Raging Moderates with Scott Galloway and Jessica Tarlov - Trump’s Trade War in Limbo
Episode Date: June 3, 2025Scott and Jessica unpack the recent court rulings on the legality of Trump’s emergency tariff powers, and look ahead to the possible changes coming to the big, beautiful budget reconciliation bill i...n the Senate. Plus, they discuss the administration’s ongoing fight with elite universities, Elon Musk’s farewell to Washington, and whether or not we want to go back to 1993. Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov Follow Prof G, @profgalloway Follow Raging Moderates, @RagingModeratesPod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Gen Z has a hot new hangout spot, church. And it's definitely not their parents making
them go.
We always assume religion is going to continue to decline, and it doesn't look like that
decline is continuing.
It shocked experts because it sort of upended everything that people thought they knew about
American religion.
Gen Z is in its prodigal son era.
That's this week on Explain It to Me.
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Welcome to Rage and Moderates.
I'm Scott Galloway.
And I'm Jessica Charlov.
Jess, thanks for your patience. Another logistical nightmare with Scott Galloway leaving his
computer on the plane.
I just can't believe you're not freaking out about it. You seem so chill.
Well, it's likely in, I don't know, if you're in combat long enough.
This is your war. My ex-wife used to say if my dick wasn't attached,
we'd find it on a card deck table in SoHo
next to a script of Goodfellas.
Oh, how romantic.
Yeah, you know, I'm five minutes away from losing my keys.
Anything that is not hermetically sealed to my body
or my person will not be with me for very long.
And that's also one of the little mistakes
for when I know I'm stressed out, I start losing everything,
like I can't everything all the time.
Anyways.
Oh, well, can we help with the stress in any way?
Enough of my logistical issues.
What did you do this weekend?
I mean, it's not particularly interesting,
but my uncle for his 75th birthday
had us all out to Westchester.
He does ballroom dancing, him and my aunt.
And we did like a dance class, and they're really good.
And so we were doing the cha-cha with a bunch of his pals.
That's nice.
Yeah, it was cute.
It was nice.
Yeah, it was really good.
Yeah, I'll send you some video.
I know you're dying for it.
Yeah, I was at the French Open.
Oh.
Enough of you, back to me.
Well, that's cool.
It was cool.
I'd never been before.
It was really.
Well, Jero says nice.
It's really well done.
Yeah, it's fun, the slip and slide effect.
It's sad to not see Nadal do it, though.
Yeah, I'm not into tennis.
I go mostly just to be fabulous.
I don't really even know who's playing.
And then for two hours, bomb in and out. I go mostly just to be fabulous. I don't really even know who's playing, you know,
down for two hours, bomb in and out.
We've been going to Paris lately,
where I took my son to a PSG game.
I forgot how beautiful and wonderful Paris is.
My God, it's so nice.
It's the real deal.
It's the real deal.
It's the, you know, it's the Paris of Paris, right?
You want to hate it because they hate us so much.
Just the Parisians, not the French in general.
And then you're there and you're like, I love you.
I love everything about you that's happening here.
I feel like there's a new esprit de corps
among sane people across all nations right now.
I feel as if we made fun of the French,
they turned up their noses at us now,
we're like, this is some serious shit going on here,
all this nationalism and weirdness
and the breaking of the post-World War II order.
And everyone is sort of like, okay,
if you're reasonably sane, you're my ally.
I've found generally people are pretty friendly
and kind of, hey, how are you?
What the fuck is going on over there?
That's the general vibe you got in Europe right now.
That's a fair point.
They still don't think that we can dress.
Our accents are terrible,
even when we try to speak the language.
And they know that they're our cultural superior.
So as long as we're comfortable with that,
I do find them to be friendly.
Did you, I didn't listen to every single piece
of your content last week.
Did you talk at all about Brigitte Macron
pushing Macron's face as the plane door opened?
I've been fascinated by that interaction.
That's called marriage.
Well, that's what he said, and French marriage.
They were playing.
I don't know if that was contempt or friskiness.
I don't know if they're about to go in the back of the plane and get it on,
or if she's just had it with him.
I don't know if she's going Melania.
I was thinking about just a tangent here.
What Bruce Springsteen said about the White House
I thought was so powerful, he said,
this is a White House with no music, no kids,
no sports, no pets, no culture, no joy, no wife.
Melania's never there.
And essentially he just escapes and goes and plays golf.
There's just no humanity in the White House.
I thought that was really powerful, the way he said that.
Yeah, he had a lot of good things to say
and then he doubled and tripled down on it
once Trump got aggravated, which I always enjoy
because it is easy to back off a bit, but the boss knows.
There you go.
So today we're talking about Trump's trade war
running into serious legal limbo,
the Senate taking up the House's budget bill and the White House's ongoing attack on Harvard.
All right, let's bust into it.
Last Thursday, the U.S. Court of International Trade struck down the president's use of
emergency powers to impose sweeping global tariffs.
The three-member body voted unanimously and included a judge that Trump himself appointed.
But later the same day, an appeals court paused the ruling, suggesting that the issue will probably
need to be decided by the Supreme Court.
The legal turmoil led Trump to lash out publicly
at the Federalist Society for giving him
bad advice on judge appointments.
And it added some juice to the acronym TACO,
meaning Trump Owes Chickens Ow.
By the way, that's from people on credit.
It's Robert Armstrong from the Financial Times.
Jess, first off, what do you make of this term taco?
Is it accurate, the term coined by FT reporter Robert Armstrong?
Well, I think there are now over 50 waffles, at least,
in terms of things that he said he's going to do or deals
that he has made that we now know he hasn't even spoken to anyone or his
Team hasn't even spoken to anyone. So yeah, I'd say it's pretty accurate
But I live in abject terror of what happens when Trump feels bullied or embarrassed
He became president because Obama
Made fun of him at the 2011 White House Correspondents Dinner
So think about the level of rage that he had pent up then, and you add to it that he's
coming in, and no matter what's going on in public, I still feel like he maintains some
core strength or core level of belief in the project, the project this time being the tariffs,
whereas any normal person, I think, would kind of take the win or try to when the courts keep batting these things down to just say,
hey, it's lawfare, right? Everyone's out to get me, even if I appointed them.
We're going to relax a little bit. We're going to put 10 percent tariffs here and there.
We'll do, let's say, 20 percent on China and let's get back to business.
He's going to dig in because he's a little kid and he's mad. And that's what scares me about taco. But it seems accurate and also amusing. How
are you feeling taco wise?
Yeah, it's interesting. Essentially. So it's a term meant to describe a financial trade.
And that is the trade is that's paid huge dividends is when the market moves because
of a threat from the Trump administration about them imposing a tariff,
you bet the other way, because essentially he
doesn't follow through, and that he negotiates against himself,
backs out, chickens out.
So for example, the shipping stocks
that were very dependent upon Chinese US shipping
crashed because of this, quote unquote, 135% tariff.
And so the trade was to go long those stocks
after they had declined, believing that, in fact, he
would back down, which he eventually did.
And this trade has been hugely consistent and profitable.
Just go the other way.
If there's a big movement based on a threat,
go the other way believing that he's going to back down.
And it's paid huge dividends.
And the number used is the right one, approximately 50 announcements around tariffs or reductions
in tariffs.
And as far as I can tell, one sort of deal with the UK,
where they're agreeing to talk more
and they reduce some tariffs on autos and jet airplane
manufacturing.
Is it like Aston Martin engines?
Yeah, I mean nothing.
Things we all really desperately need in our daily lives.
Big nothing burger.
And I used to believe that, OK okay Trump makes these irrational threats as a means of trying to get
Nations to come to the table and I now believe that that's not the primary
objective here I believe in you know in the fullness of hindsight and when
Light is shined on this period. We're gonna find that this incredible manufactured volatility was the vehicle or the inspiration for the most massive
insider trading grift in history. And I think what's happening here is that he
takes the market of a specific nation's equities or specific stocks way up or
way down based on threats and he leaks that information to people close to him
to allies or to parties related to him they make billions. I mean literally billions when
he announces that he's imposing a new trade on EU products a sophisticated
trader could figure out a way to make billions that day knowing that the
stock's about to crash. I mean when you have your own attorney general trading
stocks the morning before he announces tariffs knowing the market's gonna crash
so she goes out and sells her Donald Trump media stock I mean essentially you general trading stocks the morning before he announces tariffs, knowing the market's going to crash.
So she goes out and sells her Donald Trump media stock.
I mean, essentially, you have a totally lawless administration.
The ability to move markets like this
and then anticipate those moves and trade on them is billion.
So I no longer think this is even about national interest.
The fear was that in an attempt to advance national interest,
he was going about it in sort of this primitive 19th century
way that made absolutely no sense and historically has
never worked.
But that's not it.
It's worse than that.
He's just moving markets up and down and trading against it.
At least that's my thesis.
Your thoughts?
It seems right to me.
I mean, I have certainly no personal experience.
And then a little by extension experience
because I hang out with people like you
about the psyche of people with like a lot, a lot of money.
I know people who certainly have enough money
but when you're talking about billions of dollars,
that's not really in my day-to-day circle.
And you said people just never think they have enough money.
And I always thought that there had to be some sort of limit
on it, not that you would go backwards
and start making bad investments on purpose, for instance,
or whatever, but that there could be a limit to it.
And that's why Elon Musk might actually
be interested in doing something good for the government.
This is months ago that I thought this.
Or that maybe Donald Trump knows that he's not
going to get a Peace Prize, for instance, for just making billions of dollars off This is months ago that I thought this, or that maybe Donald Trump knows that he's not gonna get
a peace prize, for instance,
for just making billions of dollars
off of the American people.
And now it's pretty much affirmed
that this is just a grift in general,
and for every single person that is part
of the high levels of the administration,
and anyone who can frankly get their claws into him.
So whether it means that you're going to be able
to build a new resort in Qatar or in Vietnam,
whether you have a coin that you're profiting off of,
whether you're just showing up and paying a million dollars
for dinners that your son can get out of jail.
Like there are just so many ways
that he is expanding his bank account
that it's tough to keep track
of it.
There's a huge New Yorker piece about it.
And I feel like everyone has gotten the message that this is the right talking point, that
we have to say that this is unprecedented, that we've never seen anything like this.
And Adam Schiff is talking about all of the investigations that we're going to have.
But as per usual, nothing feels like it's meeting the moment.
And this is what
Does happen when things are so scrambled and are being done in such a way?
That there's no precedent for it because we don't have the laws to govern it like it's clear that this is an enormous ethics violation
For instance, but there's no immediate backstop to any of it and they're just running out the clock
Like we have three and a half years to get as rich as humanly possible and to cause as much damage as possible. And from Trump's
perspective, he knows well that to go through the courts, it takes a long time. He's been granted
basically complete immunity by the Supreme Court and no one's going to put an 85 year old in jail.
Like worst case, right, he has an ankle bracelet
around Mar-a-Lago, so who really cares about that?
He'll just be hanging out with his friends.
And I feel oftentimes at my other job,
like I'm shouting into the void,
but not so much the degree to which that I do
about this particular problem.
Because the fact that anyone is even coming back
and talking about the quote unquote Biden family corruption or whatever it is that Hunter Biden did in
contrast to what's happening now with Trump Inc. it almost doesn't deserve a
response but you know that there is a large swath of the American public who
actually feels that way and I feel a bit at a loss. Yeah I think one of the
failures of the Democratic
Party in terms of getting people to recognize the level
of the grift here is that they think, OK, there's always
been grift.
This is on a bigger scale.
He's being more transparent about it.
But what they don't connect is that this is, in fact,
a zero-sum game.
And that is when Attorney General Bondi sells Donald Trump
media stock the morning that he later that day announces sweeping
tariffs that take the markets way down.
There's someone on the other side of that trade that bought her stock, say at 20 bucks
a share, because they didn't have inside information knowing that this exogenous event was about
to take the value of the shares down to 15 bucks.
The key to the modern financial services industry
is trust. Take Russia for example. People don't feel confident taking the hard-earned money and
putting it into the market because they know that there are people in and around Putin's inner circle
that have access to information. There's kleptocrats and there are certain things that are outside of
their control influence or they just don't have the knowledge, where they're likely to be on the wrong side of a trade.
They're going to find out that, oh, so and so knew
they were about to announce a new government contract
to build a new nickel mine, or give a nickel mine
to a publicly traded company run by an oligarch close to Putin.
And they weren't in on the trade,
and they were on the wrong side of the trade.
And so people just don't participate in the markets.
There's no sense of rule of fair play.
Now the US markets, we attract these incredibly deep pools
of capital because people believe, OK, maybe I
don't have inside information, but nobody is allowed
to have inside information.
I'm supposed to be betting on a gut feeling
sense of the market.
I believe Apple's going to go up.
This is why I believe it's going to go up.
And the person on the other side selling the stock
doesn't have access to material nonpublic information.
And so when you start to erode trust in the markets,
essentially what happens is people decide,
I'm not going to play this game.
I'm not going to invest in the markets.
What does that mean?
It means companies don't have access to capital.
It means it's much more difficult to save money
for your retirement.
It means if you work for a company that is compensating many of its employees through stock options, they don't
get nearly as wealthy. In some, it punctures what is one of the modern marvels of our economy, and
that is the financial services industry, where we're able to access capital from all over the
world, thereby making our ability to borrow money and grow faster, less expensive, giving people the opportunity to participate in the prosperity
and incredible growth of these amazing companies,
even if they don't know anybody at Google or at Dow Chemical.
So all of this sort of insider trading and grift,
it has an absolutely devastating effect
over the middle and the long term.
And that is our pools of capital dry up.
People just aren't willing to participate.
And the cost of borrowing goes up.
Everything gets harder for companies.
People have fewer options to build wealth.
And it just creates a level of distrust,
where people are cynical about the government,
about institutions.
And when you have this happening at the highest levels,
and they're just totally immune from prosecution,
which I'm not sure they are, but they clearly believe they are. It basically, it's almost as if somebody said
between tariffs, insider trading,
and the grift of the Trump family,
it's as if there was this incredibly deft strategy to say,
how can we reduce the prosperity as quickly
and as severely and as structurally as possible in the US.
It's like, I almost sort of admire it.
It feels like the most elegant way to take an economy and a nation down kind of drip by drip.
It feels that way to me as well, but I'm wondering when the moment will be
where the plan is revealed because we have all of these theories, right?
But we're also trying to apply some degree of logic to it.
And it feels like there has to apply some degree of logic to it.
And it feels like there has to be some illogical foundation actually, because they're taking
us so off course of what you would expect, because there is a world in which, you know,
Trump got elected, and it wasn't this massive mandate, but he certainly got elected, won
all seven swing states, etc.
There was a good amount of goodwill coming into this.
People were enthusiastic.
He had new voters coming into the coalition, Latino men,
more black men, more women.
The red arrows all over the country
are going in the upward direction.
The blue arrows going in the downward direction
for the Democrats.
So he could have taken that as a moment to come together
and to win on these things.
And you take normal economic policy, you want to zhuzh it a little bit and add in some tariffs.
I understand that we have protectionist Democrats that are into these kinds of things.
But he's clearly tried to go in the villain direction.
And do you think we'll ever actually understand the total plot line here or they're're gonna go out of office in 2028,
and we will never really know why certain decisions
were actually being made.
Oh, I think we know.
Everything reverse engineers to,
how do I become the richest man in the world?
I think that's his-
So why hurt people?
No, that part I understand,
but that he wants to hurt so many average people,
people who have supported him enthusiastically,
is what I don't understand.
I think it's indifference.
I think he, I just-
So it's just the cruelty is the point.
And it doesn't matter if you're in my way,
en route to getting richer, then I don't care.
I don't think, and I might be wrong here,
but I don't think he's a sadist.
I think he's just a narcissist.
I don't think he wakes up and thinks, I can't wait
to shut down a hospital, a food kitchen in Ukraine,
in a war-torn area.
I think he just thinks, oh, we can save some money there.
I don't care about these people in these shithole countries.
I don't care about seven or eight million people
losing their insurance.
I don't think he wakes up and thinks, I can't wait to do it.
I think he's just totally indifferent.
And his total focus is, okay, I'll threaten this
tariff against Vietnam.
And then what do you know?
They've announced a one and a half billion dollar golf course
and he's scaling back on it.
And something he'd said earlier,
you constantly hear people say it's like that scene
from Wall Street where Martin Sheen,
is it Martin Sheen, the kid who's-
No, Charlie Sheen.
Charlie Sheen, sorry.
Charlie Sheen says to Michael Douglas, Gordon Gekko,
how many, you know, how many odds do
you need to water-ski behind?
And I have known and do know a lot of billionaires.
And what people don't realize is that there's this total act.
They get in front of a crowd and say, you know, I never really thought about money.
I just wanted to build something great.
That's just bragging.
That's saying, I'm so fucking talented that money just rained on me because I'm so amazing at what I do.
To a T pretty much. Every rich person I have met, really wealthy person, and I suffer from this, they're fucking obsessed with money.
Obsessed with it. And in a capitalist society, every point of light and incentive is to become obsessed with it because
The more money you get the more rights you get the more opportunity for your children the largest election set of mates the more political Influence you have the more status
So that number if it goes up 1% you have 1% more worth as a human in a capitalist society
At least that's all the signals are telling you in addition to be really good at money
you have to be thinking about it all the goddamn time.
And that's what I talk about on our other show,
Property Markets.
If you're serious about economic security,
I hate to say this and it's not fun,
you gotta be thinking about money a lot.
You gotta be thinking about this new tax package.
How does it impact you?
Should you be acting on certain things?
How will salt impact you?
Should you be thinking about buying rental properties? Should you be thinking about certain things? How will salt impact you? Should you be thinking about buying rental property?
Should you be thinking about putting money into a truck?
I spend four to eight hours a week
doing nothing but managing and thinking about taxes,
my money, my investments, because there are so many laws.
The tax code's gone from 400 pages to 4,000,
and those incremental 3,600 pages are there,
have been constructed to help people who have some money and think about money all the time.
Because it's essentially a maze that if you understand it, you get to wealth, whereas other people run into walls.
And so this is what happens. You meet someone who has one billion, then three billion, then five billion, and they're still working their ass off,
sometimes at the cost of their own health and their own relationships, and they maintain that obsession with money, and it's never enough until what I have found sometimes, the thing
that does in fact slow them down, is a health scare of either them or somebody they love.
But until that point, this notion that don't you have enough money, no, people never have enough
money, because the reason they're there, the reason they're billionaires to begin with, is they think about money all the time and
they've gotten huge reward and they never get off that hamster wheel. These people never,
the notion that Donald Trump isn't going to take his last breath trying to get from 3
billion to 5 million to 7 billion. No, that's all he cares about. This is his worth. This
is his total value system
It seems like such a squandered opportunity
It is I mean when you look at what he could achieve and I do know that the Peace Prize is on his mind
He thinks he should have gotten in for the Abraham Accords from the first administration and they're looking for an expanded Abraham Accords in the second
administration there are so many more people who are open to Donald Trump
being even remotely decent at this job
that I look at it as just depressing,
frankly, that he's not taking like an easy ramp
with any of this, with any of the court decisions.
I mean, it's staggering.
And Mark Elias told us months ago,
he said the courts are gonna to be what saves us.
It looks like that's what's saving us, at least from economic ruin at this point.
96% of the court rulings in the last month have gone against the Trump administration.
So that's 97 cases in district courts have blocked him.
73 judges across seven presidents in 25 districts across 10 circuits.
So basically everybody who has been appointed
and is still alive, Republican or Democrat,
is saying no to him.
And this is not just about tariffs,
this is about what he's doing on immigration.
This is restoring as many of the Doge cuts as they can.
We're gonna talk about Musk in the next section.
But they are hitting brick wall after brick wall
after brick wall, and they're not stupid people.
I mean, there are a lot of really smart folks
that have been in or around the Trump administration,
and they just seem hellbent, I guess, on money first
and not caring about the prestige of it,
because world leaders would be happy to have him,
at least to his face, if he was going to behave
in any sort of normal fashion.
But the incentive system is such that it encourages them
to, quote unquote, break the law.
And if it's found they are, in fact, breaking the law
or don't have the license to do what they're doing,
what's the downside?
They just say, oops.
And they even maybe accomplish some of it along the way.
Oh, you served congressional authority illegally. Well, guess what? All those hospitals in that some of it along the way. Oh, you you served congressional authority
Illegally. Well, guess what all those hospitals in that USA it's all gone. It's closed. We're not going to rebuild it
Oh, we laid off a third of people at you know, the EPA. Well, they're gone
They're not coming back even if it was found that you didn't do it legally
It's similar to what's happened with big tech that the incentives are if you had a parking meter outside of your house
It costs $100 an hour.
And the ticket was $0.25.
I mean, what happens?
OK, they have to stop.
But they're not being punished.
So all of the incentives are just go at it, be brazen,
do whatever the fuck you want.
And if the courts tell you to stop, OK, maybe you have to stop.
But guess what?
The majority of the damage, the majority of the objective has already been accomplished. And what we're
referring to here specifically is the International Emergency Economic Powers
Act of 1977, the IEEPA, that rolls right off the tongue, has never been invoked by
a president to impose import tariffs before until now. So essentially, it's
meant to be kind of a wartime or something to invoke in a time of extreme
threat and essentially these courts are saying no this really doesn't qualify. Trump has imposed
select tariffs on steel, aluminum, and cars and car parts under this section 232 authority. In March
Trump imposed a 25% tariff on steel imports under this authority but during a visit to a U.S. steel
facility in Pennsylvania
last Friday, the president indicated
that he might be doubling this to 50%, which
means he has no fucking understanding of economics,
because everything from steel to furniture
will go up in price, because our domestic manufacturers will
have this incredible gap or pricing power such
that they can start charging non-market rates
for their steel, because people can't access foreign steel.
Anyways, the courts are basically saying, okay, you can't do this, but my question is,
why wouldn't they continue doing this?
What's the downside?
They don't get fines.
They don't go to jail.
They get most of what they want.
They get to, you know, cosplay far right-wing leadership, promises made, promises kept.
And if they have to turn back on it,
okay, well the lawyer said we have to do it,
so we'll do it,
but they still get the majority of the credit for it.
What is the disincentive here?
Well, everyone hates you.
So- Or loves you.
A lot of people love this.
I mean, not in the polling.
So he is negative 16 in terms of handling the economy,
negative 26 on tariffs,
negative 32 on inflation
and cost of living.
A majority of Americans say that he doesn't know
what he's doing.
You know, we had that moment where we weren't seeing
Navarro and Lutnik on TV that much.
That was peacetime, right?
That was after the Wall Street Journal piece
about how Scott Bessent slipped into the Oval Office
when he saw Navarro going out the other door
and said, you have to take these retaliatory tariffs off.
I mean, this is like 50 trade wars ago, but we had this moment where they
weren't around that much.
Now they're back on the Sunday shows.
They're back in prime time and they've clearly got the reins of this.
Besant is complaining that China is withholding some things that we need.
Well, of course they're fucking withholding things.
You think they're're just gonna sit there
and take it from us?
China has a 100 year plan, 200, 300, 400 year plan.
They can wait this out as long as they possibly want.
And frankly, they're enjoying watching us suffer this way.
So the EU, they're preparing for counter tariffs
against us, right?
They said by July 14th, we're going to put these in place
if you go up to 50% on steel and aluminum.
And there is going to be a lot of suffering
from those of us who make $50,000 or less
up to the CEOs of Walmart and Jeff Bezos
who are all speaking out about these kinds of things.
So I think that part of it does matter.
The second thing that should matter,
but I'm not confident that it does to these folks
is that there are elections that are going to come and people are going to vote on the
economy and historically speaking, the party that's out of power should do well in the
midterms.
So that means that it could be a bit of a mirage if Democrats do well.
But my question back to you about 2028, at least. Do you think they're even thinking about
wanting to keep power continue to consolidate power going forward or they're just saying this is a four-year bonanza
Let's get as rich as possible as quickly as possible and we're not real Republicans
Anyway, I mean when you look at Trump criticizing Leonard, Leo who got him all three of his Supreme Court appointments,
really solidified his legacy, the guy who
runs the Federalist Society.
You think they're not ideologues anyway.
So what does any of this matter in terms
of electoral consequences?
Yeah, I don't think they care.
I think it's a chance for them.
So you have the Republican Party's gone full MAGA,
and Trump appears to have the power to primary them
and boot them out of office.
And then the people in its closest inner circle
are just making a shit ton of money.
He's going to be dead in 10 years.
So does he really care about the structural decline of the US
or the debt that young people are going to have to pay back?
And also, the glass half empty part of me
is that in the thing that I find most upsetting and maybe it's not true.
I think that the corporate elitists have defined the Democratic Party where they
rail against income inequality as they fly to their campaign events and private jets and go from a net worth of 1 million to 11
million as senators
that Americans are angry Democrats and
senators, that Americans are angry Democrats, and they see so much prosperity in the US.
And similar to the way William Gibson described the future,
it's here, prosperity is here.
It's just not evenly distributed.
And then with social media, where
they spend the majority of their days, they see two things.
There's chocolate and peanut butter,
and more really this nitro and glycerin
of exceptional coarseness and algorithms pitting people
against each other.
You know that your enemy is not Russian troops pouring
over the border in Ukraine.
It's not people who are the Islamic Republic who
has an apartheid against women.
Your enemy is your neighbor who supports Trump or supports Harris.
That these algorithms have an economic incentive
in figuring out a way for you to hate other Americans.
And then so much wealth porn is rubbed in their face
that if you're one of the 40% of American households that
can't even afford to get a crown or has to borrow money such
that your wife can have an emergency appendectomy
and you're in debt, you're working hard,
you're trying hard and all you see every fucking day
is really elegant incentive to be angry at your neighbor
and to feel as if everyone around me is doing well,
but me, I think it creates a level of harshness
and coarseness where quite frankly,
you want a blood offering.
You don't mind hearing about these elitist jerks
at Harvard getting fired or international students
having to return home or maybe, yeah, it's sad,
some of the people who are suffering overseas,
but I can't afford to get dental work
and I'm supposed to be worried about a hospital
closing down in Rwanda.
I do think there's just this very unfortunate acid running through the veins of Americans right now.
You know, I'd like to think that we're better than this and America's better than this and
they're going to gag on this harshness, this cruelty and this coarseness. But deep down,
I worry that this is a lot of Americans expressing their anger and their frustration and quite frankly their hatred
That has been fomented by social media algorithms that have an economic incentive and fomenting rage and hate
God, that's ugly
No, but it's accurate. It's just on top of how ugly and sad it is
It is then extra sad to me that it's Democrats that bear the brunt of it.
He'd still win. As of last week, he'd still win, right? The election?
Yeah. I mean, now we're up like nine on the generic ballot. There was one pollster who
had it that Harris would win. But generally speaking, yeah, I still think that because
he's directionally going where people wanted to go. And we have yet to put out a platform
to respond. What's your three-point plan?
We're going to talk about the reconciliation bill, but where's our version of the bill?
That would be the easiest thing to not just say, they're doing all these things wrong.
This is how we would do it better.
These are where our cost savings would come from.
These are the programs we're preserving.
What's our budget proposal?
100%.
Exactly.
It's like you pay staffers and you make them work miserable hours anyway.
So have them work on this.
That I would fully support that if that's how they spend their time.
You just have a team that's going to say that our own everything that they're
going to do, we're going to do better.
And that's how you spend your time.
And then when you go to run in 2026 and 2028, you can say, this is our work
product, this is how much better off the country would have been if we had been the ones in charge.
And it's strange because we talk to so many politicians
and smart political minds.
And I feel like we bring this up constantly.
And they say, oh, that's a great idea, right?
Or we have X, Y, or Z things.
And I say, I'd never have something in my hand, right?
I don't have something that I can refer to on the five,
right, to say, oh, this is actually what our Doge plan
would look like.
This is how we would redux the 1990s to today.
And so even though they're lying through their teeth,
I mean, the Sunday shows was a bevy of untruths lies,
all of it from Mike Johnson.
There are no Medicaid cuts in the big, beautiful bill.
We're not cutting Medicaid.
Blutnick, et cetera.
Yeah, that's crazy.
Lying with impunity, lying to your face,
lying straight into the camera, all of it.
So what's going to happen is we're going to take that up
to higher courts.
The president's going to win like he always does.
But rest assured, tariffs are not going away.
And still no one walked away with anything
from the Sunday roundup in the positive direction
for Democrats.
Right?
They didn't say, oh, this was a really powerful message,
or this really sunk in, or I know what the Democrats stand
for, et cetera.
And CNN released this poll.
They asked which party is the party with strong leaders?
Republicans 40%, Democrats 16%. Neither at 43%, but still 40% to 16%.
And then which party can get things done? Now keep in mind that this is the most ineffective Congress
in terms of passing things that has ever existed, right? With Republicans in charge of everything.
And the Republicans still at 36% and us at 19%.
And then 44% neither.
So everyone's fed up with both parties.
But if they got a pick and it's a binary choice, they're picking them.
All right.
Let's take a quick break.
Stay with us when we come back.
We're going to talk about the Senate taking up the House passed budget reconciliation
bill.
Stay with us.
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All right, just welcome back. This week, the Senate is taking up the House passed budget reconciliation bill and Senate Republicans have already indicated they'll look to make
a number of changes. First, they'll have to contend with the rules of reconciliation,
where anything that's not related to mandatory spending is stripped out. Some Republican
senators, including Josh Hawley, have already said they'll look to remove cuts to Medicaid.
But spending hardliners, including senators Rick Scott
and Ron Johnson, have vowed to seek even more drastic cuts.
Jess, what do we expect to happen this week,
and what will become of this big, beautiful bill?
It's all looking great for the big, beautiful bill.
You have opposition from all corners of the Republican Party for a host of reasons.
You already talked about, you know,
some people actually care about Medicaid,
like Josh Hawley and Susan Collins.
Then people are saying there are no cuts here.
We know that it balloons the deficit,
no matter what Mike Johnson wants to say
about the CBO scoring.
I love how the CBO is totally right
when a Democrat's in power,
but as soon as a Republican comes into power,
it's a Democrat run organization
that doesn't know how to count.
But I've kind of bucketed the four main reasons
that folks are opposing this bill.
So you have Medicaid cuts, ballooning the deficit,
raising the debt ceiling, Rand Paul is hot on that one.
And then also an end to the energy tax cuts.
And that was one that I wasn't expecting to see.
You have Tom Tillis, who's up for
re-election in North Carolina, talking about that, and Lisa Murkowski from Alaska. So these
are tax credits that came into play because of the Inflation Reduction Act, so something
that the Democrats got passed. And they said that businesses in their home states are going
to be dramatically hurt and probably go out of business if we get rid of those energy tax cuts.
I should note as well, and we'll talk about Musk's farewell tour, but Tesla has been rage-tweeting
about the cuts, the energy tax cuts going away as well, saying that we're going to lose
our energy independence and that the grid won't be able to hold up if we get rid of
them as well.
So that was the kind of left field objection to the bill that I wasn't waiting for.
And then a few people have said it's sad when people lose nutritional assistance, but they
can still plow on with that.
Yeah, I love your idea.
I think that absolutely the right strategy would have been for a group of Democratic
representatives to get together and propose their own bill
and basically use it as a means of proxy
for comparing and contrasting.
And I think the big opportunity for Democrats right now
is to kind of usurp the poll position
that Republicans are used to owning,
and that is where the adults in the room fiscally,
and propose over the next 20 or 30 years
raising the age on Social Security, having it means
tested, talking about maintaining or holding flat military spending. The one I
really like that I've been exploring, what do you want in a tax? You want
something that is the least taxing tax, right? And the one I'm zeroing in on that
I think it's a big opportunity that we're not talking enough about is to basically zero out or reduce the exemption on all inheritance tax.
And right now they're talking about increasing it, I think, from $26 million to $30 million,
meaning that you and your husband could combine, put $30 million of assets into a trust, and
then that can grow.
And you're young, so you live another 50 years.
Say that goes up four or eightfold.
You could feasibly have $100 to $200 million
pass through to the next generation tax free.
And I think that, similar to what
they do in the UK and other nations,
I think they should lower the exemption or the ceiling
to a million.
And the reason why I like that is there's about $120 trillion
in wealth that's going
to be passed on to the next generation in the next 30 or 50 years.
And a lot of it is going to be passed on tax-free.
And I think it should be taxed.
And I think they should raise it from 40% to 50 or 60%.
Now, why is that?
It would raise a great deal of revenue.
And two, it doesn't come at a very big cost.
Say you're really fortunate, economically blessed,
and you can pass on $10 million in wealth to your kids.
Having no exemption and a 40% or 50% tax
means they get $5 million versus $10 million.
And what Daniel Kahneman and a lot of psychologists
have determined that above a certain amount of money,
your kids really don't benefit.
So the difference between them getting $ 100,000 and a million,
there's a difference, right?
That's the difference between them being able to buy a house
and send their kids to,
that does increase their happiness, their privilege.
But the difference between having five or 6 million
and eight or 10 million for kids,
I know a lot of rich kids, they are no happier.
I think they're happier than poor kids, but I don't know if they're happier than quote-unquote wealthy kids
And I think this is something we could really generate a lot of sustainable predictable
Additional tax revenues from that would slowly but surely the bond market would love and take down interest rates
Which would lower costs for all Americans means testing Social make hard, hard decisions around Medicaid,
increase alternative minimum tax for corporations, many of whom don't pay any taxes at all, raise
have a multinational agreement of a 30%, not 15%, but 30% alternative minimum tax on corporations,
which by the way, would not take it even back to what has been historically the averages.
Corporations are now paying the lowest taxes since 1929. And you couldn't go
much further than that because you don't want to put the economy into a coma. But
if you really if you took the deficit each year from 2 billion into 1.6 into
1.4 and said in 8 to 12 years we're gonna have neutrality and we're gonna
grow such that our debt to GDP goes
from 140 percent down below 100 percent. You would see interest rates come down and sort of the positioning
is we're the adults in the room. Are we going to have to raise taxes or cut spending? The answer is
yes and it's time for us to be adults for our children. I think that is a positioning that is
so naked, that is so wide open, that no politician has the stones to try and occupy.
They're either hardcore fiscal conservatives that want to cut funding for SNAP, or they're Democrats
that never ever want to contemplate cutting spending at all. And everybody agrees to maintain
defense spending and everybody agrees. You know, it just, I love that negative 40 term that
Fahrenheit and Celsius meet at negative 40.
That's a fairly inhospitable place to meet.
And where the far left and the far right meet at 40
is around anti-vaccination, around anti-Semitism,
and around just fiscal irresponsibility.
But I like your idea.
I think the Democrats should pull together a proposal
and force that proposal.
The media would love it. The media would compare the budget proposal from the proposal and force that proposal. The media would love it.
The media would compare the budget proposal
from the Republicans and the budget proposal
from this group of Democrats.
It would have no hopes of passing,
but people would say, the Democrats are the leaders here.
They're the ones that are actually making hard decisions
and being fiscal adults here.
They're the ones managing the government the same way.
I have to manage my own god damn household.
Anyways, what are your thoughts?
Democrats put forward a fairly sober bill
that pisses off everybody.
I love it.
I love to aggravate people.
And what you were laying out makes a lot of sense to me.
And I would just add to it that I think it would be
very effective to benchmark it to points in history.
I like that.
People do that often with the 90s, right?
Cause everyone liked the Clinton years,
financially speaking.
And you just say, how did 1993 feel to you?
This is where we were, right?
Anytime you could even go back,
if it was a Republican that was in charge, I don't care,
this doesn't have to be partisan,
but you just say you were living good,
your parents were living good, your grandma,
whatever it was.
And I think that people need something more
that they can hold onto.
All of this feels too amorphous.
Like we're just spewing out into the ether, right?
And none of it makes sense
because they need to see the brass tacks of it.
And so I really like the idea
of being able to paint a full picture.
Like what your life looked like in X year,
what your parents' life looks like in X year, what your parents life looks like in X year.
And you can tack that directly to being able to achieve
the American dream again,
which is what Rahm Emanuel was talking about
when he was on the podcast last week.
There are a couple of things I just wanted to add
that would be smart fixes
or ways that Democrats could push back.
And I mean, what the Republicans are doing
and how irresponsible it is,
is they're using
the guise of these very popular policies like no tax on tips, right, or no tax on overtime.
And first of all, they're only doing it for a few years, which surprised me in the bill.
But what they do that Democrats don't do is they don't limit it in terms of what you're
earning.
And we talked about this before that like a hedge fund manager will be able to use no
tax on tips, or corporate lawyer will be able to use no tax on tips or corporate lawyer
will be able to use no tax on overtime and
That should be pretty clear messaging coming from the left
Where you just say there is no reason that someone is who's earning millions of dollars needs to benefit from this policy
And so you could save money that way. I also think that the argument that they are making about
Medicaid work requirements requires
so much more forceful pushback with the exact numbers and the explanations of what's going
on here because, A, work requirements don't work.
So they tried this in Arkansas in a super conservative state in 2018.
All it did was lead to 18,000 people not having their insurance.
There were not extra people that were working as a result of it, and it's also a complete
farce that people are just mooching off of the system.
So 92% who receive Medicaid are either working full or part-time, caregiving, have a disability,
or in school.
So basically, the program is working as it's supposed to.
And what they're trying to trick us into thinking or pawn off, and Mike Johnston was doing this
in his Sunday show interviews, is they want to make us think that this is millions of
people that are cheating the system.
We're not cutting Medicaid.
What we're doing is strengthening the program.
We're reducing fraud, waste, and abuse that is rampant in Medicaid to ensure that that
program is essential for so many people, ensure that it's available for the most vulnerable.
And to your point about social media and what we think about those around us, they also
want us to think that the people who live amongst us are stealing from us because they
want to turn us into a Hobbesian hellscape,
right where we think that we have to be in a state of war constantly.
The war is not on Medicaid recipients.
The war is not on the 40% of births in this country that are paid for by that program.
The war is with people who think that they need a tax cut when there is no sane world
in which they are deserving of it or a world in which people will believe that they need a tax cut when there is no sane world in which they
are deserving of it, or a world in which people will believe that all they're trying to do
is just extend the 2017 tax cuts.
That's one of the big fake news banners that are blaring across cable news, interviews,
podcasts, et cetera.
Well, we're not actually trying to give people more of a tax cut.
We're just extending what we already have, and it'll turn into a tax hike if we don't do this.
There are extra poison pills in this bill.
And the 2017 tax cuts were actually
a lot more reasonable than what we're looking at here, which
will be the largest transfer of wealth from the poor
to the wealthy that we've ever seen in American history.
So you brought up something you said,
do you want to feel like it's 1993 again?
So I couldn't help.
Is 1993 actually not that great?
I was young.
I was just out of business school in 1993.
But I thought, how did I feel in 93?
And for any attempt to understand
the sensation of happiness or an emotion, I go to movies.
These are the top grossing domestic box office
films in 1993.
Number one, Jurassic Park.
I don't know if it's a warning about AI. I think it's one of Spielberg's lesser efforts.
By the way, Jeff Goldblum has been in like four
of the 10 top grossing films, The Fugitive.
Great film, great film.
I don't, have we, well, I already have talked about
how much I love Chicago, but The Fugitive is my number one,
if it's on, I watch it, movie, no matter what.
And-
Chicago?
Yeah.
The Broadway plague turned movie?
No, I love the city of Chicago.
Oh, okay.
Where the fugitive is based.
I can totally see that.
I can totally see you on Chicago.
The firm, basically Tom Cruise figures out
being a lawyer sucks.
Sleepless in Seattle.
I just didn't buy either of them having sex together.
I didn't get that.
Why?
Oh God, Billy Crystal's so unattractive.
That's not Sleepless in Seattle, that's Tom Hanks. Oh, he's hot, I get it. I didn't get that. Why? Oh God, Billy Crystal's so unattractive.
That's not Sleepless in Seattle, that's Tom Hanks.
Oh, he's hot, I get it. I take it back.
Also, you always say it's about the humor.
That's why you sleep with Billy Crystal.
Yeah, that's her point. Mrs. Doubtfire, gender affirmation. I'm totally against it.
Come on, this is like the best year ever.
I'm totally against it.
Come on, Scott.
In Decent Proposal, Robert Redford pays a woman much younger to sleep with him.
That's called New York. Just call it New York.
In The Line of Fire, that was good.
John Malkovich is an assassin.
Clint Eastwood, that was a great film.
Aladdin, didn't see it.
Cliffhanger.
What?
Stupid. A Few Good Men.
That was a great film.
Yeah.
Free Willy. Oh, God.
Groundhog Day. Funny.
Oh, amazing.
Classic.
Dave.
Oh, like one of the best president movies of all time.
The best movie of the year was actually the 15th
top grossing film, Scent of a Woman.
Did you say Scent of a Woman, Jess?
Years and years ago.
Al Pacino, Philip Seymour Hoffman's first film, I think.
Oh, really?
Anyways.
RIP.
That was 1993.
Okay, back to our regular schedule program here.
But that seems good, right?
I know you had a lot of criticism.
Yeah, I think it was a mediocre year for movies.
But yeah, that's OK.
All right, let's move on here.
Speaking of, I don't know, art becoming reality,
before Elon Musk's farewell ceremony last Friday,
even he criticized the budget for increasing the deficit,
saying a bill could be either big or beautiful, but not both. House
Republicans are said to be waiting on the White House for details for a
rescissions bill, which would formally claw back some of the discretionary funds
that Doge determined to be wasteful. Is Elon's departure an important moment at
all, or is this just smoke and mirrors, Jess?
A little bit of both. I think what will be more important is what the lessons
of this are.
So I'm not into you may a coping or admitting that perhaps
you miss read things, you know, he comes out and he says,
the big beautiful bill is a crock afterwards.
And he says, I'm stuck in a bind where I don't want to speak
up against the administration, but I also don't want to take responsibility for everything this
administration is doing.
Well, you didn't have to do it, right?
You're the richest man in the world.
You didn't have to have this sideshow.
You could have just stayed at Tesla and gone about your Neuralink business and your Starlink
business and everyone pretty much would have still liked you. But the Doge master, Musk is representative of something very important culturally for
the Trump administration.
The younger men are obsessed with him.
Hardcore conservatives like Arundh DeSantis, for instance, think that he did a great job
in identifying the ways fraud and abuse, even though he only found $175 billion and had promised us $2 trillion. But what happened is that the conservatives in the
reconciliation bill are only codifying $9 billion of savings that Musk had identified.
And so there's a lot of conservative criticism, actually, of what the administration is doing
and representatives in Congress and in Senate versus Musk. So he's still a little bit of a hero in all of this.
But people have been asking, like, what will the legacy be of Musk in government?
And I think that there's kind of two parts to it.
One that you can just buy an election, right?
I forget the exact amount, a $284 million, something like that, that he donated to Trump
that got him elected.
So that's part of it.
And we know about that from Citizens United.
But if he actually ended up having such a small monetary effect, it actually had outsized
impact in these cuts to USAID.
So 80% of USAID grants were cut.
And a global health professor at BU has estimated that these cuts have already resulted in about
300,000 deaths and that
it will get up into the millions.
Because guess what?
Food and medicine are things that you need right away.
These aren't things that you're waiting for.
And I really hope that people don't get lost in the theater of what Musk meant in the government.
They don't talk about big balls or the team of kids that he had running rough shot through our systems, but understand that the richest man in the world came in
and he cut off food and medical assistance to kids in Africa.
Yeah, I think it'll go down, I think in 50 or 100 years, it'll be seen as sort of similar
to the way we view Charles Lindbergh, this incredible person of incredible achievement who ended up on the wrong side of history
and just made very bad decisions
in terms of who he supported
and where he felt the direction of America should go.
And it's sort of, I think Elon Musk sort of embodies
everything that's really gone awry about America.
The wealthiest man in the world is now killing
the poorest children in the
world and has saved $9 billion while doing tremendous damage.
And we would save more if we just cut subsidies to Tesla and then takes to Twitter and has
the gumption to rail against a proposed cut to the subsidies for his companies.
By the way, which Tesla would be unprofitable if it wasn't for their ability to sell their
carbon tax credits.
So the hypocrisy, also some of the reporting the New York Times has done about what appears
to be just rampant drug abuse.
Ketamine?
Yeah, well, amongst other things.
And it just got me thinking that there's so much interesting research coming out about
the fact that there's this trope, and I think a lot about relationships
and young men, and there's this trope that young women are really the losers and that
they're the ones that are desperate to find a husband and have kids.
And almost all the research recently is pointing in the same direction, and that is relationships
are more important, or romantic monogamous relationship is more important and more beneficial
for the man than the woman. important or romantic monogamous relationship is more important and more beneficial for
the man than the woman.
That widows are happier after the dude dies and when they were married, whereas widowers
are much less happy after their wife dies.
And that a man by the age of 30 who hasn't cohabitated or been married has a one in three
chance of becoming a substance abuser.
And that when men don't have a romantic relationship, they pour that additional energy into porn and video games and conspiracy theory and a worship of strongmen.
When women don't have that, they pour that additional energy back into their social networks,
their friend networks and their professional lives.
There really is a decent amount of evidence showing that this loneliness crisis, some
of it is just simply that women are waking up to the fact, especially as they become
more economically secure,
that traditional heteronormative relationship
just isn't as good for the woman as it is for the man.
And I think young men really need guardrails.
And without the guardrail of a romantic relationship,
men come off the tracks.
And I think this is true of Elon Musk.
And this is a guy that has absolutely no relationships
as guardrails, sleeps with a loaded gun next to his bed
and is massively abusing drugs.
And yet this is the person deciding if kids and veterans
should get SNAP or benefit payments.
It just sort of embodies what America is.
And we decided to put him in this position
despite the fact that he's probably the least qualified person for this position given his
mental state and his drug abuse.
And why do we do it?
Because we have conflated money with character and insight, and the world's wealthiest man
must have insight and character around any decision, even if he is totally unqualified
and is exactly the wrong person to be making these decisions. But I see this what's come out about him and
that reporting is fantastic in the New York Times is evidence that men really
need to, even more so than women, really need to seek and invest in deep
meaningful relationships because without those guardrails, especially young men,
quite frankly just come off the rails. And I think this guy, because he has so much power,
we like to think there's credibility there
because he has so much money,
because this company's just incredible.
This guy has come totally off the fucking rails,
totally off the rails.
Your thoughts?
I agree with it.
And I think there are a number of reasons
that it's not a good thing that people are pushing
getting married and having kids later and later in life,
not only leading to an uptick in fertility issues
just based on biology and then us having less kids
and we have a global population problem,
but you're spending more time by yourself
when your life could be enhanced
by being with somebody else.
And the amount of people that talk about that
looking back in retrospect, right?
Like the way that they behave when they were young, if only I had just met the right person.
I happen to believe, I'm very happy with the husband that I ended up with,
but there are multiple people that you can have a fantastic life with.
So I hope that more people are on the lookout for someone to journey with.
On the Elon front, he does seem like he's come completely off the rails.
I still have a ton of respect and reverence
for what he has created or been a part of.
Every story that you hear about what Neuralink has done,
when you see the effects of Starlink,
I was in Best Buy over the weekend
and we were looking at Starlink.
I was like, this is pretty fucking amazing, right?
That you can have this in your house for $400 now.
Yeah, what a product.
And I'm glad the government was working with Starling
for North Carolina, for instance,
but Starling saves the day in those kinds of circumstances.
But it does seem like he's losing it.
And one thing that he did that was particularly upsetting
to me is he was asked a question about the
report in the New York Times about the drug abuse. And he said, oh, the same New York
Times that won a Pulitzer for their fake Russia reporting, next question. And that has become
so mainstreamed and so normal to diminish good journalism, push it aside and act like it never happened.
All of the hoaxes and every defender of Donald Trump can rattle off, you know, 10, 15 hoaxes
or what they see as hoaxes that therefore invalidates any negative criticism of the
president or those in his orbit, that we have an American populace who believes nothing
and nobody.
And that's really dangerous for us as a society.
We'll take one more quick break.
Stay with us.
Welcome back. Before we go, another ruling by a federal judge last week
blocked the Trump administration from changing rules around Harvard's admission of international students,
for now at least. It's the latest flashpoint in an escalating war between Trump and the
elite university and other elite universities. Harvard's already suing the administration
over a 2.2 billion freeze in federal funds, which the White House tied to demands including
scrapping DEI programs, banning massive protests, and shifting to merit-only admissions. Trump
even floated the idea of capping foreign student enrollment at 15%.
Jess, do you think this is really about visas
or is it a broader attempt to redefine
what higher education should be?
It's definitely a broader attempt
to redefine what education should be,
and this has been going on since day one.
They always squander a good opportunity.
There's an anti-Semitism problem on college campuses.
Just stick to the script and work with these campuses
to combat that.
I can understand wanting to more thoroughly vet visas
of Chinese nationals that are tied to the CCP.
That makes good sense to me.
Understanding how the Chinese Communist Party works
and how many folks are spies for them
or want to get educated here, work here, and then they're going to go home and turn over
all of our information.
All of that makes sense, but they always just have to go too far.
And this is going to be another, well, it's going to be another series of losses in court.
We're going to be seeing that.
And when the mega showdown in court happens with Robert Herr and Bill Burke, Bill Burke,
who used to be an advisor to the Trump administration and now Trump has pushed him out because he's
defending Harvard in this, that is going to be like, get your popcorn level.
People are going to be watching those opening statements and the back and forth there for
sure.
But this is just going to be a huge economic hit to the country, like the tariffs again.
So foreign students bring in $44 billion into our economy on an annual basis.
They pay rent, they go to restaurants, they travel.
It's also a lot of rich kids, right, that are coming, paying full freight, over $6 billion
to California's economy annually, nearly $4 billion to Massachusetts, $2.5 billion to California's economy annually, nearly four billion to Massachusetts, two
and a half billion to the Texas economy.
And I don't know if what it's going to take is a bunch of conservative governors showing
up and saying, like, what the F are you doing here?
You can't go around doing this.
For the moment, it seems like the sites are really focused on Harvard.
And I don't know if you read Professor Steven Pinker's piece in the New York Times where he talks about Trump's Harvard Derangement Syndrome
and that he seems wildly obsessed with Harvard,
as many people are.
But we're going to have a huge brain drain.
You can already see in the searches for PhD programs
in the US, that is plummeting.
There was a look at scientists coming from Bangalore in India.
They talked to 30 scientists who are looking to be placed,
only one coming to the US, only one of them.
They are going to take their goods and services elsewhere.
They're going to make the rest of the world smarter.
They're going to make the rest of the world more profitable.
We are going to fall behind as a result of this,
which maybe to our earlier conversation,
the administration doesn't care.
They can't connect the dots on this,
or they just have Harvard Derangement Syndrome.
What do you think?
90% of the funds they're talking about cutting
have nothing to do with anti-Semitism.
It's basic cuts to research,
which Harvard does an amazing job of.
And the end result is the following around the research cuts.
If you have someone in your life who's struggling with MS, as I do, they are less likely to
find a cure before they die.
If you're thinking about Alzheimer's or dementia, if you're thinking about diabetes treatments,
getting them less expensive, if you're thinking about investing in new technologies that will
inspire the next generation of unicorns and create economic growth and jobs for our children,
that research and that funding has been the greatest investment in the history of the modern economy.
So this does not have anything to do with anti-Semitism.
It's been an effective steel man or straw man, whatever the right term is,
for them to have an excuse
to go in with this overcorrection.
It's more about tickling the sensors of the far right who hates Harvard and also creating
a distraction from this tax bill, which I think is a much bigger deal.
It'll impact many more people.
Just some basic stats here.
And I do think this is going to be swept away.
The problem is the best and
brightest are no longer going to want to come to the US. Is that true? I still think they
will just not in the same volume. But 20% of the NASDAQ by market cap is not only run
by immigrants, it's run by Indian immigrants. Just immigrants from one country are responsible
for one fifth of the NASDAQ. Over half of all unicorns in the United States were founded by at least one immigrant.
A third of Nobel Prize winners are immigrants.
And your number, 44 billion, is the right number.
And just to give you some context for that, the money we make selling our movies and TV
shows abroad, of which we are the best in the world, is 40 billion.
So arguably one of the biggest exports we have is selling elite education
to people overseas and Xi Jinping and his rival in China don't agree on much, but they
both agreed they should send their kids to Harvard. So this again is the Democrats as
embodied by Harvard, which is sort of the Mecca of the Democratic Party, you could argue
in some ways both good and bad,
in my opinion, really made themselves vulnerable.
And then there's this overreach and an excuse
to go in and try and dismantle higher education,
or what they see as the center of wokeness,
or whatever you want to call it, and really damage
our country structurally.
I don't think it's going to hold.
I think the courts are going to swap this away. The damage is that we get the number one draft choice every year
from every nation in the world.
The best and brightest all have one thing in common,
and that is they want to move to America.
And the richest people in the world
all see the biggest luxury item in the world
is not to go to Sanofa Fushi in the Maldives
or buy an MS Thai or hang out at the French Open or whatever.
It's to send their kids to an elite university. That is the premier luxury item. Sanofa Fushi in the Maldives or buying a rest high or hang out at the French Open or whatever.
It's to send their kids to an elite university.
That is the premier luxury item.
There is no product in the world that you can charge $288,000 a year, which is four
years of NYU tuition, and we get about 95 points of gross margin.
It is just not expensive to educate that student in terms of gross of incremental costs. There is no product in the world that has those margins at that price
point. And the fact that these kids are now going to decide to go to Cambridge or some
of the other great universities that are coming up, it's also going to give those universities
more mojo to make big investments and start recruiting some of our best researchers.
They'll say, we have a lab waiting for you.
Oh yeah, come here. Can I add, because I a lab waiting for you. Oh, yeah. Come here.
Can I add, because I really quickly,
and then I want to get reaction, or if this causes
you to update your thinking.
So you have the attacks on the universities themselves,
and then you have also what's going on with immigration.
Because people abroad are thinking about that as well,
that if there's a Turkish PhD student who
can be picked up off the streets of Boston in broad daylight that I'm not necessarily
safe in this country. And I think that those two things working in concert are going to
have more of an effect than you perhaps are thinking that they will.
In terms of discouraging people from-
From coming here.
Oh, yeah. The most horrific image I've seen, I mean, I've seen a lot of horrific images
lately.
I saw one wonderful image and that was strategic bombers
in Russian airfields being blown up by Ukrainian drones.
I watched that video over and over
and it just gave me no endless sense of pleasure.
But on the exact opposite side,
there's this horrific image of what looked like
13 and 14 year old boys in zip ties
who are being deported or incarcerated by ICE.
Yeah, that's just so bad for our brand.
It calls back to such ugly times and our points in our history.
I think it's just a really bad look for us.
Just horrible.
And again, it just goes back to our primary brand.
The best brand association is kind of strength and reach. Generally speaking,
you don't fuck with the US both legally, physically, because our
memory is long and our reach is far but that that peanut butter
and chocolate of that strength is that we're kind of seen as a
good guys and we're losing that association. So yeah, I 100%
agree with you. I just don't think and if they just toned it
back, okay, Ice,
you don't put anyone under the age of 18
in handcuffs or a zip tie.
You just don't do that.
We don't do that.
I think a lot of Americans want to see these folks,
many of these folks deported
and they don't even mind some quote unquote inefficiency
which is Latin for inhumanity.
But it seems like the inhumanity, and you've said this,
the cruelty is the point.
But yeah, I 100% agree with you.
All right, that's all for this episode.
Thank you for listening to Raging Moderates.
Our producers are David Toledo and Eric Donikis.
Our technical director is Drew Burrows.
Starting next week, you'll find Raging Moderates
every Wednesday and Friday.
That's a change.
We used to come out every Tuesday and Friday,
but now starting next week, we're on Wednesday and Friday. Don't ask me why, I don't know, I don't care. I left my computer on a change. We used to come out every Tuesday and Friday, but now starting next week, we're on Wednesday and Friday.
Don't ask me why. I don't know. I don't care. I left my computer on a plane.
And subscribe to Raging Moderates on its own feed to hear exclusive interviews with sharp political minds.
You won't hear anywhere else this week. Jess is speaking with Wesley Morris, the Pulitzer Prize-winning critic at the New York Times.
Speaking of Pulitzers. There you go. I said Pulitzer, it's Pulitzer.
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