Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #533: Radley Balko, Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian
Episode Date: June 13, 2020Bill’s guests are Radley Balko, Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian, Larry Wilmore and Matt Welch. (Originally aired 6/12/20) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choice...s. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-month series, Real Time with Bill Maher.
Thank you. Thank you, please.
Sound like a great crowd, and I know why you're happy today.
Hey, NASCAR has banned Confederate flags.
Things are changing in America.
Wow.
I mean, you know, you may not think that's a big thing,
but NASCAR banning Confederate flags?
That's like gay bars banning sarcasm.
Good on NASCAR.
They said this will provide a more welcoming and inclusive environment for their black fans.
But flags, statues, confederate statues.
Finally, that's happening.
They're all coming down everywhere.
Protesters in England, get this?
They marked racist.
They wrote racist on a statue of Winston Churchill.
Wow.
Responded World War II, what do you hear about the other guy?
So, fear not about racism, because Trump is going to make a speech about race relations.
this was in the news this week, written by Stephen Miller.
Stephen Miller's going to write it, yeah.
It's like having your spa music performed by Megadeth.
And by the way, why even write a speech for Trump about race?
He's got two points about race.
Kanye loves me, and I let Ivanka marry a Jew.
I mean, is there any situation that he cannot make worse?
No, I'll give you the answer.
I'm sure you saw what happened in Buffalo, a protester, a 75-year-old man,
was pushed by the police,
backward, cracked his head on the sidewalk,
and Trump, of course, has to go out there and tweet,
he fell harder than he was pushed.
Could it be a setup?
Yes, exactly.
In fact, are we even sure it was the cops?
It could have been Joe Scarborough.
So, listen to this.
Liberals want to take police money, police funds,
and divert it to community services,
which sounds like a very good.
good thing, good idea, but they're calling it defund the police, which sounds bad. That is so
Democrats for you. You know, they must have meetings to be this fucking stupid about politics.
Hey, guys, we're making some headway here. How can we turn this into something that makes people
have to vote for Trump? Yes, should we divert funds? But not defund. Like, I'm always pissed
off when I read about teachers having to beg for money and pay.
paying for their own school supplies.
But the cops?
Cops just go, you know,
it'd be cool if we had a robot
that shoots fireballs.
Done.
So, yeah, Trump is a monster,
but boy, he knows how to market himself.
And that's the whole ballgame.
Like, he's starting rallies again.
And, of course, at his rallies,
no precautions,
no face masks,
no social distancing,
because this is on brand
for the guy who fucked a porn star
without a condom.
So, yeah, that's going to be quite a rally.
No distancing, no masks.
But, hey, I wouldn't worry about it, MAGA fans.
It's not like you're old, overweight, smoke, drink, have diabetes, stress issues, and anger issues.
And if you have those, I would avoid the virus, yes.
Well, things are opening up again.
Even New York, which, of course, was hit hardest.
But they are opening with stringent guidelines.
For example, a pizza rat has been restricted to curbside pickup only.
Pizza rat is evil.
But here in California, we have opened up bowling alleys and miniature golf courses.
No word yet on soda fountains or sock ops.
But yeah, today's the day.
Bars are opening again, gyms, schools, movie theaters.
Movie theaters at 25% capacity.
This is how we do it.
You're allowed to open, but not make any money.
And, of course, there are stringent.
guidelines here in California. Oh, we're the nanny
state here. Mandatory masks and
forced social distancing. And of course
they remind you anything else that would
make the experience not pleasant or
fulfilling. Yeah, it's interesting
that we're finding out now that everything that
we thought we do, we actually didn't know it was
all wrong. Last week, the CDC said
touching services, no, you don't
really get it from that. So anybody who was
like putting the box out for three days,
waste of time, stupid. This week,
the World Health Organization
said, very rare
to get it from asymptomatic people,
which we were told was the truth.
No, now they're saying very rare
for an asymptomatic people
to pass it to you and spread it.
Today, the CDC and the WHO
put out a joint statement.
It said,
what the fuck are we doing again?
Oh, all right, we got a great show.
We have Larry Wilmore,
Matt Welch, Radley Balco,
and Dr. Derriush Mosafari,
and I spoke to them all yesterday.
Let's get to it.
All right, my first guest
is an opinion journalist
for the Washington Post and author of Rise of the Warrior Cop,
the militarization of America's police forces.
Radley Balco is back with us from Nashville, Tennessee.
Thanks for being here, Radley.
I know you've written many times about the police,
probably more influentially than anybody in recent years,
and for a long time, change was slow coming.
It looks like that's finally changed,
and maybe the straw was broke, the camel's back,
and now things are changing, attitudes are changing.
Tell me what you think policing is going to look like in five years.
Different, same, somewhat different?
Man, I got to tell you, I mean, if you'd ask me that question two weeks ago,
I'd give you a completely different answer than today.
I mean, we've seen just such remarkable change in the last couple of weeks.
I think I read somewhere where there's been a 20% jump among the general public in questions about things like
whether there's systemic racism and policing, whether police is sort of fun.
fundamentally flawed. It needs to be reformed. I never would have thought, for example, that we were at a place where we might soon be repealing qualified immunity or there might be sort of, you know, pan ideological support. This is the shield that police officers get when they violate your rights. They're held to kind of a higher standard, and this makes it really difficult to sue them. And, you know, I never thought it would have been a popular political position for members of Congress, introduce a bill to dramatically scale back or even,
abolish qualified immunity, but there seems to be a growing, probably not a consensus at this
point, but certainly it's more popular than it's ever been.
You know, I think we're going to see a lot of experiments.
Minneapolis, you know, sort of going to tear it down its police department and build it again
from the ground up.
I think we'll probably see a lot of cities try different things, try to, for lack of a better
term, outsource different things that we normally.
Camden, New Jersey, did that?
Did they not?
Did they not fire the whole police department?
hired many of them back, but completely retrained them.
And it was a success, was it not?
I think it was an unqualified success.
They fired them, they abolished the union,
and then they rebuilt it from the ground up,
retrained everyone.
There is now a union again,
but it's not the same type of union that was before.
And crime has gone down in Camden since this was tried,
and relations between the police and the community
have improved immensely.
So it's been a big success.
It does seem like we're often
at this standstill with the police where the public is saying, you know, can't you do it
without the brutality? The police are saying, we resent that you are questioning us, and the
public is saying, well, then stop doing horrible shit. And we don't seem to understand why you
can't have both, why you can't have, I think they do it in other countries, where you do
have law and order and police do the job of police without this sort of we see so much sadistic
joy from the police and stuff yeah and i think you know there's this constant debate over is it a
few bad cops is it is it a significant number of cops as a majority of cops and kind of the way i look at
it is if you have cases where you have police officers who you know are bad who it's clear i've done
bad things, whether it's, you know, beating people or corruption or whatever, and the system is
incapable of ejecting those people, then I think you can only conclude that you have a corrupt
system, you know, it almost doesn't matter sort of whether it's 1% or 5% or 25% of cops that
are, you know, bad. If we can't get rid of the bad ones, then the system itself is corrupt.
Yeah, and it's the union, I think, that is so different from other unions. Am I right about
that the police union it doesn't really negotiate it it threatens uh you know it's a little
about like are are terrified of police unions i mean you look at somebody like de blasio who ran on
a platform of police reform got elected on it uh and then said something you know that was pretty pretty
tepid and milk toast he said he he told his mixed grace son that that he should be careful
around the police and you know the police union just clutched its pearls and feigned this outrage
and then, you know, all the officers turned their backs on de Blasio when he tried to give a eulogy at a police funeral.
And you can tell that it just shook him to his very core because he's been completely deferential ever since.
And it's really a testament to the power that these unions really have over politicians.
I mean, they are terrified across it.
And again, because they don't really negotiate.
It's more of a mafia-like protection racket idea that they put across.
I mean, let me quote Bill Barr.
this in December, he said this. I flagged it, never got to do it on the show, but it stuck in my mind.
This is the Attorney General of the United States, said they, meaning the public, have to show,
start showing more than they do, respect and support for law and the respect and support law
enforcement deserves, and if communities don't give that respect and support, they might find
themselves without the police protection they need. I find that such a chilling remark. I've heard
it from union people. I've never heard it from the Attorney General of the United States.
Well, Sessions actually said something similar. Oh, yeah. Right before bar. But yeah, I mean,
chilling's the right word for it. It is, I mean, I can't think of any other profession that is so
kind of psychologically isolated and kind of bound to one another where, you know, I'm a journalist.
You know, a journalist call each other out for bad behavior all the time. The idea that
like I would stop doing my job or intentionally doing it less well because some other journalist was criticized.
It's sort of mind-blowing. And then you think about what police actually do. And it's not just about not doing their jobs, right? They're literally saying, we are going to put people in harm's way. We are going to fail to protect people if you dare to criticize us or you dare to prosecute us when we do things that are illegal. I mean, it's it is a mind-blowing place that we've gotten to
where we are right now.
And, you know, it's overdue for a correction.
It's overdue for a major correction.
And it's heartening to see that we're finally or we seem to be finally there.
Do we ask the police to do too much, though?
We're talking now a lot about defunding, which is a terrible way to put it.
And I'm going to talk about that with the panel, the branding aspect of it.
But just the idea of defunding, it really means reorganizing.
And in some ways, asking the police to do less.
of the things that they do now.
They do seem to have to do everything from, you know,
stop murders to being marriage counselor sometimes.
I mean, it's true.
I think, you know, I think defunding,
it means on some level, shrinking the footprint
of the police and trying to minimize the number of actions
police have with the interactions police
that have with the public.
So, you know, if we decriminalize drugs,
you would eliminate a ton of police officers
and a ton of police where we get cops out of the schools,
you would do the same thing.
And this, what I'm going to say now is going to sound somewhat radical only because we're so accustomed to the idea.
But there's been a lot of writing on this this week and it's been fascinating.
There's no reason why police should be enforcing our traffic laws.
It just doesn't, it doesn't, we accept it because they've always been doing that.
But if you think about what happens when you get pulled over, cop pulls over, pulls you over, you know, he's got his gun and there's four other weapons on his belt.
He's looking down at you.
It's a very sort of power, lopsided power reaction.
What does he do?
he gives you a ticket, which you then take home and decide whether you're going to pay or not.
There's no reason why, you know, I have problems with traffic cameras for other reasons,
but there's no reason why a camera or even the equivalent of a parking meter made
couldn't just drive up behind you, get your license, call it in, and you get a ticket in the mail,
and you're right back to where you were before.
You decide whether or not you're going to pay it.
The idea that we have to have these interactions with these armed sort of enforcers for what
our petty offenses, I mean, and you've got to think about how many, how much of
the animosity between, say, the black community and police has stemmed from traffic stops
that go awry or that go wrong or that lead to unnecessary or unjust searches.
You eliminate that and you also, again, you eliminate a lot of police personnel, but you
also eliminate a lot of the bad will and bad blood.
And then what the cops that are left over, the people who are actually going to be fighting
crime, you could pay them a lot more so you can attract better people and keep better candidates.
Well, this week they canceled cops and they canceled live PD.
So once again, Hollywood has come to the rescue and found the solution to the problem.
That will do it.
We're canceling the TV shows.
You're welcome, America.
Hey, thank you for joining us.
I appreciate your expertise on this subject and I'll see you soon.
Thanks for having me.
Okay.
All right.
Well, in the many weeks, we've been doing the show here in the backyard.
People have seen glimpses of my dogs before.
Chula.
And they've asked me, can we see more of the dogs?
And all I can tell you is yes.
And here's the day we're going to do it.
Because these dogs are exquisitely trained.
Chico, come over here.
Sit.
As you can see, they do whatever the fuck they want
because that's the way I like it.
I don't like to train my animals.
I think it's demeaning.
I like to know what they're thinking.
Come here.
You've got some shit on your ass.
Come here.
Okay.
The secret to training animals is knowing they're stupid and they're hungry.
They'll do what you want if you give them food.
Hey, stupid.
Hey, you can't even smell food.
This dog is so fucking dumb.
Come here.
Chico, it's your lunch.
And that's today's version of Bill Maher with Dogs.
All right, here's our panel.
Here's a writer, comedian, and host of the podcast, Black on the Air.
Larry Wilmore from here in Los Angeles, Larry.
Hey, Bill.
See you.
Great to see you.
He's editor at large of Reason Magazine and host of the Reason Roundtable podcast, Matt Welch,
from Brooklyn, New York.
Matt, great to see you.
I see you too, Bill.
Looks like you're calling the Nick game there, but...
Don't tone!
Yeah, yes!
All right, so...
Very frustrated if you're always.
I wish we could watch basketball.
I guess we will soon, not there, but on TV maybe.
Well, listen, let's talk about the protest first.
that we saw the last couple of weeks.
It did seem something was like something
was very different in that it was a multi-racial protest
against police brutality.
Mitt Romney.
Larry, would you like to comment
on the social significance
of the whitest man in America
in a Black Lives Matter protest?
It's unbelievable, Bill.
I have to tell you, it actually,
this is sound kind of weird,
but it actually makes me feel good that white people
are showing the level of passion for black people
that they normally reserve for animals.
I think that's really, really good.
Very few white people care about animals either.
Trust me, I'm a Peter Board member.
I know that.
Yes, I know you are.
Well, you can love all living creatures, you know.
All creatures.
That's all creatures matter, really.
All creatures great and small.
Black, white, pod, furry.
I think from Rooney, though, it's kind of a,
probably a thumb in the eye to Trump, too.
You know, like at this point,
he's doing everything again to Eric Trump.
But it is interesting, Bill, how it's kind of become not just diverse, but it's global, which
has really surprised me.
I mean, in the 92 rides, it was really localized, you know, it was right here in Los Angeles.
I think, I don't know if you were here in New York at the time.
No, I was here.
Yeah, it was bad.
So what happened to the, unless we're six feet apart, it's a matter of life and death?
That seemed to go out the window very quickly.
What must frustrate a lot of people are, you know, the, the, you know, the, the matter of life and death.
people who had to bury loved ones without having to see them in the hospital in the final days and
and then you know can't go to religious ceremony and such like and then seeing that incredible zoom shot
i think it was on hollywood boulevard where just the guy's a gigantic uh street party hopefully that
will lead to us being able to do things like you know go to the store in my neighborhood in
Brooklyn again and go to the beach and all that uh but i think pursuant to your original point
it also it's an amazing shift in public attitudes in six
years since Ferguson, it's amazing to see that a majority of Republicans support these demonstrations,
not just a clear majority of Americans. People's view on whether the criminal justice system
has systemic problems is way up, way up. And I think one big part of that, which is interesting,
is that it's cell phones, right? Everyone has one in their pocket. We've been able to see because
the media for a long time did not cover certain neighborhoods or certain populations that
much. Well, we cover ourselves now, or whoever covers themselves and you can share this.
And I think that's really alerted public opinion, as of the protests themselves, which have been largely peaceful.
There's been some looting at the tail end in places.
But the confrontations with police themselves would show how armed they can be or sometimes how arbitrary they can be in going after people has kind of fed into all of this.
So I think it's really remarkable how a different world we live in than just a couple of weeks ago.
Larry, did you see that Trump is resuming rallies, and the first one is going to be on Juneteenth?
Did you see this today?
In Tulsa, Oklahoma, which is the side of the worst racial, one of the worst racial crimes ever in American history, certainly in the 20th century.
Wow, not since Reagan went to Philadelphia, Mississippi to open his campaign in 1980, have, I think I've seen a racist dog whistle that loud.
Yeah, Trump has passed dog whistling.
It's like a, it really is a dog megaphone at this point, you know.
And even if it's not that, Bill, the insensitivity to it and not doing, just do your fucking research, do your homework, you know, feel, be a little more conscious of the actions that you're doing.
Even from the way he did that, you know, his silly walk to that church, you know, and had all the people, you know, gas them or whatever.
You know, just for that ridiculous photo up,
you know, Trump, he's in the weirdest kind of bubble
I've ever seen for President Bill.
I've never seen the type of bubble he's in.
It's even hard, it defies explanation.
I think that one move, however,
permanently made unpopular what Tom Cotton was talking about.
Like, if that's what it looks like
when you send in the National Guard
or send in federal troops, that's ugly.
They're just shooting pepper gas and tear gas canisters
and people and arbitrarily clearing out
a population of people who were not rioting in any sense.
We're not breaking the law at all.
So, yeah, it's, you know, it's not the,
you don't need to army helicopters going down in the cities in this country.
And he had just, he had just faked praise the peaceful protesters, you know.
And then immediately after that happened, you know, you can't have both.
You know, the American people aren't stupid.
And it's interesting to see all the, well, I won't say all the Republicans,
but the number of Republicans that are starting to respond to this,
especially the military leaders who are coming.
out and kind of going against Trump, people that he's had in his cabinet and other people.
I've never seen anything like that. That's kind of unprecedented.
So I was talking to Radley Valcoe earlier about the police and we were talking about defunding,
so I want to get into the branding aspects of that with you. I think it's a terrible way to put
it. Only a third of black folks want to in the latest poll defund the police.
If you put it a different way, like, hey, we did it in Camden and it's the Camden miracle.
That would be a, and the mayor of Minneapolis was thrown out of a Black Lives Matter meeting because he said, I do not support abolishing the police.
I worry that Democrats are wandering into another purity test that's not going to serve them well.
And it's going to be about how much you want to get rid of police altogether.
Yeah, the thing that gets me about this is what do you think happens after you get rid of the police?
You know, there's going to be public safety as going to be a function afterwards.
The purge.
There are interesting conversations to be had about like whether cops should be like pulling you over for traffic tickets, right?
Or a one way of looking at is that police should stop being funded by shaking people down and seizing their assets, which they can do under civil assets forfeiture or, you know, installing traffic light cameras.
You know, funding the police through operations like that has created all kinds of terrible incentives.
Yeah, sure, let's talk about that, but that fits a little bit more difficult on a street sign.
It was one of the problems in Ferguson a few years ago.
It wasn't about funding.
The police were funding themselves through all these excessive traffic tickets.
And, you know, if you're struggling to make it, you know, month to month, you can't pay for like a ticket that's $400, $500,
for an incidental thing, like a rolling stop.
And then you go to jail for a rolling stop.
That's crazy. And it's just that type that's the type of a civic oppression that people face all the time.
And it puts them in these economic holes that makes it so hard to get out of, you know.
So I think it's also important to point out that in terms of what is actually on the table,
Democrats bill, which has a lot of good stuff in it, also increases funding for the police, right?
It doesn't defund the police. It refunds the police. Joe Biden wants to refund the police even more.
So it's not actually a working proposal on a federal level.
On the local levels, different things and experiments can be tried,
but people aren't actually defunding the police in any widespread sense.
Democrats like to do all they can to lose things first.
I'm so glad you brought that up.
That's where I'm going with this,
because the Democrats do have a very good police reform bill
with the things that have broad support,
like no more chokeholds and no more no knock going into somebody's house,
that kind of stuff with a battering ram and shooting their dog.
We want to get rid of that kind of stuff.
Okay, so they're introducing this bill.
The congressional Black Hawk has asked them to wear this,
I think it's called a Kinti scarf.
The Kentee club, yes.
Clock, okay, it's a scarf,
and I'm sure we're going to sell a picture of it, I hope.
And, of course, woke Twitter had a shit fit
because they said they were culturally appropriating.
To me, it's so like woke liberals to do.
do this, to tell the people who are trying to do the right thing, you're helping wrong.
You're always helping wrong.
No, but that Democratic Congress, come up, that's the Pander Express, like, on the highway there,
just trying to do whatever. Oh, you're wearing, you're wearing Kente. Well, I feel really good
now, Chuck Schumer. I think you're really going to do the right thing. But they were asked to
by the congressional black caucus. What would have happened if they had said no? What would they,
they would have gotten more shit? Both of those would have been ridiculous.
is what I'm saying.
But if they had said no, if they had said no,
it would have been an even bigger story.
What I'm saying is the Democrats, you're right,
they're horrible.
They put themselves in this no-win box,
and they did it to themselves.
Yes, but they looked so ridiculous.
It looked like it was like,
for congressmen who considered suicide
when the rainbow wasn't enough,
like, you know,
they could do this,
some black nationalist readings or something, you know?
I actually thought when I,
the first couple of times,
this come back on my Twitter feed, that it was photoshopped.
Like, oh, yeah, this is some kind of like a political deep fake of trying to make the Democrats
look ridiculous.
All that said, it's this whole cultural appropriation argument that we've been having
increasingly in this country is 99% of the time really stupid, just really stupid.
We should mix as a culture.
It's kind of the American point and to be involved in never-ending purity spirals over, like,
whether you can do this and you can do that and can you write about this experience
if you don't have this set of immutable characteristics,
has been, I think, a source of more poison than anything that's helpful.
Also, it's an African symbol.
I think it's from West Africa, I think the nation of Ghana.
And it's, I don't know, does it not sort of say your foreigners in your own land?
When they presented the Dream Act, they didn't have a mariachi band behind them.
Are you sure?
They didn't, just because they didn't think of it.
They're just full of put on Afro wigs too and just go full, full early seven days.
I haven't heard that.
No, they should have had black gloves and done the Tommy Smith, Juan Carlos thing.
You know, we just in there like this.
If Jamie Diamond can take a knee, they can take a knee too.
Come on.
All right.
Just sign the damn bill.
Bill, how about this?
Pass some good fucking reform.
How about that?
You know, that's the thing that you are.
Well, I just don't understand why they never rebel against the bullies who are on.
who are on Twitter, who do not represent.
How many times do they have to learn it?
They do not represent nearly the mainstream of the party.
Now they're doing it with this looting issue.
You know, on social media, it's, you know,
saying looting is bad is bad.
And looting is bad.
I can keep two thoughts in my head at the same time.
You know, that police brutality must stop.
Racism is horrible.
And taking things,
that aren't yours, also not good.
Absolutely.
And a lot of it, the looting was kind of this weird,
like other experience that was happening alongside of it.
Because normally, looting usually happens right away
when people are at their angriest, you know,
it's usually local because people,
there's a connection between that local business
where you feel maybe a press vibe,
where they're taking money out of the community.
You know, that's where it comes.
People were looting in Santa Monica, Bill.
You gotta use ways to get to that looting, you know?
I saw white guys coming out of Patagonia with surfboards getting on a motorcycle.
Right.
I mean, what's good?
They're loading a wet seal.
At least have some taste if you're going to loot.
Right.
Right.
I mean-
They were rolling up in New York where I'm at.
They were rolling up in like black Rolls Royces, like $100,000 cars and getting out there in
a very organized sense and it was bags and everything.
And to your point, Bill, it's not hard at all.
This is exactly where the vast majority of Americans
are to say we want a police reform.
Demonstrators are fine and also don't loot and smash.
It's really not hard.
It's just sort of this elite conversation
where everyone is on eggshells, like afraid to say
this obvious thing because then they won't be seen
as being, you know, having good enough allieship.
And it's nonsense.
Like normal people look at that and say,
what language are you speaking?
Right.
Phil, one of the worst examples was when the police station
was burned in Minneapolis.
Now that's one of those instances where you can say,
That's a horrible thing to do.
You would never support that.
But I understand where that anger's coming from
because that's the source of it.
That's where you can have both thoughts at the same time.
I would never support that.
I would never want somebody to burn a police department.
It's terrible.
But when you see that that happened, you understand it.
I don't understand people like looting the gap in Venice Beach.
It's like, you know, that just doesn't make sense.
LA Times, I interviewed looters,
which is pretty funny, I have a few days ago.
And one of the quotes was, well, looting
is the only way that we can get our voices heard.
It's like, no.
Yeah.
No, you can get your voices heard in other way.
So I'm pretty sure.
Voting would be a good one to start with.
Speaking of that, they had a primary in Georgia this week, and it did not go well.
There's things we've seen before.
I feel like this is just a dress rehearsal for what's going to happen in the fall.
Not enough ballots, five-hour lines, broken machines.
We also know that the Republicans much more happy to go to the polls in person.
Democrats are much more afraid of the coronavirus.
So they're going to stay home, and we don't know what's going to happen with the mail.
If Trump has its way, you get rid of the post office altogether.
So I just see a bad moon rising.
And this authoritarianism that I see in the country now taking shape, you know,
trying to call out the military last week and that kind of stuff,
I feel like this is the bond between Trump and his Republican allies.
They don't really like each other on a lot of stuff,
but they both agree that trusting democracy to the voters,
trusting our government to the voters,
letting democracy take its course is just a little too risky.
Republicans just have to maintain control
for the better part of the country.
So what do you think is going to happen in the fall with voting?
It's a tough one. I think if there's a feeling of a protest vote, like the way the protests are happening now, people aren't going to be thinking about corona, especially if it hasn't come back yet, which it probably will, but it's it may be early in that flu season, so who knows. But if a lot of that energy is gone and or let's say COVID comes back early, I think you're, I think you may be right. It's, it's, I mean, you talk about the ultimate dayus X machina, you know, coming down and saving Trump for Christ.
It would, our heads would explode if people don't get out to the polls because of this coronavirus and Trump becomes president again.
I can't even imagine that future.
Yeah, I don't, I think Larry's right.
Like the coronavirus, I don't think is going to be that big of a feature.
And in fact, there's going to be a lot more states that allow more mail-in voting than we've ever seen before that's already starting to happen.
So there's going to be, I think, access to the vote.
And it's also worth keeping in mind every time Republicans are around and Trump in particular are talking about,
voter fraud and all of this.
They tried.
They set up a voter fraud commission.
It was a complete, like, Wiley Coyote self-owned.
They had to disband it in disgrace when they found nothing.
The people who end up being caught voting illegally
tend to be like Republicans in Florida or college students
who forget what state that they're in.
So the kind of laying the groundwork as Trump has tried to do
to assume that all this voting activity is happening there has fallen on its face.
and it's been rebuked by a series of judges as well.
So I think it's gonna be more difficult,
perhaps than you fear, Bill,
that the voting is going to be significantly hampered.
And Bill, one of the reasons why people don't want this mail-in voting
is because it's harder to purge voters that way,
because many times you're purged from your precinct
or that type of thing, but you may still be on the role.
You know, it's this weird middle ground
where you're registered, but you don't appear.
And so many times your vote doesn't get counted, you know.
They give you, what is it got an alternative balance?
I forgot the name for it.
But if you're mailing in your vote, you don't have that problem.
So it's one of the ways that votes are suppressed by purging voters off of voting rolls and that sort of thing.
What I know is that close elections are decided by percentage points, sometimes less than one.
I mean, we remember Florida in 2,537 votes in a state of that many people.
So I feel like now that we've, and I blame the media mostly for this,
but also the government, scared the shit out of everybody in America.
I believe there's a certain amount of people who will never come out of the house to do anything again.
Not a large percentage, but there is a percentage of people who are like, yeah, I can do this.
I can stay home always and there are germs out there and God knows what could make me sick.
And even if it's 2% of the people, that could be the difference in an election or lots of things.
I disagree, Bill.
I think what we've seen here is like a laboratory experiment on humans.
And, you know, I'm in New York, so I'm in ground zero of this, of the virus killing people and all that.
You can't do it.
You got 11-year-old and a 5-year-old.
Try keeping an 11-year-old and a 5-year-old in house when it's like spring.
It's the only nice day all year in New York.
Well, they wouldn't be voting anyway.
We all go crazy.
Human beings can't stay penned in.
They're not hamsters.
Some can.
So I think even people who are trying to be creepy shut-ins now or germapobes, they're going to go out.
It's just, it's nature to do it.
We'll see.
All right.
Thank you.
You guys were great, and I hope I get to go out very soon, because really, we could be doing
this in the studio.
All right.
Thanks very much.
See you soon.
Okay, I mentioned earlier that Mitt Romney, the whitest man in America, was out marching
with Black Lives Matter, which I think is fantastic.
I was going to send him a fruit basket just for that, and then I found out, Mitt Romney,
oh, no, he's not done.
He's all in on this.
In fact, this week, he dropped a rap album.
Yeah, it's called Fudge the Police.
And here are some of the other cuts on the album.
He's got, I've got 99 problems, but my lovely wife, Ann, ain't one.
Into country club.
Papa's got a brand new binder.
I'll be missioning you.
Fear of a black coffee.
That's the Mormons.
They don't fuck with caffeine.
Sitting in dockers on eBay.
Me so corny.
Knapper's delight.
And of course, little red corvette with my dog on the roof.
Okay, my next guest is a cardiologist, public health expert,
and dean of the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University.
Please welcome Dr. Dariush Mosafarian.
Doctor, I'm so anxious to talk to you because you are the dean of the only independent school
and school of nutrition in this country.
And I've been trying to tell my audience
ever since I've been on the air,
you are what you eat.
Food is either medicine or poison,
and I feel like it's been falling on deaf ears,
but there's one guy in one school who believes me,
and he's got a lot of degrees.
He went to Harvard and a lot of good places.
So why don't you tell us,
I know you've said that 12% of Americans,
only 12% are metabolically healthy.
What does that mean?
Why are we not healthy metabolically?
Yeah, among adults, only 12% meet sort of basic criteria for being healthy, having a healthy
waist circumference, having, you know, normal levels of blood cholesterol, blood glucose,
and not having hypertension.
Just those few minimum criteria and 88% of adults are not metabolically healthy.
So many more of us are sick than are actually well.
And I'm surprised to find that an alarming number of Americans I talk to still are not aware of the connection between having a bad result with coronavirus, if you get it, and obesity.
But that is, outside of being very old, that is the main factor, is it not?
Well, what we're seeing with COVID-19, with coronavirus is really a fast pandemic.
on top of a slow pandemic.
You know, coronavirus has hit the world
in a matter of months,
has been devastating.
And yet, you know, at the same time,
obesity and diabetes have hit the world
over just 30 to 40 years.
30 to 40 years ago,
the world did not look like this.
And we have had skyrocketing rates
of obesity and diabetes,
you know, never before seen in human history.
And that slow pandemic has been at least as equally devastating
and really in almost every other way, much more devastating than coronavirus.
And yet because it's happened over 30 or 40 years, the world has been really collectively shrugging
and not really doing what it takes or taking it seriously.
And what's really striking now, Bill, is that there's a clear link between those two things.
If people don't have high blood pressure, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, obesity, heart disease,
a couple of other risk factors, many of which are diet-related, they don't get that sick from
coronavirus. And so it's very possible if we had a metabolically healthy population, if our country
looks like what it looked like 40 or 50 years ago, you know, coronavirus would have been deadly,
but it would have been far, far less problematic. We wouldn't have had to shut down our economies,
spend trillions of dollars and bailout dollars. And so this fast pandemic of coronavirus has hit
on top of this slow pandemic.
And we have to address obesity, diabetes,
and other diet-related illnesses
because first, just to deal with coronavirus right now,
but this is not going to be the last pandemic.
This is not going to be the last one,
and we really need a resilient population.
So this has to be a national priority.
All the more reason why I thought it was a scandal
that nobody I saw in those press briefings with Trump,
the Surgeon General, Dr. Berks,
Dr. Fauci, none of them ever talking about what you can do to get yourself healthier.
Just about putting a mask on your face and avoiding and hiding.
I never heard them suggest anything about eating.
And we know now that you can't hide from it and you can't shut down the economy indefinitely.
The one thing we could have done was to make ourselves healthier.
And we have had the time.
I've heard you say or read you say that it takes only four to six weeks.
to change your metabolic profile.
We were locked in for that time.
They could have said, look, you're staying home,
you're getting your staycation,
the government is footing the bill,
we've spent all this money to hand out to you.
Here's what you can do in return.
You could get yourself healthier.
Tell me why you think the medical establishment
doesn't talk to the American public that way.
Well, first, it's not too late,
so let's start, and let's start here with this show.
But I think that, you know, we didn't understand, we, the scientific community, didn't understand COVID-19 very well.
And really, it's been now a couple months that we've seen these incredible reports in the United States, in the United Kingdom, in Italy and China, every nation that's looked.
If you have obesity or diabetes or some of these other chronic conditions, the risk of a severe illness of needing hospitalization is three or fourfold higher with each of them.
And so that means in combination, if you have, let's say, diabetes and obesity together,
you could have an eightfold higher risk of being hospitalized.
These are massive numbers.
And when half of American adults have diabetes or pre-diabetes,
and about two and three American adults are overweight or obese,
this is not small change.
I mean, these are big, big numbers.
But I'm asking, why doesn't the government say anything?
Why doesn't the government say anything?
We know what the problem is.
But why are people so afraid?
Why is this such a third rail?
It's a health issue.
It wasn't when it was smoking, it wasn't a third rail at a certain point.
It was something people were absolutely telling you you can't do
when they sued the tobacco industry.
Should we have a sugar tax?
What should we do on a policy level?
Well, I think, again, you know, in terms of government, officials,
state and federal officials, they have shown that with some,
simple public health messaging around social distancing, wearing masks, washing hands. People change
their behavior. So I agree with you. It's a huge missed opportunity, and it's not too late.
We should be telling everyone every day, you're at home. 330 million Americans are having a
national experiment to eat at home together and be at home together. We should be active.
We should be trying to sleep. We should be eating just even a little bit healthier. And, you know,
across the whole population bill, small changes in weeks. In weeks can make a difference.
over a few months, we could slowly start to improve the health of our population.
So I don't know why.
You know, I'm not, you know, in those people's minds, but I think that it just maybe doesn't
seem that important or it doesn't seem like it's that big of a deal.
But it's a really big deal.
I agree with you.
And we need more than just messaging, of course.
And I think that's what your question, you know, highlights is how do we get around this?
And, you know, when you have two and three-year-old kids who are obese now, when you have
every segment of the population, every education and income level affected by these diseases,
every country in the world affected by these diseases to some extent, we know we have a structural
problem. This is a systems problem. This is not about individual behavior or just choice.
And so we need systems solutions. And I think there's really three top priorities that we can
talk about in more detail. Food is medicine to use health care dollars to pay in health.
incentivize healthier eating, innovation and entrepreneurship to push the science to allow
innovation and business growth to really tackle what's ahead of us. And federal coordination.
We spend over $150 billion in the federal government around food and nutrition programs
and other things and they're uncoordinated and we need federal coordination. And so I think with
food is medicine, science and innovation and coordination, we could tackle this pretty quickly,
actually within you know several years but that isn't what the medical
establishment does the medical establishment listens to lobbyists I mean we get our
advice from food from the cattlemen's association from the dairy industry
from big farmer from Archel Daniels Midland they make corn in great supplies
then we have to eat it there's a lot of pressure not just with politicians I
think but with people in your profession to go along to not even say some of the
things you're saying now which
you're fairly mild. Where do you think that comes from? Is it all just the money? Because I know there's
no money in healthy people and there's no money in dead people. The money is in what America is,
chronically ill people who constantly need pharmaceuticals and medical services. Is that not correct?
Well, I think all the money, you know, over a trillion dollars is in the healthy people. We're just
not valuing it and rewarding it correctly, right? If we, it's shocking. It's shocking. It's,
bill, how health care costs have risen, as you alluded to. Health care costs from, from the last
50 years for the federal government have risen from 5% of the federal budget 50 years ago to 30%
almost now. The same thing for states. It's 30% of the average state budget. For U.S. businesses
in 1970, they spent a total of $80 billion on health care. Adjusted for inflation, they now
spend $1.2 trillion on health care. That's stagnating wages. It's suffocating every other priority
for business, for government. So there's huge savings to be had here. The problem is, I think, twofold.
One, this is pretty new science. And so, you know, for most of the last century, we were worried
about starvation. We thought we were going to have a billion more people on the planet, and we didn't
have enough food to feed them. And we were worried about the science of the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s,
was vitamin deficiencies, things like scurvy and rickets and plagra and night blindness,
these diseases where if you don't have the right vitamin in your food, you get sick.
And so we actually very purposely built up the modern food system, which is a food system
that has loads of cheap, shelf-stable, starchy calories that are fortified with vitamins.
That was an intentional goal.
And it was an intentional goal to address widespread fear of starvation and vitamin deficiency.
And what we've learned, and this is a new science, this is not something we knew even 30 or 40 years ago.
What we've learned really in just the last 20 years especially is that that simplistic approach to vitamin deficiencies and kind of mass starvation, which has been very effective for those conditions, doesn't work for chronic diseases.
It doesn't work for obesity, for diabetes, for cardiovascular disease, for cancers, for what we're just starting to learn about the gut microbiome and immunity.
And so we have this kind of legacy system that's been built over 100 years, and we built it purposefully.
And so that actually gives me hope that we can purposefully now build another system that is good for the population and good for health care costs.
And millennials are leading the way.
So I'm actually quite optimistic because millennials are demanding food that's healthier, that's sustainable, and that's trustworthy.
And businesses are hearing this.
And businesses that don't change are not going to be here in 20 or 30.
years. Thank you so much for joining us. I got a pizza coming. I got a, but I appreciate your
expertise, and I'll see you soon. Thank you, Doctor. Of place. Great to talk to you. Yeah.
All right. Time for new rules, everybody. New rules. All right. New rule, in cells must learn
some game before someone gets killed. Incell, you probably know, stands for involuntarily celibate
and describes a movement of young American men who can't get laid
and blame women for it.
Like Cole Corini here, who police say accidentally blew off his own hand,
while making a bomb he planned to use on hot cheerleaders.
Wow, talk about a lose-lose.
He fails to kill those who would never have sex with him,
and then he blows off the one thing that would.
Neuro-Nacho Vidal, the male porn star who sells penis-shaped candles
and got himself arrested for accidentally killing a...
friend in a mystic ritual involving toad venom must be declared the new most
interesting man in the world I don't always smoke naturally secreted hallucinogens
but when I do it's deadly toad venom by the way high on toad venom is what you
have to be to buy a penis-shaped candle new rule Coca-Cola needs to stop coming out
with all these new flavors hey vanilla cherry sherbert
mango, coffee. You know what? None of this makes me want to drink Coca-Cola. But give me a call when you put
the cocaine back in it. New Rule, if we're serious about getting back to normal, we need a dating
site for people who have the antibodies for coronavirus. Call it OK COVID. The site for singles who
are ready, rested, and tested. Because nobody's idea of a pickup line is, hey, how about we go back
to my place and you watch me jerk off through the window?
New Rule, someone must explain the popularity of incest porn.
It's everywhere now, and it's creepy.
If a young woman is blowing a guy and her mother walks in on them and then joins in,
that's not hot?
That's helicopter parenting.
And finally, New Rule, now that the blue wall of silence is finally cracking,
Republicans must tell us if we'll ever see a crack in the red wall of silence.
Yeah, that's the solid front Republicans put on whenever Trump does something outrageous.
As with last week's tear gassing of protesters, here's NBC's Casey Hunt trying to get senators to comment on that.
Was what the president did last night the right thing to do?
Was that the right thing to do?
Was clearing the protesters in abuse of power?
You don't have any comment on what happened at the White House last night?
I didn't watch that.
Are you concerned at all about what happened at the White House last night?
Sorry.
Do you think what we saw last night at the White House?
Was what we saw at the White House last night an abuse of power?
One thing you've got to say about Republicans, they're tight.
In 2016, three Republican congressmen, Steve Scalise,
and past and present majority leaders, Paul Ryan and Kevin McCarthy,
were caught on tape in what they believe.
was a private conversation, admitting they thought Trump was on Putin's payroll.
Really?
They laugh about it, and then Ryan says, no leaks, right?
This is how we know we're a real family here.
Yeah, that's how they are.
What happens in the underground volcano layer stays in the underground volcano layer.
This is how we know we're family, he says.
A crime family, sure, but a family.
What I want to know now is, is there another conversation Republicans have had in private
where they agreed that there was something Trump could do that would make them stop him?
Of course, they would never tell us, because being Republican is all about never breaking ranks.
But amongst themselves, is there a safe word?
You know what a safe word is, right?
Don't lie, you freaks.
You know, a safe word
is an agreed-upon specific word
that people engaging in rough sex
used to let their partner know
they're not playing anymore
and they really want it to stop.
So it has to be an offbeat word
that would never come up during actual sex.
For example, Melania uses, I'm Coming.
But for most garden variety freaks,
it's a word like, you know, I don't know,
pineapple.
You say pineapple, so that way when the dominatrix is choking you, you don't have to say,
stop, you whore, you're killing me.
And she doesn't have to say, wait, really stop?
Or pretend stop?
And I would like to think Republicans have that with Donald Trump.
Because any dominatrix will tell you, most of her customers are successful, older white guys with power and authority.
They know they don't really deserve.
In other words, they're Republicans.
And in Washington, they're all in thrall to Mistress Kofifei and his 50 Shades of Orange.
The way Lindsey Graham acts around trumpet, it's like something out of a porn hub clip titled
Slave Abused by Fat Daddy.
And I want to know if there is something Fat Daddy can do that will make his Republican bottoms
tap out and say pineapple.
Have you asked me five years ago when this nonsense all began, what it would do?
be, I would have thought it was the very first thing.
Mexicans are rapists.
But no.
Or the next month when he said McCain wasn't a war hero.
But it was soon evident that the line was not going to be drawn on matters of behavior,
mocking the handicapped, bragging about your dick at debates, grabbing pussies, all good.
Then once in office, it became apparent the line would also not be drawn.
at what we call norms, you know, practices,
so universally agreed upon to be the right thing to do
that we never thought we needed to codify them into law,
releasing your taxes,
not putting family members in the cabinet,
having press briefings,
siding with Americans instead of Russians.
And then we moved on to breaking actual laws,
not answering subpoenas,
using campaign funds for hush money to mistresses,
withholding foreign aid to allies and domestic aid to states for personal reasons.
So we know what won't make Republicans say pineapple.
And I doubt when he makes Ivanka the defense secretary or starts poisoning journalists
or literally shoot someone on Fifth Avenue, that that would do it either.
But now that we're at the Julius Caesar moment here,
where the Republic becomes a dictatorship
with real talk about calling the military
into the streets and elections that might not count
because they're rigged?
Is that the stuff that will finally make Republicans say,
I'll do anything for love, but I won't do that?
If you've got a safe word, Republicans,
you better use it soon,
because democracy is about to stop breathing.
All right, that's our show.
I want to thank my guest, Radley Balco, Larry Wilmore, Matt Welch,
and Dr. Dariozschma Safarian.
We'll be back next week.
Thank you, folks.
There you go.
Sit.
Hey!
We have a winner.
Give me your paw.
Shake hands.
Lie down.
Rollo.
If never once obeyed me.
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