last week and how Trump was going to get tough on the prime minister and get a ceasefire deal done, we still got nothing. Netanyahu is still demanding Hamas do things he knows they won't do, and he's just making Trump look weak and denying him the ceasefire agreement he wants. So it's just, I think it's worth putting a pin in that because we did it. We made that point about Biden a lot. Second, we also just wanted to recommend that.
everyone read this really long New York Times piece from Friday called How Netanyahu
Prolonged the War in Gaza to Stay in Power. If you're a long-time listener to the show,
you will have heard a lot of this information discussed, but it's really worth your time
to just see in black and white how cynical Netanyahu is, how he prioritized his own power
over the lives of both Palestinians and Gaza, but also Israeli hostages. Now, there is
a notable kind of threat to his power happening as of today.
On Tuesday, one of the ultra-Orthodox parties in Netanyahu's government left the coalition
over an issue that has long been a huge sticking point in Israeli politics, which is whether
ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students should continue to be exempted from military service.
The ultra-Orthodox have gone from a couple hundred people at Israel's founding to 14% of
the country.
So we're talking about thousands of exemptions at a time when Israel has been at war for two years,
and it's creating a lot of resentment.
the Supreme Court ruled last year that the military could begin drafting the ultra-Orthodox,
and Netanyai was been trying to kind of strike this balance between complying with that ruling
and appeasing religious members of his coalition.
But kind of patience on all sides is wearing thin here.
And, you know, his kind of like juggling seems to be coming near to an end, hopefully.
So we've got if the, with the United Torah Judaism Party leaving the coalition,
Netanyai was 61 out of 120 seats in his coalition.
There's another ultra-Orthodox party that holds 11 seats.
it's also considering abandoning the coalition, meaning Netanyahu would then only have a minority government.
The Kedesit will soon be going into recess until October.
So he's not in danger of immediately being forced out of power, but it puts him on very shaky ground.
They won't be able to get anything done, et cetera.
So then Netanyahu is a political survivor, like beyond anything I ever could have expected or believed.
But if anything takes him down, experts all kind of believe it'll be this issue of these ultra-Orthodox exemptions.
So fingers crossed, I guess.
Yeah, except, look, yeah, anything that would get rid of Netanyahu would be great.
And, you know, hopefully he can pay for his crimes, whether those are the crimes he committed in Israel or the war crimes he's presided over in Gaza.
I think that the two caveats I'd say to this are, like, one, whenever there's this dysfunction, like his instinct is, as that time story showed, to actually perpetuate the war in Gaza and appease the far right.
Or bomb Iran.
Like, that's Obama-Iran, right?
Like, we've been saying this on this fucking podcast, and people are like,
oh, how do you?
Like, this is so transparently, partially about just him staying in power by appeasing the far
right.
And so what I worry about is the worst his political fortunes get, like, the worst.
The worst actions are, right?
Yeah, you know.
And then the other thing, I think is important.
It builds on, I made this comment about APAC last week and not, the Democrats not taking
money from APAC.
Bernie Sanders, like, hopefully, like, you know, pick that up.
one reason why is even in Nanyahu's gone,
I think there's this kind of hope among some Democrats that Israel is going to go back to having, you know, normal.
Keep in mind that Nanyahu, with a brief interview for Nftali Bennett,
has been in charge since 2009.
So normal, I guess, would be all the way back to like Ehud Olmert in 2008 or something.
Yeah.
Who wasn't exactly like a left-wing guy.
But it's not.
Like Israeli politics has moved so far to the right that like the government.
the government that comes after Nanyahu,
it's not going to be like Yitzhak Rabin type people running Israel, right?
And I wish it would be.
That'd be great, you know.
But my concern is that, like, there needs to be, like, a profound political change in Israel
for there to be a government that could pursue policies that, you know,
anybody with, like, who cares about the future of the Palestinian people in their existence could support.
Yeah, I mean, look, Netanyahu is sort of like a uniquely correct.
corrupt and odious and selfish and awful leader.
And I think we'll hopefully go down in history in Israel as like one of the worst leaders.
Israel has ever had in part because of the way he is driving the Democratic Party away from support for Israel right now through his actions.
But I agree with you.
It's like it's not like things are going to be great.
You know, and I've talked to, I've talked to multiple people, not just multiple recently who've been in Israel and describing, you know, how euphoric everybody is.
that they're winning, you know, Iran strikes and Hezbollah and, you know, Hamas.
How can you be euphoric when you're, you know, engaged in genocidal violence and, like, there's something wrong.
Like, when you, this is, you shouldn't feel good about these actions, yeah.
No, I agree with that.
Another sort of issue we keep covering that's getting worse, Ben, is we talked a couple weeks ago about Israeli settler attacks in the West Bank.
Yeah.
Where the violence just skyrocketed since the war in Gaza started.
And on Friday, a 20-year-old Palestinian-American man was beaten to death by Israeli settlers in the West Bank.
Seifullah Musilet, his family calls him, safe for short.
He owned an ice cream parlor with his dad in Tampa where he was born.
He had been in the West Bank visiting family, hanging out with friends.
On Friday, he was with a group of Palestinians that drove to this town called Sindjil, where his family owned land.
I think it was like it was kind of a mild act of resistance, just like going to a town where that
Palestinians were supposed to have authority over, but they were met by these settlers who beat them
with sticks and clubs and basically beat Safe to Death. And then an ambulance was sent to help him.
And the ambulance was refused access to the area for three hours. And this happens routinely in the
West Bank. Yeah, she's like death. Murdered by bureaucratic. I mean murder by clubbing, but then
by the bureaucracy. And then they never prosecute the settlers who murder. Exactly. And so Safe did
make it to the hospital alive. This other man, a 23-year-old Palestinian was shot in the chest by
the Israelis. And as usual, the IDF said, well, they, they started the conflict by throwing
rocks at the settlers, but as if that justifies murder. Some shitty-ass people on Twitter were
making these baseless claims that both men were in Hamas, because I think Hamas put out an
infographic saying they had been martyred, which is just like, again, just like insane baseless
allegations, but ones that traveled far to influential people on the internet. And so Safe's father
gave an interview to Zateo News. Here's what he had to say.
or some of it. At this moment, so far, I have not been contacted by anyone from the U.S.
government. I have not been contacted by anyone from the Florida representatives from the U.S.
Senate or nothing. You know, the consulate called me. They told me, you know, they gave me condolences.
They told me they would be contacting me in a few days and coming by. But from the USA,
you know, any Florida representative, anything like that, I have.
haven't been contacted. I honestly, deeply, not only think, know that if this was an Israeli
American, that they would be on top of their things. They would be there. They would be
contacting them, the representatives, the government. But because he's Palestinian, American,
I feel that we don't have the same standards. It's a double standard, you know.
Right before we started recording, Mike Huckabee released a tweet saying he asked Israel to investigate what happened.
So hopefully that will, you know, tear some fruit.
Although, as you mentioned, like these things never get really investigated or prosecuted.
According to Zateo, Israeli forces have killed at least six Americans in Gaza in the occupied West Bank in Lebanon since October 7, 2023.
It's a horrific story.
I mean, I wish, again, I had any confidence the Israeli government would look into it or that U.S. lawmakers would put real.
pressure on Marco Rubio. I mean, this guy's from fucking Florida. Yeah, we keep saying,
you know, the U.S. government under Biden, too, the same thing like, we demand investigations
and then the investigations never happen and we never stand anything. I mean, this, unfortunately,
we focused on it because it's an American, this kind of unaccountable settler violence,
including blocking ambulances, is a regular occurrence in the West Bank. Like, the one thing I'd just say
about this is, you know, because as Zeta noted, this is not an isolated incident even with Americans.
these are religious extremists, right?
The word settler makes it seem something kind of like peaceful about that.
Like a bunch of these are religious extremists, you know,
because anybody who like beat somebody to death like over, you know,
they're, well, anything that they believe,
if this happened in any other country in the Middle East,
if an American was beaten to death by religious extremists,
it would be like, you know, we went to war with ISIS because four Americans were killed.
Yeah.
You know, four Americans, which, again, I'm not devaluing that.
That was horrible.
But, like, what, I mean, just people need to stop and sit and think about this.
Like, why is it okay for Americans to be beaten to death by religious extremists in one place?
And not if it happened, like, 50 miles away somewhere else.
You know, it's like a global story, you know.
Yeah.
It's ridiculous.
It's horrible.
It's horrible.
And it's just the impunity with which these guys act.
Because they're overseen by people like I'mar Ben-Givir and smoke.
and people who support their project.
That's why they're in those jobs.
The reason that Ben Gavir wants to be the national security minister is that you can oversee
the police or the ones they're supposed to investigate these kinds of things.
Right, exactly.
Final thing, then, before we go to the interview with Matt Duss, what's going on with the Trump
administration's Cuba policy?
They are now sanctioning because they care so much about human rights and democracy
around the world at the same time that they're gutting that bureau.
They're now personally sanctioning, you know, the president of Cuba, members of Cuban government.
They're just piling new sanctions.
upon sanction. Oh, good. That'll work. Right. But like I, you know, two people in Miami that support
this kind of policy. Like, you have Cuban Americans dying in ICE custody. That's literally something
that happened. You've got the Cuban government dug in as much as they have been, despite the fact that
the Cuban people can't afford to eat because of these sanctions. Like, what are we doing here,
people? It's crazy. Yeah. Well, the embargoes is going to work one of these days, right?
Marco Rubio is literally down there. Like, we're literally intervening in politics.
on behalf of an autocrat in Brazil while saying that, you know, claiming democracy and human rights
to just punish the people of Cuba. It's fucking outrageous. Outrageous. Okay, we're going to take a
quick break when you come back. You'll hear my interview with Matt Duss about what a Democratic Party
foreign policy should look like going forward, not just in the Trump era, but forever in the future.
So stick around for that. Some really smart stuff from that. Appreciate this time.
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I'm very excited to welcome to the show, my friend Matt Duss.
He is the Executive Vice President of the Center for International Policy
and a former foreign policy advisor to Bernie Sanders.
Great to see you.
Great to be here, Tommy.
Thank you.
Matt, I'm excited to talk to you because you are not just a foreign policy expert.
You are one of the more progressive foreign policy voices.
And I feel like for some reason, the people who get booked on the Sunday shows are the more hawkish,
dare I say Republican voices and not the more progressives.
And I think when you look at history and the mistakes we've made, it's maybe we should think about talking to the folks on the left a little more.
What do you think?
What a weird concept, man.
Maybe like, I don't know.
Talk to the folks who've been more right than wrong.
But, you know, I'm not a booker, so I don't know what the formula is, man.
It's some out.
Well, we'll work on that.
We'll work on that. So I want to talk just big picture today, which is like, what should the Democratic Party's foreign policy be for the remainder of the Trump administration, but also more durably going forward, kind of big picture stuff. And that is a sprawling question. We could go in a lot of directions. We could do a, you know, 10 minute opening answer. But I want to start with this and see if we can do just like, what's the elevator pitch for the best version of the Democratic foreign policy in your view?
Sure. I mean, I would put it like this. I mean, what's foreign policy?
policy for. Any country's foreign policy is promoting for promoting the security and the
prosperity of that country's people. So at the most basic level, that's what American foreign
policy is for. But as a progressive, I include a third word in that solidarity. You know, I think
we are in a deeply interconnected world. That's a cliche. It's a cliche because it's true.
I think, you know, America's relative share of power is declining, but America is still enormously
influential. Still very powerful. We have a network of alliances and partnerships around the world
that is really unmatched. And I would like us to see us using those relationships and that power
to really support a genuinely rules-based order. This is one of those terms that's thrown
around all the time of rules-based order. But, you know, the sad reality, and I think we've seen
this demonstrated really, really starkly over the past few years when you compare like the U.S. approach
to Ukraine versus Gaza is that the rules-based order and much of the developing world, the
global south, whatever term one wants to use, they've been aware of this for a very long time,
this double standard because they've often suffered at the pointy end of it, is that the rules-based
order means, you know, the United States and its allies make the rules, and there's a different
set of rules that get applied to American adversaries. You know, and I think Americans do have an
interest in a world, you know, of rules and of laws and of norms, and not just of might makes right.
I think that's not just good for us.
That's good for a genuinely peaceful world or one that we want to be moving toward being more peaceful rather than more destabilized and warlike.
And I think I want to see leaders of all parties, but particularly the Democratic Party, saying that out loud.
America should be in the business of promoting peace and making peace.
Yeah, it does feel like we're moving very much into a might-nakes-nakes-right era along with a little, you know, corruption on the side.
but we'll get up to that in a second.
So I want to play a clip for you of Politico's,
Dr. Burns, talking with senators Gene Chaheen
and Chris Coons.
Let's listen.
I've interviewed Congressman Rokane recently,
who's been advocating for the Democratic Party
to be the anti-war party.
He said that the party has become too hawkish, in his opinion.
Is this an opportunity for Democrats to move more in that direction
as you're hearing from Americans that they don't want us?
I mean, one of the reasons so much of the president's base is frustrated is because they voted for him because they felt that he was the anti-war president, that he made promises that we would not be entangled in foreign conflicts.
Is this an opportunity for Democrats?
Might you be missing that opportunity if you don't sort of look at that messaging as a path for the party?
No.
And I think Rokana is wrong.
Okay.
The fact is foreign policy isn't that easy.
You can't just say I'm against all conflicts because they're all going to be against America's interest or against global interest.
What do you say to the accusation that Democrats have become the party of war?
I think it's shallow and overly simplistic and wrong.
That's not what I'm hearing from my constituents.
All right, Matt, so when I heard that for the first time, I wanted to throw my phone through the wall.
but let's approach it with some nuance and try to at least define the terms here and understand
what anti-war means. Like, I'm not, I'm not opposed to U.S. support for Ukraine to defend against
the Russian invasion. I'm not opposed to all, you know, U.S. military force being used for counterterrorism
missions, although we should probably do it as infrequently as possible. But that does include drone strikes.
I think, you know, the big mistake is like sending the U.S. military to do nation building or regime
change operations or to solve political problems. But what was your reaction to those comments? And
like, what do you think about the kind of the complicated version of this question about what it means
to be anti-war? Yeah. I mean, well, first off, I'll say, like, I will not take it as a personal
attack, having written a piece that was literally titled Democrats that become the party of war.
For the Guardian. But, you know, hey, listen, if Senator Coons is reading, then, you know, I appreciate that.
I'd love to chat with him about more. I think I laid out, you know, a pretty detailed case where why
that, you know, even if it's, you can point to counter examples, a lot of Americans perceive it that
way. And I do think before I get to, to the senator's answers, I do want to note the question
is that, yes, Donald Trump leaned into the anti-war lane. He promoted himself as a pro-piece candidate.
Even as, of course, we should never take Donald Trump out his word about anything, but he was at least
smart enough and J.D. Vance and the party was smart enough that there's a real constituency for that
message. And they, and they profited by it. And the last kind of point I'll make here that
I think people should keep in mind is like in every election since the end of the Cold War,
since the 1992 election, with the one exception of 2004, the more anti-war candidate has won.
The less militarist candidate, the less interventionist candidate, has won.
I'm not going to claim that they won because of that position, but I do think that's a set
of data that we have now, that people should keep in mind, which says at the very least,
there is a strong constituency of American voters who are attracted to that message.
Now, you know, looking at what Senator Coons and particularly Senator Shaheen in response to
Congressman Kana's position, I mean, Rokana is not an isolationist, okay?
Rokana is not out there saying we should just oppose military force in all cases.
I think that really kind of disrespects what I think is a fairly detailed and a responsible case
and a pragmatic case that Rokana's out there making.
And let's also know, I mean, when people throw this term isolationism around, it's almost
always used as just a slur. There is really no one in American political life who, in my view,
merits that real, that, you know, that, that label. Even people who are more anti-war do not
believe that we should simply withdraw behind our borders. I mean, even, you know, anti-war people,
and I consider myself to be one, I'm not saying that we should withdraw. I want us to be more engaged
in global affairs. The question is, through what tools? How are we executing that engagement? What are we
doing? Are we using foreign aid, medical assistance, humanitarian assistance? Are we really trying to
create that system of rules that, you know, that, that, you know, that prevents wars from happening
in the first place before we eventually have to consider whether we want to intervene or be
involved in them? You know, and the last thing I'll say here is just the idea that you respond to
kind of an anti-war position by saying, oh, tut-tut, small child, it's, the world is so much more
complicated than that, I'm sorry, with all respect, that's just, that's just BS, man.
Especially when you look at, you know, who's been right over the past 20 plus years.
It's been the anti-war side.
So I would say have a little bit of self-awareness.
Yes, foreign policy can be complicated.
That does not by itself tend toward a militarist position.
Yes, very well said.
Let's talk about some of these non-military tools we have in our foreign policy toolkit.
So Trump is just burning shit down, right?
I mean, USAID is gone.
They just fired like 15% of the workforce over the State Department, I think.
Obviously, I think dismantling USAID was a catastrophic mistake.
But I'm also worried about the next Democrat who gets elected president getting pushed to expend a bunch of political capital to build things back exactly the same and not kind of reflect on or recognize the fact that there was a perception of flaws, if not a.
reality of some flaws and how these programs were administered. How do you think Dems should think about
that kind of next iteration of diplomacy and development assistance post-Trump?
Yeah, well, I think first off, you know, as I said, you know, we had to think about what foreign
policy is for. What is foreign aid for? You know, make the case. And I think what we really need to do,
and I think, again, successive administrations, Democrat and Republican have done a poor job of this,
which is why Trump was, you know, was so easily able to just dismantle USAID is that we have not
not really made the case to enough Americans, why this helps all of us.
You know, and this is why I, you know, when I included that third word of solidarity
in my, you know, what I defined as a progressive approach to foreign policy, it's like,
yes, I mean, we should be in solidarity with communities around the world and try not to
export insecurity and poverty onto them as we promote our own security and prosperity,
but also understand helping to diminish disease and suffering and deprivation around the
world keeps us all safer. You know, whether you want to look at, you know, for example,
PEPFAR, which is the George W. Bush administration, very successful. One of the most successful
foreign aid programs probably since the Marshall Plan at the end of World War II to, you know,
to fight HIV AIDS in Africa. That's not just altruism, although I have no problem with altruism.
Diminishing disease and, you know, and easing suffering leads to less conflict. It leads to fewer
situations when the United States might have to intervene or be called to send our young women and men
to fight. And I think we can point to similar examples all over the place. But again, before we get
to, okay, what form should foreign aid take? Should we recreate USAID or should we continue simply to do
this through the State Department? I've heard good arguments for both. But I do think, you know,
building and strengthening an actual constituency among American voters who understand why this helps us.
Yeah, and another thing, you know, another sort of tool in the toolkit that Bernie Sanders, your former boss, talked about a lot, was this nexus of, you know, oligarchy, authoritarianism and kleptocracy.
And people tend to think of foreign policy as like military force or not, trade deals, alliances, right?
But how did you and Senator Sanders think about oligarchy and kleptocracy and that corruption angle?
And how did that fold into a foreign policy?
for the United States or the Democratic Party.
Right. Yeah, no, thanks for bringing that up.
And I think some of the work, you know, that Senator Sanders did, and there was a piece in
The Guardian, he wrote, and I believe it was September of 2018, that really kind of laid
this out.
And then the speech he gave based on that in 2019 at Johns Hopkins.
But first, it's understanding that there is a kind of global network of kind of right-wing
authoritarian, ethno-nationalist, whatever term you want to use, whether it's Trump, whether
it's Bolsonaro in Brazil, it's Orban in Hungary, there's Netanyahu in Israel, there is this growing,
you know, kind of trend across democracies, developed democracies, but also developing democracies,
that is, you know, promoting a very kind of exclusivist conception of citizenship,
whether it's ethno-nationalism or, you know, here in the United States, it's a version of that, too,
which is to say, you know, this is a white Christian nation.
And every, you know, if you're not white or Christian, you can be part of the club as long as you
accept these certain conditions.
But it's also being run with the support of, you know, wealthy actors, whether they're
tech bros with lots of money, Elon Musk being one of them, foreign actors with access to whether
it's oil and energy wealth, such as Vladimir Putin or folks in the Gulf.
And they are using corruption strategically to influence politics in, in, in, you know, and
in various ways.
I mean, that's one way.
I mean, there's the more basic level of corruption.
It's just, you know, these people who take control
of government and use that for their own personal benefit.
And of course, we're seeing that in our country now too.
As, you know, the Trump family is now magically, you know,
getting all these investments.
You know, they're getting $2 billion in investment
in their crypto venture from the Emirates.
The Qataris kept it much simpler.
They just gave Trump a plane.
But, you know, it's, we see this across, you know,
across different governments and different regions.
And I would just mention here the work of Sarah Chase,
who has written a couple of really excellent books
of the first called Thees of State about Afghanistan.
And then the second one called On Corruption in America,
where she really does a deep dive
in how corruption works and how it shares similarities
across different societies.
And we are seeing that play out, like right now in America.
And so to answer your question really quickly,
in order to really talk about America's role in the world in this new era, we need to understand
that those are the forces arrayed against democracy, arrayed against equality, and that have no
interest in a world of rules. They want a world in which they make the rules for themselves and
their friends. One sort of question, I think it's become so central to the Democratic Party's
challenge on foreign policy is the war in Gaza. I mean, Democrats, especially young Democrats,
are furious about the war and they don't understand the kind of unqualified military and diplomatic
support for the Israeli government under BB Nint and Yahoo. A lot of people were furious at the
Biden administration's policy, right? This is not a Trump criticism. It's broader. How central,
sometimes I wonder, is this like the most important issue for Democrats to fix and guess right
right now, is this something that maybe we all focus on and talk about too much because there's
muscle memory of like the Middle East peace process being kind of like the brass ring that every
politician was going for? Like, how do you think about how, and I'm not trying to like belittle
or diminish the evil that's happening in Gaza right now. I'm just trying to like be honest with myself
because at the same time, Democrats are so focused on US-Israel relations. We all kind of tacitly
agree that the biggest challenge over the next century is going to be China. But we're
We're not talking about that all the time.
So how do you think about the centrality of right-sizing the U.S. Israel relationship is to the Democratic Party going forward?
Yeah, I mean, there's a couple things here.
And you're right.
There's a lot of things that people could focus on.
There's a lot of crises around the world.
There's other horrific wars going on around the world.
But I think Israel and Palestine is an issue.
And I think this is true for a lot of progressives like myself, but not only.
And especially for a lot of young people, it is an area.
where the kind of double standard and the double speak and the hypocrisy of the establishment
is revealed so starkly. And it's not just since October 7. It's going back many decades
where, you know, when I talked about, you know, the quote unquote rules-based order,
you know, this is a perfect example of what I was saying. It's United. And you couldn't ask for a
better demonstration of this double standard than, you know, comparing our support for Ukraine.
And then, you know, a couple years later at Gaza, you know, the very same things that we rightly condemned
Russia for doing in Ukraine. We are either pretending not to see or simply denying or protecting,
you know, giving political and military support to Israel, as it continues to do even today in Gaza.
So, you know, I think it, you know, it's an important issue in and of itself. It's seen as an area
where the global north acts upon the global south. Again, I think that maybe flattens the history
of this conflict and of this region a bit, but I do think that's how a lot of people in the United
States see it and certainly around the world see it in that way. But also, you know, getting back to what I
said first, it's just, it's one of those things where you hear, you know, you'll hear like a U.S.
official or a U.S. politician give this whole great rap about, you know, what they want to do.
But then when they talk about Israel and Palestine, it's like a switch flips. And they are just regurgitating
these same BS talking points that are just completely detached from reality. Yeah.
You know, and I think, you know, I saw you and Ben were talking about this on the last episode or a very recent one.
It is, it has become a litmus test for a good reason.
And it does turn out to be a pretty good indicator that you're not actually full of crap on all the other stuff.
You know, if you can run down, again, a whole policy agenda of great stuff, you know, you know, affordable housing, good jobs, you know, free transportation, college, all the stuff.
But if your answer on Israel, Palestine is just Israel has.
has a right to defend itself, that's saying that is single that you're probably going to fold on all
that other stuff too. Yeah, that's really well said. Final question for you. I mean, I don't want the
Democratic Party to define its foreign policy based on what Trump thinks or does, but I think understanding
his views and sort of what is popular and what's not as important and just sort of helps us,
you know, kind of like road test things. But we're talking Monday, midday, Los Angeles time. Earlier this
morning, Trump seemed to just completely reverse his position on support for Ukraine and will now be
sending them weapons via NATO. But I think the Europeans will kind of pick up the bill.
This comes on the heels of, you know, the so-called anti-war president bombing Iran.
It comes, you know, there's the tariffs. Trump came out in support for the ethnic cleansing
of Gaza after the sort of really hopeful beginning where he and Steve Wickoff actually got the ceasefire
deal over the finish line. And I guess just like at this point, I don't.
know what the fuck is foreign policy is anymore. You know what I mean? It's like there's,
there's more like traditional hawkish Republican DNA than I thought. Then there's just the
brazen corruption, right, of like Don Jr. and Eric Trump going out like Hanoi and greasing some
golf resort deal. And then all of a sudden, you know, they figure out the tariff problem with
Vietnam. Right. It's like, how do you, what do you make of it so far? How do you summarize it?
The Trump is. Yeah. No, you're right. I mean, it's all over the place. As, as as is often said,
I mean, he kind of agrees for the last person who spoke to him or convinced him, like,
this is how you make Trump seem great.
You know, the example of the Israeli strikes on Iran, you know, apparently he watched Fox News all night,
and it seemed like pretty awesome.
And Fox News talking heads were praising it.
And he decided he wanted a piece of that action.
But my quick response would be like, listen, when he does good things, that's good.
And I think we shouldn't be afraid to say so.
I mean, I wrote a piece a few weeks ago right before he reversed course on Iran saying,
listen, if Trump gets a good deal on Iran, that's great.
If we're able to have a diplomatic agreement with Iran,
he could literally write his name on top of the JCPOA.
And I would just be like, great job, Trump.
You know, let's hear that was a good deal.
If you want to take ownership and say that's the grand,
beautiful, super golden Trump deal,
I'm fine to go with that because it's a good deal.
Listen, now that he's reversing course on Ukraine
and going to continue help them defend themselves,
I think that's good.
You know, the thing is no one should bank on this.
you know, lasting. Never. He could change his mind again. Someone could annoy him. He, you know,
you know, NATO's flattery could stop pleasing him as much as it does and he, or, you know,
dozens of other things could happen. But I think what we have to do is not, you know,
decide on our foreign policy based on what Trump does. I think the Democratic Party really needs to
have a conversation about what are we trying to do in the world. What are we offering to the
American people in terms of foreign policy. And as I said, I think we should understand that
Americans are tired of war. It's not to say they want to withdraw from the world. They absolutely
do not. But there is a real strong constituency that wants to see the United States making
peace, avoiding war, using it only as a last resort. I think we do have that evidence. And, you know,
it shouldn't be seen as, you know, unsurious to say so. I.
I think not only is it the right policy.
It's a policy that is a political winner.
Yeah.
How great would it be if one day a pundit got on TV and said,
tonight was the night Donald Trump became president because he signed some diplomatic
agreement.
Not because we bombed a fucking runway in Syria that they rebuilt the next day.
Right. Let's dream that dream together, you know.
I will dream that dream with you.
Well, Matt, thank you so much for doing the show.
Where could people follow your work?
What would you like to point to?
Well, Center for International Policy.
You can find us online.
You can find me on ex-Twitter, whatever, at Matt Duss, where I probably post way too much.
And I also am a regular contributor to a foreign policy magazine.
And a co-host of the undimplomatic podcast, need to mention.
I love it.
Yeah, thank you, Tom.
I love it.
Well, I think you're one of the sharpest thinkers out there.
I really appreciate your unabashed fighting for diplomatic solutions to these problems and a more progressive worldview and involving all these sort of
economic factors like kleptroxy and oligarchy in this vision. Because I agree with you,
fundamentally, the thing I agree with you most on is that we can't just be anti-Trump.
We have to present a vision for the world that is rooted in values that people trust, that people
believe you execute on or else we're never going to win again. So, all right, thank you for my soapbox.
Thanks, buddy. Great to see you. Bye-bye. Thanks getting Matt Duss for doing the show. Ben, great to see you in
person. I hope the jet lag isn't too bad. No, I'm feeling good. I've been energized being in studio.
You're more energized than I am. I was up at like four.
am for no reason.
Probably like reading this Epstein news.
Yeah.
There's a lot of content to consume on this one.
Yeah, I've got a bad dream about alligator alcatraz.
I'm not even kidding.
Oh, yeah.
I've had some Trump 2.0 anxiety dreams.
They're not good.
Favro mentioned to me yesterday that people are doing live shots from it, like with like giant
jackets on and things over their head because the mosquitoes are so thick they can't
even breathe.
And I think that kind of like the image like I felt it inside.
I don't, I'm sorry to people made this along from Florida.
I get uncomfortable in Florida.
bugs and
It's the worst.
And alligators.
I don't...
No thanks.
I'm good.
Opting out.
I prefer California.
Yeah, me too.
That's it for us.
Talk to you guys next week.
Yeah, see it.
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