Provoked with Darryl Cooper and Scott Horton - EP:15 - LIVE - SPECIAL GUEST - Auron MacIntyre : The Reason Magazine Hit Piece
Episode Date: October 4, 2025Start with a simple claim: rules only matter if everyone believes they bind everyone. From there, we pull a thread through media smears, unequal justice, and the hard truth that modern politics alread...y runs on “exceptions” to the rules. We’re not romanticizing power or hunting for a strongman; we’re asking why the ordinary law—applied evenly—feels so rare, and what it would take to make it normal again.With Auron MacIntyre joining us, we put Carl Schmitt in his place: not as a mentor to emulate, but as a mapmaker of uncomfortable terrain. His line about the “sovereign” deciding when rules don’t apply rings familiar after years of emergency orders, selective prosecutions, and agencies governing by letter instead of law. We trace how the administrative state grew behind judicial deference, how anarcho-tyranny rewards street violence while penalizing technicalities, and why calling this out gets mislabeled as extremism. The punchline isn’t “break the system”; it’s the opposite—use the laws we have, evenly and transparently, to reestablish the baseline that protects all sides.We also press a cultural point that legalisms dodge: a constitution is a living practice, not just language. Rome stayed a republic when Romans honored republican limits; paper alone couldn’t save it when belief died. Translate that to today and a path emerges: shorten emergencies, narrow agency deference, prosecute violence consistently, and end back-channel censorship. If platforms truly host criminal coordination, use existing statutes narrowly; if government leans on companies to silence lawful speech, treat it as state action and stop it. And amid heated foreign policy rhetoric, we draw a boundary—no outside government should set our domestic speech norms or enforcement priorities.Call it a restoration agenda: fewer exceptions, more accountability, and a civic culture that takes equal protection seriously. If that resonates, subscribe, share this episode, and leave a review with your take on the single reform that would rebuild trust fastest.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you.
We're going to be.
We're going to be able to be.
We're going to be able to be.
We're going to be able to be.
I don't know how much.
We're going to be.
I'm going to be.
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Yeah!
We're going to be able to be.
all right y'all welcome the show it's provoked with me scott horton and him darrell cooper
and uh we're going to start off with a spot here real quick and get out of the way for the
expat money summit coming up on the 10th through 12 and this is mckell thorup he's a really good guy
and uh traveled around the world 10 times or something and he knows all the rules and regulations
for how you can buy property in other countries uh get dual citizenship or otherwise protect your
assets and no gimmicks um you know this is all about how to pay your taxes and stay out of jail
but as little as possible and the whole thing is free and it's a real substantive thing you'll
really learn a lot and yes they do have some upsells but you'll not waste your time on the free
version um it's a really great stuff it's a two day long summit the expat money summit and just go to
expatmoney summit dot com slash provoked to check it out that is the 10th through the 12
and then also provoked is brought to you by the book provoked written by me was supposed to be
co-authored by him but he dropped out and i wrote it instead but it's really good and you'll all
want to spend a lot of money on a lot of copies for all your friends and family too um okay so a little
bit of business before we really begin the show is i wanted to say thank you to julian dory
he and his buddy joey had me out to hoboken new jersey which is a real nice little town
I had only ever heard of it before because it has a funny sounding name.
But it's a real place, and now I've been there.
And I had a really great sandwich from Lucy's Deli,
and I went and hung out with Julian Dory and did his podcast for a little while.
The other day, they had me out there, and it was a lot of fun.
So I think they said it's not going to be out for a few weeks.
So that's how they do it over there, I guess.
I don't know.
But keep your eyes out for that.
And then I was on Judge Napolitano show the other day,
if anybody wants to look at that, too, I guess.
And then also today I interviewed.
Ted Snyder on my show, the Scott Horton Show, and that'll be up on my channel slash Scott Horton
show here before too long. And with that, that's all the business I got. How the hell are you,
Darrell Cooper, Martyr Made? Perfect timing. I just got finished posting the link to the show,
which I forgot to do. So I'm good, man. You know, I'm recovering from my wounds from the vicious
attack that was levied against me and several of my friends in Reason magazine. But I am recovering,
you know. Yeah. Well, with that, let's go ahead and
introduce one of our mutual friends here, Oren McIntyre from The Blaze. Welcome to the show.
How are you doing? Be well, guys. Thank you for having me. Absolutely. Happy to have you here. So,
first of all, on behalf of all of libertarianism, I disavow Reason magazine. As all libertarians do,
now Jesse Walker, of course, is worthy of our respect. But I got to read their morning email
about how Israel is defending themselves from Hamas
every morning. And I've been
tired of those guys for a long time anyway,
but I'm so over them. And
as you correctly characterize them
on your show, Oren, they're the
regime libertarians, which
is a very, very small subset
of the libertarian movement, just
so you know. And with that out of the way,
have Adam. Guys,
they called you a couple of right-wing
rikists. What's the matter with you
or them after all?
Anyway.
Well, Scott, I appreciate you being one of the good ones.
You know, I appreciate that.
Thank you.
Most of us are Ron Paul Folk.
And no, you know what?
I should say, too, I've always gotten along with Nick Gillespie.
He's not exactly my point of view on everything, but he seems like a really good guy.
But, okay, I'm done defending them now.
They said that you guys are obsessed with Carl Schmidt and Carl Schmidt wrote that
Adolf Hitler can do whatever he wants, I guess.
So you guys apparently have a real problem.
Is that right?
why don't you go ahead brother you're you're the main subject of the article so well as darrell and
i were laughing about before we got started here i don't think i've ever heard darrell mentioned
karl schmidt once in my life um they're just like yeah seems like a nazi just kind of round
them all up there by the way uh it should be noted that yorm hosone is uh one of the key figures
in the piece uh the jewish uh you know uh nationalist uh art and jewish nationalist funny thing i've i've
everybody on the front of that piece except Carl Schmidt because that would require some
necromancy. But of course I caught quite a bit of flack for having Harzoni on my show because
I just talk to everybody. I want to understand what's going on. I may agree with you. I may not.
But ultimately, I just want to grasp the situation to have a conversation. And the fact that he got
roped into this whole thing as like a dangerous Schmidian was, you know, incredibly comical.
but yeah there's a real problem with
I guess we could broadly say the right at the moment
I guess if that's what we want to call it
but there's a subsection
of conservative and libertarian
who decide that there's like intellectual cooties
and if you read something that someone mildly disagrees with
then ultimately you are a hundred percent
of a proponent of everything that person said so for instance
you can't read Plato's Republic because he talked about
how you have to take people's children with a seven-year-old
and train them in good fascists.
And so therefore, anyone who reference Plato or the Republic
is obviously de facto for stealing people's children
that's been a year old and turning to fascists.
That's just how philosophy works.
If you read any philosopher,
you automatically agree with everything that philosopher has ever set,
which is why everyone who reached Aristotle
believes that everyone is a slave.
You know, that's just how reading philosophy works.
That's the level of intellectual rigor we're dealing with that reason why we can.
Yeah. Well, and I think the point of-
Wait, hang on real quick, Scott, hold on.
Am I the only person who it sounds like a terrorist attack just took place in Orrin's vicinity
or something? Like there was a weird sound, and now you're kind of sounding bubbly and weird.
Oh, is there a problem with my audio? Is it still good?
Nope. Yeah, I don't know. There you go.
Yeah, I think it went out for a minute, but I think you're back now.
We heard everything, though. It was just a little bit, yeah.
Yeah, it was a little bit. It was good enough, though. And I think we're fixed.
So, yeah, and look, the point of the piece,
is, you know, in spite of the fusion project that Daryl and I are working on here, the point
it was to say that the two of you and a couple other associated type people, you're not just
conservatives. You're to the right of conservatism. You're to, I guess, the radical right where now
the rule of law doesn't count. And you both just want to kill your enemies, I guess, invoke
Barack Obama's NDA of 2012 or NDAA of 2012 and start rounding people up and throwing them in
Guantanamo Bay, which is something I don't think I've heard either of you say. I watch your show
pretty regularly, Oren, and I know Darrell pretty good. We talk usually like once a week or so.
And I hadn't heard so much of that. So I guess that is the question, though. And I've posed this
question to Darrell before. Well, just how far to the right are you guys? Obviously, you're to the
right, not just of reason, but to the right of me. But how far to the right do you go?
well i mean you know the same i tell people the same thing whenever that question comes up is it depends on
what's going on in the world you know i'd love to be a libertarian again that would be awesome
i would love to live in a live in a world where i could be perfectly comfortable being a libertarian
but you know that that's not the world we live in in political systems and political ideas
you know people have this idea that principles are these things that they're what makes a
principle a principle is that they don't change based on any circumstance
They're, like, sacred, you know.
And I just don't think that that's how politics has ever worked or should work, you know.
You have to look at, you know, it's interesting, actually, in the reason piece,
two of the, two of the points that they make sort of to indict Carl Schmidt,
it cites his legal argument justifying the 1932 Prussian coup as so-called coup.
And in 1934, the Night of the Long Knives, right, where Hitler had the lead.
of the S.A. rounded up, and many of them kill murdered. And, you know, it says that the 1932
coup against Prussia, which basically what happened, you had the Prussian government, the parliament,
was so hopelessly divided that they couldn't form a coalition. And there was no constitutional
provision for that situation. And so the head of state at the time, Von Pappen, he stepped in
and just appointed by Dictot, a government in Prussia to kind of keep things moving. And the reason
piece says, you know, that this sort of, this weakened the Weimar constitutional order and
paved the way and provided the tools that Hitler would later use to consolidate his power.
And it's like, kind of, I guess, you could, you could make that case. But there was no real
constitutional order in Weimar to protect at that point. I mean, you're talking about 1932.
You know, this is, Germany's being torn apart by street, I mean, not street fights, street,
running gun battles in the streets between communists and right-wing militia groups.
The Communist Party is the largest party in the country at the time directly tied to Moscow,
and everybody knows it.
This isn't like a Russian collusion thing.
Like they were taking orders and getting funding directly from Moscow in order to overthrow
the existing German government and work them into the communist world with the rest of the conquered nations at that point.
And so, you know, Germany's in this place where most people felt for very, very good
reason that they were facing a choice between communism. And remember, this is 1932. The bodies are
still warm from the Holodomor, like just a few hundred miles to the east. You know, I mean,
people know in Germany, people know what's going on there. They know millions and millions of people
have been butchered in the last 15 years. And they're facing a choice between communism or
somebody who, yeah, yeah, you love the autism hands. We all do. Um,
Or somebody who is willing to sweep aside the limits of the Weimar constitutional order that reason is so in love with, as many liberals then and now always have been, when what could have prevented Hitler?
If anything could have prevented it.
It would have been a strong executive of the type that Schmidt was talking about that could have done something about this communist insurgency.
But the people felt like they had no choice except to bring somebody in who was not going to be let themselves be limited by that.
You know? And the second thing that they brought up again is a night of the long knives. And this is, you know, there's this tendency among modern people to take political ideas that are perfectly, you know, applicable to Vermont in 1952 and apply them to Germany in 1932, you know, or apply them to ancient Rome when they're talking about Caesar or something. It's just, it's a tendency people have to apply what they know to things that are
radically different. You go to 1934. The essay is a two million, this is a two million man street
army, okay, in Germany, in a Weimar Republic that is forbidden from having more than a hundred
thousand troops in its military or, like military police forces around the country. They have a
two million man army of street soldiers who are openly starting to talk about maybe we need to
overthrow Hitler because he's not moving fast enough. He's making. He's making.
compromises with some of the existing power structures and all these kind of things.
And so rather than wait for that to build up and manifest, you know, Hitler made a call,
he went in and he arrested and rounded up and killed a lot of the leaders and kind of shut
that down.
Now, that was mass murder.
No question about it.
That was politically sanctioned, judicially sanctioned murder, no doubt.
But again, like, I would like to know what Reason magazine are all the people who would
criticize that, criticize what Schmidt had to say about it, you know, what their, what their
solution would be in a situation like that. You know, and I never get that part from them. It's just
that, well, these things work in Vermont. They would have worked. You know. But so your point is
that Schmidt wasn't that far to the right in the first place? So their measure is not such a big
deal? Or what is it? No, my point is that, you know, when people talk about Schmidt,
They want to talk about him as if he rose up through the ranks of American academia and now as a Supreme Court judge in Washington, D.C., you know, and like, here's what he's doing and how it relates to the American Republic or something.
So you're saying it's really applicable if somebody wants to talk about you or Orrin's beliefs that he's not really part of that discussion in the first place.
I know, Orrin, you were saying on your show the other day, I quote George Washington every day. What are you talking about? And they even admit in the article, right, that McIntyre,
does say that current laws on the books could be applied to accomplish everything he's
talking about here. This radical who wants a right-wing revolution.
Yeah, the one thing about that article is that it's written in this style. Two or three
paragraphs of absolute, you know, libel, complete falsehoods, complete fear-mongering. And then they
have to, after every two to three paragraphs, include in some parentheses, the fact that
actually, I don't believe any of the things that they just assigned to me that I say specifically
that actually, you know, we should be bound by the law, that ultimately Trump should be acting
under the color of law, that Schmidt is bad for being a Nazi, that Nazism is bad and it's bad
and it's good that they lost. And I decry fascism. They have to like go in and caveat that
after just, it's the, it's the most schizophrenic article other than they have to, they're like,
lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie. Oh, by the way, he didn't actually say any of this.
lie, lie, lie, lie, and that's the
entire article. So
the funny thing about Carl Schmidt
is Carl Schmidt is a synthesis
of Thomas Hobbes and
Joseph Demaestra. And
if you don't know anything about political
philosophy, you know, Thomas Hobbs
is the father of
classical liberalism. You know,
you have Lockean liberalism and you have
Hobsian liberalism and these two strains
go in different directions, but ultimately this is
the beginning most people recognize
of liberalism. So
in its very inception, this line of thought is fundamentally liberal to its core.
And when you synthesize it with something like Joseph Demaster, what you're trying to show ultimately
is, you know, this is Schmidt's entire point.
Tell it.
I'm sorry.
Joseph.
DeMastra?
Yes.
So, DeMaster was a French philosopher.
Actually, he served in the kingdom of Sardinia, but he wrote a lot.
He was an arch Catholic.
He spent a lot of time defending the church and its authority and these things.
very reactionary in response. He has a famous volume on the French Revolution, probably second
only to either Burke or maybe Thomas Carlyle as an authority on the French Revolution. And so
this is a guy who very much opposed the excesses of kind of this revolutionary liberalism that was
taking hold in France. The point of both of these thinkers ultimately is to say that at some point
for the civil order to be maintained, someone has to make a decision. And who,
whoever that person is that can make the final decision, the ultimate decision, that person is the sovereign.
This is why Carl Schmidt said the sovereign is he decides on the exception.
There are constitutional systems, and for the majority of the time, the constitutional system is the one that we follow.
But in moments of decision, you know, for instance, the Romans, obviously, they had a literal office of dictator, right?
You had these two consuls, and they were the ones who were elected for the year, and they could disagree, and they could have different roles.
but if Rome needed one decisive force for six months to make a decision on what was going to happen in a dire moment,
they installed a dictator. In fact, Schmidt wrote an entire book about dictatorships and the different types of dictatorships
and the different levels of dictatorships and when they're appropriate and when they aren't
and when they legally fit into constitutions and when they don't. And so Schmidt is just going through a well-established
understanding of how constitutions and sovereignty interact. A lot of people look at Schmidt and they say,
well, this is very prescriptive, right?
Like, this is, this is telling you exactly how you should operate a government.
I would say that most of Schmidt is descriptive.
In the, he is not explaining authoritarianism or designing authoritarianism in a way that, you know,
Newton was not designing gravity.
He's simply explaining the properties of how these systems work.
Now, ultimately, he's part of the Nazi party.
I think most of that comes from his instinct to really just climb and ingratiate himself with power.
But I'm not here to defend the man.
character. I'm not saying Carl Schmidt is a deeply ethical person. He's a man you should
follow. And, you know, the reason magazine piece says, I follow his cultural teachings. Carl Schmidt
didn't have cultural teachings. They made that up out of whole cloth. He's a guy who's doing
political science. He's trying to lay out the way that politics works. You can disagree with him,
right? You can say he's wrong about some things. I think Machiavelli was right on like 80% of
politics. I think the 20% that Machiavelli was wrong about is really critical. But I'm not just
going to throw Machiavelli in the trash because I disagreed with 20% of his politics.
This is true of Carl Schmidt. Yeah, Nazis are evil. It's bad. I don't like the Nazis.
Now, can we talk about the way that this actually works for the same reason that like Von Braun can get
you to the moon even if you don't agree with this politics? Right. Like, this is just the way the science
works. If you don't like it, then argue with the science. But don't try to ascribe some ideological
obsession to me when it's clearly these people who are ultimately obsessed with the
specter of fascism coming back for them in the Eurolord, 2025.
I think one of the interesting things, you know, you said Schmidt defines the sovereign
is he who decides on the exception, right? In other words, decides on the time when the normal
rules don't apply. And everybody immediately, right away, libertarian, non-libertarian,
anybody, the first criticism that pops in anybody's head of that whole idea is, well,
then there's just going to be an endless array of emergency.
and exceptions that justify continuing to, you know, to act unilaterally.
And that's probably, that, that's a, that's a danger.
It's something to think about the whole, the whole point, the, the main point that the reason
piece misses, I mean, regarding, like, ignoring the fact that they slander oron for
eight paragraphs and everything.
I'm talking about, like, the actual ideas that they're trying to talk about in the thing,
are that they're imagining, they're in this fantasy world that we don't live in that
place.
Now, how could anybody go through COVID?
and think that we don't already have that.
We already have a sovereign that decides, you know what?
This is an exception.
None of the normal rules apply.
None of the old norms apply.
We are going to do whatever we want.
And if you don't like it, we're going to send men with guns to your house to throw you in a cage or whatever they have to do.
Like we're already 33.
It's been like that since then here too.
That's a funny thing about it too.
It's like who are the liberals like biggest heroes?
Lincoln, Wilson, freaking Roosevelt.
Obama. Like, four of the most authoritarian, like, you know, sovereign presidents in the history
of the country, including Obama. I mean, you know, say what you, obviously, like the administrative
state, like, sort of boxes in the president in various ways now. But that dude just ordered
the execution of American citizens. Hey, they love L. B.J. too. Yeah, that's true. I mean,
they're, they're a little softer on that. But, you know, I mean, today, like, a lot of these
ideas, the liberal ideas, were developed to help people understand and govern themselves
in a political order where elected leaders, like most government action was either the
direct result of initiative by or was under regulation of elected leaders, right?
Today, the vast, vast majority of the government, 99% of the government has nothing to do
with the elected leaders. Elected leaders are almost frontmen for this
bureaucratic state, their job is to either, is basically to take the heat when things go wrong.
And then they get shipped out and they get to go work on a few corporate boards or, you know,
go head up an agency or something as their little reward or they get a book tour.
And then new people come in and the, you know, the bureaucratic state just keeps doing what it's doing.
And I mean, think about like the Chevron case in 84, Chevron versus the natural resources defense
counsel or whatever it was. One of the biggest, like, cases that ever hit the Supreme Court
and is really like ever since then kind of really defined how the courts have treated the
administrative state, right? The idea was this, the Reagan administration's EPA had reinterpreted
some laws regarding pollution, regulation, and so forth. And basically they made it so that
plants instead of having to individually get a stamp of approval for each thing they were each
type of thing they were putting out which made it like difficult to put out upgrades for that thing
because then you had to go through the whole process again whatever you could just have like
your factory be approved and then you could just sort of work and so uh you know an NGO brought a
brought a case against the Reagan administration's EPA and Chevron, and this is what the Supreme
Court decided, long-winded way of getting to my point here, what the Supreme Court decided has,
again, influenced the way the administrative state has acted ever since then. Basically,
what they said was, look, we're just judges, okay? If the law is very explicit, thou shalt not do this,
or thou shalt do this, then fine. You bring it to us.
and we're going to do that. But if it's anything other than that, if there's any vagueness or
anything like that, we went to law school. Like, we're not going to tell the EPA or some of the
experts at these agencies what they should and shouldn't be doing. So we're going to defer to them
from now on if there's any amount of vagueness or uncertainty about things. And so this was a
conservative court. You know, six of the judges on the court at the time had been appointed by
Republicans. That doesn't necessarily mean they're conservative. But it was it was center right, say.
It was a conservative ruling in the sense that this was the court saying, you know,
we're going to limit our own overreach or our own ability to reach into the executive branch
and dictate to them what they can do.
We're going to reinforce the separation of powers.
What has been the effect of that for the last 30, 40 years now?
The effect of it has been that more and more and more government action has been offloaded
to this unaccountable bureaucracy that can do whatever it wants without even having court
oversight unless things are very, very explicitly forbidden. And so this thing was meant to
reinforce separation of powers, decentralized power just has led to way more centralization of power
than ever before, you know. And so I did not repeal that one though, right? Didn't they finally
strike that down? I think it's still. Yeah. Yeah, they limited it. They didn't straight up strike it down.
What you're saying is that the entire American political center and establishment are all a bunch
of Schmidians now and so what damn difference does it make anyway which so to or and then let me ask
you contrary to whatever you know reason would say on your behalf who do you look to as your
most important political theorists or legal theorists about how things ought to be honestly i
probably look at bertrand de juvenile uh more than i do anyone else who was the for libertarians
this is the guy that uh hans herman hopper was drawing on when he wrote democracy
the god that failed. He's functionally, I would say, an Aristotelian in general. But the only reason
to draw on Schmidt, again, is the fact that he's a modernization of two critical thinkers on the
line that kind of gets us to where we're at right now. This is someone the left has been studying
for a very long time. Actually, the left has been students of Schmidt for a good while now.
This is accepted as, you know, good, you know, good research, good university work for pretty much any left-winger who's working in the political realm.
So the idea that you would look at Schmidt is in no way radical, except when you're trying to smear people with this, like, Nazi charge, which is the actual thing they're trying to do, right?
Like, again, I wrote a book, you know, the total state.
I did 10 chapters.
Most of them were on different thinkers.
The shortest chapter in the entire book is on Schmidt.
Right?
Like I reference him.
I talk about him.
He's important to understand.
But he is one of several different thinkers that I focus on.
I give him the least time of anybody.
If you look at my YouTube channel,
I've done a few videos on him,
but he's dwarfed by several other thinkers,
including Demaestra and Alster McIntyre
and all kinds of other people
that the left would probably find far more approach
but it's a lot easier to yell
Nazi Nazi Nazi rather
than to just say, oh, this guy
is putting several pieces together of
the reason we're in the modern
situation you're in and Schmidt simply has
one of these critical pieces.
The ultimate point that Schmidt is making is the
same point that's been made from everybody from
Machiavelli to Leo Strauss.
I know, right? Like the arch
villain of many. That ultimately
there are moments where
you have a crisis
and in those moments of crisis
no constitution can meet
every one of the things. No matter how well
crafted a constitution is, it cannot
assume every possible outcome
that can happen. And in the moment
all that constitution can do
is tell you who makes the decision.
It can't tell you what the decision will be.
It can only tell you who has the authority to make the
decision. And that's how Schmidt
came up with his famous formulation. You want
to know who has sovereignty in a
constitutional order? It's the person who can decide
on the exception with a constitutional
order no longer applies. Now, as Daryl has pointed out, the state of exception has been running
roughshot over the American government for a long time. Pretending that we have not existed in a
state of Schmidian exception for decades at this point is ridiculous. Now, you don't have to
agree with the Schmidian exception to say, that's what that is. I recognize the thing.
They're doing the thing that's not good. So if you don't like the Schmidian exception,
still having a grasp on the Schmidian exception helps you identify what's going on.
here you're not in a democracy you're not in a republic you're not in a representative government
there's a perpetual state of the exception going on which is allowing this extension of government
you could approve of that you could hate that it doesn't matter the point is this is the tool
that allows you to diagnose the problem if you don't have the framework to grasp the issues
then you can't see what the problem is or if it's even a problem at all and that's what they're
trying to do they're just like oh well if you notice that we're in the state of exception then you might be
challenging the orthodoxy
of the regime that we prop up
and make no mistake. That's what reason
is doing. They are propping up a regime
that they serve. So they don't want
you to notice that you live in a state and exception
because if you do, then all of their
lulbert bromides don't work.
Oh, I care about the rules.
Cool. The rules have been out the window for 50
years. What do we do now?
They don't want to talk about that. They just want to pretend
we're living in a state that we don't have.
And which is funny because if you ask
any libertarian, including it reads
magazine or cato or anywhere what happened in 1933 they'll tell you the constitution up and died
in 1933 when president for life roosevelt you know took over and then took us to war nationalize
the economy and created the world empire so all libertarians know that so yeah state of exception
that's what you know how many different national emergencies are we under right now probably
thousands since then, you know? And so, you know, during the days of W. Bush, and I think this is the real
problem with at least some kind of spins on this thinking is when September 11th happens,
then Bush says, ah, I can make the exception and legalize torture and order people to torture
when, in fact, the law already did account for emergencies and torture and said, no, you can't
torture, even in an emergency. And so, but Mr. Sovereign gets to break the law and do whatever he
wants. And then as Al Gore would say, there's no controlling legal authority. I guess as Schmidt would
say, there's no controlling legal authority to stop him. He can commit as many felonies as he wants because
that's what it means to be the president. And so, uh, and same thing for Barack Obama with his terror
Tuesdays and all of this stuff. I mean, all of these guys break the law all the time.
In fact, one of the National Security Act in 1947, the president is authorized to authorize
the CIA to do things from time.
to time or whatever it's written very broadly like that. They can just break the law right there
ever since the end of World War II. It's written in the law that the CIA can break the law
if the president tells them to. So yeah, that certainly seems to be where we are. And now you talk
about in your great book, The Total State, or about the constitutional ghost dance. And that's me.
I'm still completely married to this Bill of Rights. What are we going to do without this Bill of
rights? We've already lost so much of it. But when it's outright repudiated, then
I don't know where the hell we're going to be then.
But so what do we do?
What course do we set?
So this is what I've been trying to explain to everybody, libertarians included, though I think guys like you are a little closer to, you know, agreeing with this than obviously the people at reason.
But the critical aspect is this is a failure to understand what a constitution is.
No constitution has ever been written by human hands.
There is no written human constitution.
That's not what constitutions are.
A Constitution is literally the way your people are constituted.
It emanates from the folkways, the traditions, the religions, the belief of the people.
The Constitution of the United States is a beautiful document.
But it's not a beautiful document because it was written down.
It's got the best prose, though it has amazing writing.
But ultimately, the reason the Constitution was special is that it encapsulated a way of being, a way of life of a specific people at a specific time.
It understood that these were the people who would be living under the Constitution.
And you can have a written constitution that jives with the actual constitution, the way the people are living their lives.
Or you could have an unwritten constitution, as many countries do, that jive with the way that they're living their lives.
Or you can have a written constitution that in no way actually reflects the way that people are living their lives, which is what we have today.
technically we have a written constitution
but the people in the United States
are in no way following it they are not the type
of people our founders themselves said
would be necessary to live
in this type of constitutional republic
so if you want to restore
these values you must first restore
yourselves to the state of the people
who founded the country you must live
the kind of lives they lived
you must have the type of beliefs they had
you must follow their religion
you must respect the folkways
you have to embody the constitution
It's not enough to just sit there and point at a string of words and say,
I saw it on a piece of paper, therefore.
Like, this is always the problem with legalism.
Oh, well, I have the piece of paper.
I'm waving in the air.
Okay, how's that working for you?
Is it stopping anything?
Is it doing anything?
No, not because the Constitution failed or the Constitution isn't good enough.
It's because the people are no longer believing in it.
They're no longer animating that document with their actual lived experience.
So if you want the Constitution back, it's not about,
writing a better constitution, it's not about getting the framework exactly right, getting the
exact legal language down. So therefore, no one can get out of the constitution. That never
works. That's Schmidt's point. There will always be exceptions. And the only thing that matters
in that moment is, do you agree? Do you have a shared belief? The Romans, for many, many years,
had deeply held ideas about how Republican government could work. You had sacred offices,
like the Tribune of the PLEBs, that could not be violated. Because all the tribes,
all the people believed in those traditions.
But the minute that power was able to say,
you know what, maybe I just kill the Trebulin-Oplex.
Maybe I just override that veto.
Maybe I just don't care if I step back from that dictatorship.
It wasn't the law that was making, you know,
Cincinnati step away from his dictatorship
and return it back to the Republic.
It was the tradition.
It was his honor.
It was his beliefs that mattered.
And that's what people don't grasp.
The Constitution is not a piece of page.
paper, it's not a set of laws. It's a way that you live your life. It's a belief that is encapsulated
in that moment in the Constitution. And just like when the Romans lost their belief in their
constitution, they went from a republic to an empire. The minute of the United States stopped having
the belief in the founding document and the founding principles, it didn't matter if the document
was still there. We're no longer a republic anymore. The paper is not the thing that's making you a
country. It's the people and their belief in it that matters.
Yeah. And, you know, in the Roman case, in the modern case, you know, that collapse of belief
in the old ways comes as, you know, this is not something that's just entirely manufactured
in left-wing academic classrooms or something, you know, this is, or by people like Carl Schmidt,
societies grow and they change and they have different requirements as far as their
governance and they and people are going to start you know just to hold to keep it to our
modern case you know you go back to like Roosevelt's takeover when he became
president for life in 33 right we can look at Roosevelt we look back now and people
looked at it then and said this is just it's total overreach this is this is
destroying the constitutional system it's you know it's
all over now, I don't know if somebody else being in office in 1933 would have made that much
of a difference to those things. Maybe in details and like maybe it would have been delayed a bit,
but people were, you know, they were living in a world where all of a sudden you could have
millions and millions of people being, have sheriffs show up to their farm to run them off
their family farm because something happened in New York on the stock exchange and some,
something happened on the commodities exchange in Chicago and somehow that cascades down and now I'm
losing my family farm. This is like, you know, for most of human history, if you're going to lose
your family farm, it was because some natural disaster happened. There was a famine or there was,
you know, something real happening. All of a sudden we're in this world where people are losing
their farms and there's no famine. There's no nothing. It's just, it's a financial thing that's
happening in a distant place. And they look at the constitutional order and they say, we don't, this thing does
not even, it doesn't begin to, uh, to deal with the problems that we're facing now. And you can
either make it deal with those things in a way that, that serves people, uh, or you can just,
you can not do that. And people are going to, are going to look elsewhere, you know,
because they have no choice. I mean, things do change. I think, um, one of the things I wanted to
bring up, Warren, um, is one of the, one of the many lies in that reason piece. But, you know, they say
that Schmidt, that the new right, such as it is, uses Schmidt to, let me see, he says,
to justify aggressive state action against all who are designated as MEs. That is, that's just a
complete lie, first of all. Like, nobody's doing that, you know, nobody on the new right is invoking
Schmidt to justify using the state to exterminate the untermination. Okay, he is invoked to the
extent he is invoked at all, by people on the right, when they are talking about taking action
against what amounts to this rolling color revolution that we've been living with for years
and years now. You know, you're talking about, we're talking about like a country where you have
violent, non-state, you know, street armies like Antifa, Black Lives Matter, who are actively
collaborating with political officials, with the media, media corporations, with other corporations.
They're getting funding from other corporations and the bureaucracy and local law and for all
these kind of things to terrorize American citizens for political reasons. You know, you look at what
happened in Kenosha. This was like, you looked at as like a riot. It wasn't a riot. People were
coming from all over the state, all over the region to go in there. And why were they doing that?
because they turned on their TV and they saw Kamala Harris saying that this innocent man who was
wielding a knife at a police officer who just tried to kidnap his child. He was just murdered
in cold blood just like every, you know, person that whatever. And that what did she say during
the Minneapolis riots that this should not stop, right? They hear that stuff. They hear that this
is going on and they're being incited to violence. They're being incited to go attack an American
city. And that's actually what happened. And so when you,
you live in a place where that's possible, where the media is inciting that, politicians at the highest
level are inciting that, running cover for it. NGOs, judges are running, you know, a legal cover for these
people. They refuse to prosecute them. And then somebody being chased down by a freaking child molester
trying to take his gun from him, Kyle Rittenhouse, when he fires in self-defense, they try to put him
in jail. You know, and so when you live in a society where that's already happening, there is no,
there's no constitution you can possibly write that is going to allow you to fix that problem.
You know, when the vice president of the United States is saying, you should keep burning Minneapolis,
that's what you should do. You're not going to write a constitution that's going to fix that.
Somebody has to have the balls to step in and say, I'm going to put a stop to this.
And the people who are causing this to happen and the people who are doing it are going to be punished
so that people in the future know that they can't do this anymore. And we can say, well, but that's anti-democratic.
it's anti-liberal, it's anti-American.
You know what?
It's probably all of those things.
But America's never dealt with a situation like this before, you know, where you have
so many just high-level, such organized power at the highest levels working, treating
half at least of the American population as just real enemies, as war enemies, you know,
cheering on their deaths.
And it's, you know, when people talk about,
talk about Schmidt, you know, again, this is the whole, the whole reason magazine thing when you go through
it is like, they're talking as if it's 1777 and people want to start quoting Carl Schmidt to
overthrow the constitutional order. And I just don't know what world they're living in. And that's a
weird thing for me. Like, they're libertarians, you know, allegedly, which I would think of all
people who look around and say, man, this is not anything like, you know, the way to, you know, the way
things are supposed to be running out, that it would be libertarians. But, you know, they,
they see that when it's convenient to see it when they want to go after Oren and me, when they
want to run cover for COVID, then, you know. Scottie. Mike, by the way, because this part
of it is my business. I've never heard of either of these guys. I think one of them I've heard
his name one time before. The other guy I've never heard of before. So they're certainly not
speaking for our movement, you know, whoever they are.
But, you know, part of what you're describing there is what they call, I guess Sam Francis coined the term anarcho tyranny.
And the thing is, a lot of that unrest is about the tyranny part.
And then they're allowed to just run crazy and riot and loot.
And then that's the anarcho part is the lawlessness part.
And then when you have all this pressure from below for real judicial reform, I mean, man, there's so many lousy cases.
The cops kicking in the wrong door, shooting somebody, shooting a,
unarmed guy when they don't need to jumping in front of a car so they can say oh she was trying
to run me over and just crazy things and when people demand satisfaction on that that you lift the
tyranny part where they fine and fee especially poor people to death all day instead they legalize
armed robbery and they you know let murderers off pay the bail uh no cash bail for for you know
violent felonies and this kind of thing and crack down on regular people committing so-called offenses
against state edicts harsher than ever and so that's what really sucks is because libertarians
you know will have this right and even including reason magazine will have this right about
what needs to be done and then instead we get george sorrows financed liberal and progressive
prosecutors and socialists even uh people come from the uh what do they call it not the social democrats
usa but the modern one you know the one i mean the the the aOC one and um and and
And so then they come in and, of course, just screw up everything and make people want even more law and order, which means more of the tyranny that they weren't really asking for.
So that's the unfortunate part is all the security that you guys are asking for is still a government program.
And they're still going to be, you know, cracking the protester skulls, but letting the looters run until 3 a.m.
I mean, we're already seeing in Portland.
There's been, what, two reporters recently who have been arrested by the police.
for you know saving an american flag like not fighting anyone not going to battle not not diving in
and no just picking up an american flag and putting it out and they didn't arrest the people who were
assaulting the cops or burning things down or you know doing violence to the streets they arrested
the reporters who were you know victims of violence because they recovered american flags and did
nothing wrong like that's what the police are doing in this area and you know when you look at that
behavior you need an explanation for it right like i'm sorry but rule of law obviously does not
explain what's happening there so what is happening there well you see the portland police know who
their friends are and who their enemies are and it turns out that the most important political
distinction is not the rule of law it's not what the constitution says it's who the state
recognizes as friend and enemy now you don't have to like that you can be a libertarian and say i don't
want the state to exist at all. But the entire point of what Schmidt was saying is that as long as
the state does exist, the nature of the state will be to declare friends and enemies. And the
friend coalition will be those that allow for the existence of the identity of the group.
And the enemies will be those that challenge the existence of the identity of the group. And again,
you don't have to like the group in question. You don't have to agree with the actions taken by the
state. But it is very observably clear that he's correct.
about the way this dynamic plays out.
The funniest thing about people attacking the friend-enemy distinction
is that they are almost always attacking those
who recognize the friend- enemy distinction as existential enemies.
Like, they literally frame you as,
oh, if you recognize the friend-in-deme distinction,
you're an enemy and you're not welcome in polite society,
and the state should probably snuff you out
for going around and recognizing that there are friends and enemies.
And this is the lie at the heart of liberalism.
There are no objective institutions.
There are no neutral institutions.
The institutions must make decisions.
And they must decide who they're going to apply their standards to and how they're going to apply it and how force is going to be applied.
They have to decide all those things.
Now, as a libertarian, you might say, well, the state just shouldn't exist and that solves that problem.
We can have a deeper debate on that.
I think that's impossible.
And therefore, decisions must be made.
But just sitting around and pretending like the decisions aren't being made, this is why people look at libertarians and assume they're the handmaids of the left and the handmaids of the regime.
because when it's convenient they just shut their mouths
and then the minute someone pushes back on the regime they say
oh well you're asking for something ridiculous
outside of the box well actually no I'm just recognizing
where we're at and the fact that we already have police
who are going to arrest you for peaceably saving an American flag
that's been burned and thrown on the ground
assaulting no one but you're going to jail anywhere
we're not arresting the violent people we're not arresting the mob
we're not arresting the rioters we're arresting you American citizen
for trying to pick up a burning flat.
Like, that's where we're at right now.
I don't understand how you look at that situation.
You're like, no, we're just a normal, liberal democracy.
That's just where we're at right now.
Anybody who challenges that or notices that, they're the real problem.
That's when it becomes clear.
You're just controlled opposition.
You're just, that's all you are.
So just to clarify here a bit, because I think, again,
they admitted that you have said explicitly that you want the president to follow the law.
And that's it.
Oh, fine. On the other hand, though, the rest of those paragraphs are full of them, at least
pretending that what they thought that they heard you say was, forget the law, actually.
I'm sick and tired of the left, so I want the government to just hurt them for me.
That's what they thought you had said, because, hey, brand enemy distinction and exception
decider and all of that. So is that or is that not what you're saying?
No, I think that everything that can be done that needs to be done to stop the violent left,
can be done under the color of law.
The problem is not that there are just not laws in the books that restrict leftist violence.
The problem is that we ignore them.
We don't apply them to the left.
We make sure that judges make sure that these people never see the inside of a jail,
even if they're arrested.
As where if the right is arrested, if you have January 6 protesters,
they just had the guy, the trans person who wanted to kill Brett Kavanaugh, right?
Just got eight years in jail.
Now, you want to compare that to the leader of the,
the proud boys who wasn't even at January 6th, he was sentenced to 22 years in jail.
Several other proud boys were sentenced to 17 years in jail. Donald Trump was facing over
100 years in jail for the fake charges they brought to try to keep him out of the election.
Now, you can disagree with the proud boys and Donald Trump, but if you try to murder a Supreme
Court justice, I feel like you should get, I don't know, maybe as much time as a guy who
wasn't even at January 6, much less not a third of the prison sentence, we can't look at that
and pretend like there isn't some kind of exception going on. So do I want there to be some
extrajudicial action by Donald Trump? Do I think we need to break the Constitution in half in order
to destroy the left? Not at all. All you need is a basic application of the law.
Even the most basic level of equal application will destroy the leftist project. But they've
been operating without any kind of actual law for at least 70 years of that.
this point. The left just has a blank check for violence, and they've had it since the 1960s
at least. So they're used to having no penalty. So the slightest amount of legal penalty under
the laws we already have is like fascism for them, because they've never had to pay a price
for the violence that they use. The weather underground was trying to murder people.
They were blowing up government buildings. They were planting bombs everywhere. And you have
them serving as professors in colleges, celebrated mentors of presidents of the United
States. Can you imagine that for Timothy
McVeigh? Which, you know, we don't need to go deeper
into the actual
orders. But you get what I'm saying. Like,
this would not be applied to any right winger
in the same way. And yet this is how
our law works. So no, all we need
is the actual law on the books, but we're not
getting it. And so what does Carl Schmidt
do? He lets us understand why
we aren't getting it. That's
the reason you invoke him.
Yeah. Eric Rudolph School of Medicine.
Wait, hold that thought just one second.
Darrow, I got to tell him this.
Buy my coffee, Scott Horton's show coffee.
Just go to Scott Horton.org slash coffee.
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And then I also want to say we got 3,000-something people watching and listening to the show right now.
So please everybody like and subscribe and share and hit the bell and all those damn business model type things.
We've got to build up this show.
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So, yes, thank you.
Don't forget to subscribe.
And now you were going to say something, Darrell, but also I had a question for you, which is, I wonder why you think this is happening.
happening. And I don't want to jump too quickly to the Israel thing because, you know,
reason is not just simply a Zionist rag. It has not been, you know, historically. But then again,
in their morning email every morning, I got to read all about how poor little Israel is just
defending themselves against the terrorists as they slaughter a Waco massacre worth of children
every single day over there. And then I notice that you guys are right wingers who don't like
Israel very much. And it seems like it makes a lot of sense if I was a Hasbarist to just say
all good right-wingers love Israel and the ones that don't are fascists, because that fits in a
cookie cutter. So I wonder if you think that perhaps that might be part of what's behind this
smear against y'all's characters here. I mean, maybe, you know, yeah, I don't know.
Maybe Oran has thoughts on that. I mean, I think, look, if, if dislike
King Ted Bundy makes me a fascist, then I guess, you know, I should learn to goostep.
I just, you know, I don't apologize for, I've always, look, up until, like, I've always tried to be fair with Israel.
There's nobody that could listen to my fear and loathing series and make the case that I did not do my best to try to be fair to the Zionist perspective.
And I was always like that.
When you go in and start massacring tens of thousands of children among a stateless people, captive stateless people with no army of their own,
no Air Force, no nothing. Yeah, I'm going to have words for you. I mean, I just,
people who don't like that, that's just too bad. I mean, yeah, and if it makes me a fascist,
that's just fine. I don't know. Orrin, you get the sense that that's, like, part of the motivation
behind some of this stuff. I mean, I don't know that part on Israel. You hardly even really,
so I. The amazing thing right now is if you, if you, you know, look at what's happening to
Megan Kelly, right? Like, she loves Israel. She's been very clear about that. She just refuses to
announced Tucker Carlson. And because of that, and because, like, she, she noticed that, like,
people like Charlie Kirk were kind of saying, well, you know, I love Israel, but maybe we should
be a little more careful with the way it's conducting itself. Like, all of a sudden, she's
getting struggle session. Like, you hate the Jews, you hate Israel, all this stuff. So it doesn't
matter. You can say barely anything, which I try to in general, if for no other reason, then I
want to care about Israel, not at all. I would like Israel to be, like, Timbuktu, or, you know,
Madagascar or Zimbabwe where I just don't ever think about it at all because it just doesn't
matter. It's not my country. And so I don't care about it if I don't have to. The only reason I have
to care about Israel is literally if I don't spend all of my time saying, yes, everything they do is
holy and we have to follow them because God said so. I get a thousand people in my comments telling
me that I hate the Jews and I want them all to die. I'm a bad Christian and all these things.
And I'm just very tired of it. You know, they just had Benjamin Netanyahu talking about the woke
right and how important it was to use social media influencers to attack the woke right.
Man, I wonder where he got that verbiage from.
But, you know, I don't want Benjamin Netanyahu talking about how important it is to
influence our country's policy openly.
I just think that if I'm going to send a guy, I don't know, three to four billion
dollars up front and then another $20 to $30 billion on the side, that maybe he could
shut up and be thankful and go away.
But no, instead, I have this guy openly talking about how he's dropping a pile of money on American influencers with the explicit intention of manipulating the public opinion in the United States.
I just don't want that.
And by the way, I don't want it for Qatar or for Russia or for Ukraine or for China or anyone else.
I don't want any foreign influence in my country.
And Israel is just one of the many countries I don't want to hear from about my domestic politics.
That's it.
But that's enough.
That's all you need.
If you say that, then you are, of course, a neo-Schmidian, which they just mean neo-Nazi,
by which they mean, we should shoot this guy.
Because let's be clear, Reason Magazine is saying we should murder these people.
Like, I don't want this to be, like, there are no equivocation on this point.
Reason Magazine knows what it's doing.
It's putting out a hit piece.
It wants people to kill you, just like the, you know, people who are yelling,
Charlie Kirk is a fascist, want him dead, and then they killed him.
Like, that's what that means.
fascism means secular Satan in our in our in our in our current vocabulary you can kill baby Hitler he's so evil you can kill him as a baby when he's the most innocent he's no longer human because he's Hitler and when they call you a fascist that's what they're saying about you you could be murdered you don't have to do anything wrong you're just in the state of being a fascist and therefore worthy of violence that's what they mean yeah violence that is framed in entirely self-defense terms right you know yes that like like like
the way that these people think the murder of Charlie Kirk was actually an act of self-defense,
you know, just like killing baby Hitler was. Because Orrin and me, Charlie Kirk, I mean, it is
baby Hitler in a way, right? It is, according to these people's like interpretation, where if you
let this thing grow, you know, this is the seed, this is the, like, yeah, it seems harmless
now, but if you let it grow, then this is what's going to happen. And wouldn't we all kill
baby Hitler? I would not, by the way. But, Orrin, I want to,
Um, or I don't know, you want to talk more about the Israel angle, Scott?
Well, I just wanted to actually ask you guys if you, uh, wanted to because time is running short here.
I wanted to make sure, uh, before I forget to give you a chance to stick up for the other guys who got attacked in the piece who, uh, they were attacked by name.
And I'm sorry, I don't have it in front of me right now.
But in case y'all wanted to get a word in, uh, on behalf of your buddies there.
I guess these are all people you said you've had on your show before, right, Horn?
Yeah, it was, uh, it was, it was again, Yoram Herzone, uh, who, uh,
of course, you know, again,
a art and Zionist
and Israeli national and
just somebody who has noticed
that liberalism has probably run its course
and we need to start looking at like actual
nationalism and, you know, people
are going to have their disagreements. Again, I caught a lot
of flack for having him on my channel
from people on the right, you know, the far right
who said, how could you talk to this Zionist?
You know, he's going to sell you all the
Zionist propaganda. I was like, no, I'm just
going to talk to him and hear what he has to say and I agreed
with some and I disagreed with other things.
And, you know, the fact that this guy is somehow being dropped into the same, you know, bucket and say, well, this guy obviously is a neo-Nazi because I don't know. I really, I don't even know how it's the founder of the Burke, the Edmund Burke Foundation thing. Okay. I know who you're talking now at least.
And then I'm trying to remember who the last person. There was one other person, I think they had besides me and Daryl and Carl Schmidt in the picture, but I've suddenly forgot the lineup.
up um but yeah it is just it is just wild that they have grouped all of these people together like
look it in many ways i think darrell is a bleeding heart liberal right like i disagree with darrell
on on several things but like the idea that all of us are somehow unified and are you know
genuflecting before carl schmidt oh it was curtis yarvin right uh right and and you know again
And Yarvin has obviously a lot of unorthodox ideas, but the one thing that Yarvin is just
never, ever, ever, ever doing is calling for a state violence.
Like he has been very careful about this, right?
He will talk about how a regime could change, but he only ever talks about regime change
in peaceful manners.
In fact, he talks repeatedly how dangerous it is to try to change it in any other way.
So the idea that he is like somehow sitting there and, you know, steepling his fingers and just
waiting to pounce in the next, you know, Reichstag fire is just, is just ridiculous.
But again, facts don't matter because Reason Magazine is just there to call you a Nazi.
That's all they want to do.
Yeah.
Well, look, I like this quote from Daryl.
I think that's right, that you do more than anybody on TV to help set the tone for what the
American conservative movement is talking about and how they feel about things, what they know about
things.
You do a really great show, always very deeply informed, great.
interviews with great guests. And I watch you all the time. YouTube knows to serve me up all the
latest or McIntyre every day. So no question about that. No doubt. One of my few appointment
listenings. Yeah. All right. Any closing words, Darrell? I mean, I could go on about that stupid
article for a lot longer. But, you know, just the main takeaway from it is just, you know,
that I just, I really have trouble wrapping my heads around what world, the reason people
who wrote that article like have been living in this whole time, you know? I mean, imagine you're
in like a boxing match and your opponent pulls a knife and starts slashing at you. And you
somehow make it through the round and you get back to your corner and you're like, coach,
he's got a knife. What should I do? He's like, well, whatever you don't do, whatever you do,
don't hit him below the belt. No rabbit punching. I don't want to see any of that dirty stuff because, you
know, the integrity of the, we have to be better than them. The integrity of the sport is at stake here.
And so you look over to their corner and you say, well, but now his coaches, his corner men are
flashing a gun. Look, you just get out there and give him the old one too. And the coach here is
Reason Magazine, of course, and all the people like them. And so you go out there and he runs
at you with the knife and you drop a headbut on him and drop him and the fight's over. And you get
disqualified and you lose and they award him the championship. And then the next morning you wake up
and you pick up Reason Magazine.
And there's an article in there about just framing you entirely as the bad guy
and the other guy as the victim and how, you know,
they quote the guy telling, you know, the writers of the piece that he's just shocked
and appalled that you would, you know, that you would ever do such a thing,
break the rules in such a way.
Your own coach is denouncing you as a rule breaker.
You know, this isn't the way I taught him.
And that's like where we're at right now.
you know it's like if you're playing if you're i'm just going to take my sports metaphors way too
far but like it's all i got um uh you know you're you're playing a soccer game and um
somebody comes over and just punches you in the face and instead of coming over and giving
that guy a red card and throwing him out of the game the ref comes over and shoot you in the head
at that point you're not playing soccer anymore you're playing something else there's a whole
different game afoot and you better adjust to that and start playing according to the new rules because
that's you know and the reason people again they're just they're living in the in a world that doesn't
exist right now and one of the things i would point out too about what oran always says he doesn't say
like let's do all this stuff because it would be awesome he doesn't say let's do all this stuff
because the constitution and all those things were bad and stupid and all the ways we used to do
things that that's that was always a bad idea he says if we ever want to get back to anything like
that we need to take some action against these things that are standing in the way of
that, you know, and we're not talking about people who have the wrong ideas about immigration or
wrong ideas about anything, actually. You can be, I think in orange in mind, you can be a communist in my
country, you know, if I'm the emperor. You just can't go out and actively try to overthrow the
government or, you know, do illegal things. Like, all we're really asking for is the radical just
request please oh please please you know state authorities can you please just do the actual thing that
your name is and exercise state authority can you just enforce the laws that are already on the
books like that is a it seems like a pretty simple request but it's one that is just apparently
too much and so because i mean in your boxing analogy it sounds like you're saying it's time
to start going beyond the law and win which was i think contrary to the way uh or
Orrin was describing his view.
It's just winning and losing, when that guy brought a knife into the ring,
winning and losing was no longer the relevant metric.
Okay, you need to survive is, is what I guess what I'm asking is.
So then like, for example, some people are saying it's time to censor the left.
But then again, the First Amendment would forbid that.
But then again, the Democrats, when they were in power,
they were sure not shy about censoring the hell out of people.
So, for example, are you saying that the right-wing government should go ahead and abuse that same power because it serves them right or not?
Well, look, when you no longer have a concept of loyal opposition amongst a large section of the population, including people who are in positions of power, then, I mean, those are questions that you have to ask.
Like a lot of people, a lot of people watching maybe would listen to what you just asked.
And they don't even, like, it's almost a rhetorical question.
It's like, of course, the answer is no.
But these are, these are discussions that have been forced on us at this point.
You know, so like, yeah, speaking of censorship, one of the things reason actually quotes or on on instead of reinterpreting and, you know, paraphrasing.
He says companies like, companies like discord need to pay a severe price for going out of their way to allow an organization.
of terrorist networks on their platform.
And then comments on us and says,
ISIS propagandized, fundraised,
and recruited via Facebook, Twitter, and Google,
but the Supreme Court rightly ruled in Twitter versus Tomnay,
2023, that the social media companies
were not guilty of aiding and abetting.
Quote, social media firms do not owe a duty of care
to all potential victims of terrorism,
even though they knew that several terrorist organizations
were using their platforms to recruit new members,
explains University of Florida law,
professor Jane Bambauer. All well and good. That would be a compelling argument if we were
having a neutral good faith argument instead of the discussion that we're actually having,
which in the world that we're having it in, which is the one where, you know, people on the right
were being censored at state direction for, forget about violence. I mean, just for questioning
the 2020 election. Hey, they kicked the president off of there while he was still sitting in the
presidency for another couple of weeks. Yeah. And this way, it just seems like we're, like, I feel
like I'm in the twilight zone sometimes when I'm trying to have a conversation with somebody like
the writers that magazine where it's like if you could, like in a vacuum and you were to take us
out of all context, we could have this discussion and it's a worthy debate, but you have to live
in the world that you're actually living in. And they're just not. And they, and they, they sort of
make a profession out of refusing to do it.
All right.
Well, listen, I think we better wrap.
Oren, tell us about your show.
Oh, yeah, I've got the Oren McIntyre show.
It's, of course, on Blaze TV.
You also can catch it on YouTube and Rumble and Twitter.
I'm never calling it X.
Sorry.
You can also catch it on all your favorite podcast platforms, you know, Apple and Spotify and
Google and all that stuff.
So check it out if you'd like.
And I have your book here somewhere on the pile, but it's buried.
But it's a great book, the total stuff.
eight oh you got one there must
yeah absolutely
all right well thank you both very much
a great show really appreciate it
and thanks everybody for watching
see next week
You know what?
You know.
Bhopha!
Bhopha!
The