Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #545: Fareed Zakaria, John Leguizamo
Episode Date: October 17, 2020Bill’s guests are Fareed Zakaria, John Leguizamo, Noah Rothman and John Avlon. (Originally aired 10/16/20) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visi...t podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series,
Real Time with Bill Moss.
Okay.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, people.
I appreciate it.
Braving all the protocols, the masks, the separate.
Thank you so much for doing all this bullshit.
I mean, necessary bullshit.
But, geez, I was disappointed.
It was supposed to be a debate last night, right?
And then, you know, Trump got COVID,
and then they said, you have to do it on Zoom.
He said, I'm not doing that.
So they had good grandpa and bad grandpa.
Had dueling town halls.
It was, I had a flashback to the 70s
when the only choice on TV was Barnaby Jones or Matlock.
You know, it was...
Did you see that Trump was on NBC?
Joe was on ABC.
I was on THC.
It's the only way I could get through this.
And...
And, of course, the Democrats, you know, they always fuck up the optics.
Oh, shit.
As I say, as I fall off the riser.
I fucked up the optics completely, these morons.
I'm going to fix that shit.
But Biden's questioners were above him.
So he was always looking up, you know, and squinting.
It looked like Clint Eastwood trying to decide to change a light bulb.
But the Trump one was just amazing.
Trump defended retweeting this crazy conspiracy theory.
Did you see this about how bin Laden wasn't really killed by Obama,
because, of course, Obama never could do anything good.
So he didn't even do that.
It was a body double.
And then Obama had SEAL Team 6 murdered to cover it up.
Trump said that, defended this.
And then, which led to an undecided voter from Bridgeport, Connecticut,
to ask a follow-up question, are you on bath salts?
And the mom.
moderator of Savannah Guthrie.
This was great. She actually said,
you're the president, not someone's crazy uncle.
Apparently she has not read the book
by Trump's niece called My Crazy Uncle.
I mean, there's actually a book about my crazy uncle.
So, no, it's getting so crazy.
The October surprise that the Trump people have now,
have you seen this? It's Hunter Biden's laptop.
Joe Biden's ne'er-do-well son, Hunter,
has this laptop which apparently had incriminating evidence
with, you know, maybe stuff about influence peddling on it
that was contained in his emails.
And apparently, you know, according to this,
Hunter was trading on his name, selling access to his father,
accepting money for nothing, what Don Jr. calls living the dream.
And here's the part that gets a little squirrely about the story.
How do we know about these emails?
Well, apparently Don Jr.,
I'm not done, Hunter,
took his computer, which wasn't working,
to a computer repair shop, as we all do in 2020.
Do we?
Okay, maybe.
I don't know.
The computer, and left it there and forgot about it
because, says Rudy Giuliani,
I won't even get into how he's in this,
because he was drunk.
And the computer repairman is blind.
I'm not making that part of the story of.
No, I swear to God, it's in the paper, legally blind.
So how the blind.
blind man knew Hunter was drunk, how you
how you repair a computer if you're blind,
I don't know about that either.
But in the process of repairing Hunter's computer blindly,
he read, again, don't ask,
Hunter's emails and turned it over to the FBI.
Is that how you fix a laptop nowadays?
You read somebody's emails?
It's like the plumber saying,
well, the problem with your private.
is you have cocaine in your underwear drawer.
And also on apparently, again, this, we have invented this,
on Hunter's computer, a picture of him passed out
with a hooker and a crack pipe in his mouth.
So many questions.
First of all, how do we know it was a hooker?
Could have just been a crack enthusiast
whose legs got caught in a fishing net.
You know, I...
You know, fish...
Also, who passes out on crack?
Is my other big question?
I always thought that heroin, yes, but crack?
I thought that was more of an updrug, but, you know.
So, anyway, amid all this, the hearings have been going on with the Supreme Court with Amy.
Coney Barrett.
Have you seen her this week?
Oh, my God.
You know, all these hearings are the same.
They're all the same.
you have a brilliant legal mind
can I ask your thoughts on a legal question
no you're in
and you know I
I did call her a nut a couple of weeks ago
and the Trump administration put it in an ad
they were very mad but come on
I'm going to talk about her at the end of the show
but I've got to say this part
she was in this cult Catholic church
no I mean
a cult within a cult
and I read this week they thought
large belt buckles
were a sin because
they draw attention to the crotch.
Well, good luck on the Supreme Court
because you know what else draws attention to the crotch.
Clarence Thomas going, look at my crotch.
But Trump, they think this is
helping them with the Supreme Court. I don't know.
Trump is bleeding support with suburban women.
He was begging them. This is not a paraphrase.
This is what Trump said word for word
the other day in Pennsylvania. He said,
Suburban women, will you please like me?
He's so desperate.
It's like one of those desperate husbands.
Honey, I can change.
We'll take a trip.
He's ending his rallies by playing YMCA.
I'm not kidding.
A gay anthem about hooking up at the Y.
This tells me two things.
Trump doesn't know what the song is about.
And Lindsey Graham is in charge of the music.
That's what this tells me.
And, you know, it's not just among women he's losing,
among all white voters.
This is becoming a very unpopular ticket.
Flies have stopped landing on Mike Pence.
Oh, they asked Kamala about that this way.
She said she did notice during the debate
that the fly landed on him.
But she said it was very confusing
because during debate prep, they told her,
if you want to make Mike Pence nervous,
stare at his fly.
All right.
We've got a great show.
Got John Avalid and Noah Rothman,
and a little later he'll be speaking
with the very talented John Ligwezamo.
But first up,
he is the host of CNN's
Farid Zakaria, GPS,
and author of the new book,
10 lessons for a post-pandemic world.
Farid Zakaria is over here.
I was so tempted by habit to lunge at you.
You know, this is a...
From India, this is a perfectly nice substitute.
Okay, so I read your book
and one big gobble.
It's great.
Great read, quick read.
quick read, and also
right out of the day's headlines.
I mean, it's about the pandemic.
Very gutsy to write a book
before the thing is over, right?
And they call it a post-pandemic world.
Well, yeah, because we see
in Europe, the pandemic's coming back in the fall.
This thing is far from over.
Do you worry about that?
Something's going to happen?
You know, be like, oh, boy, I should have waited.
Well, I think, no.
I think I've got it about right in the sense
So what I'm talking about is we now understand these problems in a way that we didn't.
Because this is not going to be the last pandemic.
And one of the things I talk about in the book is this should be a wake-up call to realize
we've been living in a way that is very risky.
You know, if you think about the way in which we are spewing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
And eating.
The way we eat.
I talk about the factory farms.
Factory forms are essentially a petri dish.
for the next pandemic.
You're just going to create larger and larger
more powerful viruses.
The way we subsidize people
that live at the edges of forests.
So I feel as though
we've got, you know,
and it's like we're driving the fastest race car
in the world and we're like, who needs seatbelts?
Who needs insurance?
But, you know,
what you're really saying is we need to learn.
Yeah.
I don't know if we're the learn species.
Really?
I mean, my question to you is,
I hate to say this because it sounds so pessimistic,
but I don't think one is going to do it.
In other words, one pandemic.
I don't think we're going to change after one.
I think it's going to take more than one
because people are just going to go,
oh, that was a fluke.
Thank God 2020 is over.
We're back to normal.
I don't see less cheeseburgers being eaten.
Well, take a look at what has happened in East Asia.
Really, these are the countries that have handled the pandemic the best.
South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan more than any other.
Also the thinnest.
So part of it is, yes.
They don't have the obesity problem, which is, you're absolutely right,
a kind of disease multiplier.
But they all went through SARS and MERS, and they did badly, many of them.
Taiwan actually handled it not so well.
It was a worse pathogen.
And they learned from it.
And they revamped their public health systems.
They moved early and aggressively.
They figured out how to do contact trace.
You know, so you can learn.
Now, here's the tragedy.
Taiwan has handled this better than anyone else, in my view,
24 million people in the country, seven deaths, you know,
to give you a sense.
New York State, 20 million people, 34,000 deaths.
Now, what the Taiwanese did was they used,
they never did a lockdown bill.
It was smart contact tracing, testing,
you know, occasionally very selective closures.
But they use good technology.
phones, but they used it well. All this
stuff was invented in America. The
technology was invented in America. The software
was invented in America. The guy running
the Taiwan response was educated at Johns Hopkins.
So they've taken our secret
sauce and we're watching
while they're getting it right and we're
foundering. Again, I agree
with all that, but you're mentioning
one half of the equation in my view.
The external part.
There's the internal part, your immune
system. Fighting it
internally because viruses are everywhere
and you can't avoid them.
And externally, you need to do both.
They were successful because of both
because they're healthier internally. And what I object
so much about what this country did. Yes, Trump, of course, fucked it up. We expect
that. But the people
like Dr. Fauci and those folks
who are the medicalists, they never once had the courage
to ask the people to get themselves
in better health as the best way
to ensure this. They're cowards.
They are cowards. They will not ask for that
little bit of sacrifice. I agree with you, but I'll tell you
one part of the problem is we have a health care system
that is so broken and it is particularly broken
for poorer people because I saw a really
interesting study which pointed out that
you know, Germans were a lot healthier than Americans and even though
Germans are very rich and they have you know they have a diet
that is not completely ideal.
The big difference was, in Germany,
your annual visit to the doctor is free
because, you know, it's universal health care.
And at your annual visit to the doctor,
the doctor always tells you four or five things,
like don't smoke, don't be overweight,
exercise, put your seal belts on when you drive.
Just those constant reminders
actually play an incredibly large role
in your ultimate health outcomes.
But we don't have,
we have lots of millions and millions
millions of people who don't go to the doctor
because they can't afford the COVID. And don't have access
to good food. I mean, that has to be part
of the solution. And the other
thing is about America, I hate to say
this too, but it's true.
When you look at how other countries sometimes
were successful and
be realistic about America,
we can't.
We're just not that bright.
We're lazy.
Can I show you a little video? I was watching the baseball
game the other night. This is what, you know,
I'm glad the sports is back.
it's been a real lifesaver.
First there was none, now they're all on at once.
It's pretty amazing.
The other day, you could watch basketball, baseball, and football all at the same time.
It was a husband's dream.
This is what they do after the game.
They used to do this all the time, and now they still do.
Look at this.
They're shaking hands.
They form two lines, and they slap hands with every single person.
You could not design a system.
to make sure that every person got every other person's germs.
That's not integral to the game.
We don't need to do that.
I just feel America can't be Sweden.
We're just not that good anymore.
I still think it's puzzling, isn't it?
I mean, as I say, we're the country that invented the Internet.
Invented.
Amazon.
That was three people.
Three smart people.
I'm talking about the rest of it.
By the way, most of them immigrants.
Right.
But look at, you know, I mean, you've set up exactly, you know,
how do you make sure that we can open up the economy?
Look at this show.
Like, I had to get tested before I got on the plane to come here.
I had to get tested before I got into the studio.
And we appreciate it.
Everyone in the audience did that.
Everyone's wearing masks.
You still have social distancing.
If you do sensible things, you can get back to normal.
The vice president of Taiwan, this guy who ran it, said to me,
a lockdown is already an admission that you have failed.
Right.
What you're trying to do, because, you know,
they had to isolate and quarantine 250,000 people.
In other words, one percent of the population.
And his point was, for 14 days,
we inconvenienced one percent of the population,
so the other 99 percent could continue businesses as usual.
No, I mean, what we're doing here I'm so appreciative of
and that you would go through this and you would go through this,
and I'm happy to do whatever I have to do.
I just don't see it happening on a mass scale.
Just bars.
In the video you showed it, of course,
it reminds you part of the problem is we have this American exceptional idea that we have, you know, the best.
I mean, you're showing a baseball, right?
This is a game where basically there's one or two other teams from outside America and the world,
and we call it the World Series.
To me, that's a metaphor, right?
It's the World Series when it's basically the U.S. and Canada.
Yeah.
But bars.
I really feel like bars is a big part of it.
And look, I'm a guy who loves bars.
I've spent a lot of time in bars.
I hate to speak against bars.
But I feel like that's, you know,
once you get a little drunk,
the masks I'm off,
you forget about the...
I feel like that's a big part of the solution.
It's just restaurants, yes, we could do this.
I could be doing my stand-up act.
People could be performing.
that's ridiculous.
If you can be on a plane,
I think you could be in a theater.
But the bars, where there's drinking involved,
I think that's just a recipe
to fuck the whole thing up.
Bars, you're absolutely right.
Bars are the toughest.
Churches are also tough,
and I'm sure that that pains you deeply.
All right, I'll leave it there.
Farid, thank you so much.
Great book.
Please get it.
Farid Zakari, everybody.
All right, great job.
Let's meet our panel.
I don't want to get anywhere near you guys.
Probably disease.
Okay, he's a CNN...
God damn, this fucking shit.
Now, they put these in a groove
so that we make sure not to get too close,
and then it always falls out, the fucking thing.
All right, he is a CNN political analyst
and author of Washington's Farewell,
the Founding Fathers' Warning to Future Generations,
John Avlon.
Okay, thank you, John.
Andy is the
Associated Editor of Commentary Magazine
and author of Unjust Social Justice
on the Unmaking of America.
Noah Rothman, Noah.
Hey guys.
All guys today, huh?
Yeah.
All right, so I want to talk about the court
because I've been watching Amy all week
and it's very depressing.
I mean, like, she doesn't know about global warming.
She doesn't know about, you know, maybe we could
recriminalize homosexuality.
I mean, we got to do something
about how we pick the court.
I mean, this, Adam Schiff was here last week
and I was asking him about,
doesn't the Constitution need a page one rewrite,
which is a tough sell because, you know,
a lot of people think Jesus brought it personally
to the founding fathers.
But the Democrats are talking about packing the court,
terrible messaging, but I think they should.
And by the way, we can.
It's not that hard.
You know, you just, it's not written down.
I was saying that last week, too.
You know, Trump does everything by,
oh, it wasn't written down.
We should do that.
It's not written down.
We could add three justices,
and I think Biden should do it,
and then have the just...
Then there'll be six and six,
and then have those six and six decide another three,
have a court of 15.
You've got to do something to even the score,
because the thing is rigged.
It's rigged.
Look, I mean,
Republicans have invited retaliation,
because of the unforgivable hypocrisy
of blocking Merrick Garland
and then applying a different standard.
But that said,
we got to have a democracy movement in this country
that goes way beyond election day.
We've got to strengthen a lot of the institutions
that Donald Trump has run roughshod over
because they were unwritten democratic norms.
And look, I'm fine with talking about term limits
for Supreme Court justice.
Stephen Calabrese endorsed that
and one of the founders of the Federalist Society.
Biden's not actually is an institutionalist,
unlike Mitch McConnell.
He doesn't actually want to pack the court.
You can hear that part between the lines.
We don't know that.
Yeah, but...
Before an election.
We've got to have so many reforms
to sort of unfuck America after this experience.
And we've got to really...
Well, why isn't this one of them?
Look, I think it is.
I think we need to take on corruption in the executive.
We've got to restrain a president's ability to pardon.
We've got to have more election reform.
But right now, we have appointment by fluke.
Whoever dies while you're president.
You know, Reagan and Nixon
got four appointments each.
Carter got none.
You know, this, Trump gets three.
It's, the, their democratic plan was
Ruth Bader Ginsburg doesn't die.
That was their plan.
Well, no, she was approached in Barack Obama's term,
and she actually, I believe it was the Huffman Post
where she said, who would you want to see on the court, then me?
Well, this is what you get.
If you want to strengthen institutions,
you don't change them every cycle,
which is precisely what will happen
in the event that they've,
wanted to pursue this court packing plan, and I welcome the opportunity for them to do so,
because it would require blowing up the Senate and swallowing up Joe Biden's entire term,
sacrificing just about every other incremental but achievable progressive reform you could get in the interim.
So go ahead and give that one a shot, because I think it's an empty threat.
But it's better than the messaging that they're getting around hypocrisy.
Hypocrisy, the Republicans were hypocritical in 2016 inventing a standard for themselves that they then violated.
Yeah, that's true.
And if hypocrisy wasn't the water that politicians swim in, it would hit hard.
Yeah. But, you know,
but hypocrisy used to be the unforgivable sin in politics,
and then Donald Trump normalized it and made it table stakes.
Right.
And this is what's so discussed what's going down right now.
We have normalized lying.
We have normalized hypocrisy.
We have normalized the idea that might make right.
And that invites a powerful response.
What we got to do is find a way to reconcile as a nation without getting rolled
when it comes to negotiating with people who evidently are most,
Look, Donald Trump has shown that fear and greed is still a powerful motivator for people, even in the U.S. Senate.
Those folks have rolled over for him and abandoned so many of the principles they said they once supported.
And so we got to learn, we got to really strengthen our civic backbone to get out of this.
But as a practical matter, wouldn't it be better to have justice's appointment to an 18-year term?
Yeah.
So every two years, a president gets a pick.
So you don't have...
Do it so that way...
So draft a constitutional amendment, pass it and...
Congress submitted to the states.
Does that need an amendment?
I think it requires a constitutional amendment to...
Because I learned that states don't.
You can add states. It's not that hard.
All you've got to do is...
That too.
Yeah.
But there's a reason why we've only ever done that on balance.
Even in the antebellum period, there was a balance associated with adding states to the union.
But it was corrupt then.
There was two decodas.
This is a stone in my shoe.
I bring it up all the time.
They must hate me in the Dakotas.
But I don't care.
There should not be two decodas.
Well, look, the problem we're getting, and it's structural, again, is that you're going to have the U.S. Senate have 50 members, 30% of the population is going to be represented by a majority of the senators. That's not sustainable. And so it's one of the many reasons that we're going to need to get. You can't have Republicans winning the popular vote one time of the last seven and apporting four out of the last six judges. It's what's happened. But people are going to start to lose faith of democracy. And that's exactly what we need to stop. We need to increase faith of democracy because we've got a whole bunch of folks overseas.
I want to see a talk.
It was Columbus Day.
They ripped down the statue of Lincoln in Portland.
I mean.
I got to give a shout out to Fred Armisen.
When he did Portlandia, he got it right.
Portland, I always love playing Portland, but I guess I missed a lot that's going on in Portland.
The mayor there, Ted Wheeler, is about to lose to someone who's proudly Antifa.
And Lincoln?
I mean, he was pretty woke for his day.
I mean, look, I'm finishing a book on Lincoln right now, so I take this personally.
What?
I'm finishing a book on Lincoln right now, so I take this personally.
But if you can't figure out the difference would he tearing down a statue of a Confederate general in Lincoln,
you should probably sit that one out.
I mean, this is so...
And by the way, they're cutting a campaign ad for Donald Trump.
All these cats.
This kind of iconoclasm is what we were afraid of.
when the movement started targeting people like Confederate figures who were odious and worthy of being torn down,
is there was no deliberative process at work here. It was purely mob justice, and it will get worse because there's no limiting principle.
And now we're seeing that on display. People like Ted Wheeler in Portland and Jenny Jorkham in Seattle have been terribly permissive with this organization, with these groups, with this ideology.
But the conservative movement doesn't have a champion to attack it.
Republicans do not have a champion to say, this is not what we should do. We should be in post.
what the president says, law and order.
People don't perceive of Donald Trump
as the law and order candidate.
They see him as an agent of chaos.
That's true.
So conservatives, people like me,
are very frustrated that we do not have
an effective champion to say, this is wrong,
and we should be doing this.
Yes, and to put perspective here,
Christopher Ray, our FBI director,
pissed off Trump recently because he testified,
he was talking about violent extraditism.
He said, the biggest chunk of that
are individuals motivated by some form of white supremacist
ideology.
In other words, most of it is coming from the right.
He said, they are responsible for the most lethal activity in the last few years.
But then he added, he said, as a point of clarification, this year the lethal attacks we've seen have all been from anti-government or anti-authority types.
So I think what he's saying is, yeah, the white supremacists are still the biggest problem.
But now we've got this other group, the anarchists.
And I was reading in the New York Times, which is,
usually pretty sympathetic to the Portland
left. But even they wrote this article
on the front page. The marches in Portland
are increasingly moving to residential neighborhoods
where demonstrators with bullhorn shout for people
to come out of your house and demonstrate your support
saying that sitting idly and watching a protest
without participating nowadays is to show tacit support
for racism.
I'm not down with that.
No.
When I'm home, I'm home.
Yeah.
Sorry.
And this is...
There is a totalitarian streak
that runs through all extremes.
And folks on the left need to understand,
look, Democrats don't need to have antifa
hung around their neck.
You know, every time a couple of protesters
do something insane,
they try to associate it with the Democratic ticket.
Whereas, you know, radicals in the Republican Party,
I mean, you've got your militias
and you also have, you know,
legit folks on the far, far right
serving in positions of power in Congress.
It's not commensary.
That said,
if people don't appreciate how this is a feedback,
back loop between each other, that the militia groups look at Antifa and use it as
excuse to try to bring guns into the streets. And that's one of the things we've got to watch
out for around election week is because they're all, you know, Plack going to do armed poll
watching to protect the polls from Antifa and to crack down on mythical voter fraud.
And that's going to be a powder keg we've got to watch as a country. It's the interplay
between these extremes is really dangerous. There was an international group this week that
monitors hot spots around the world, you know, where war might break out. And for the first
time they said they're going to watch America
on our election day.
Fun stuff, huh? It's terrifying.
So Joe Biden, during the debate, said
something about this anti-fund, particularly
to mention Chris Ray said, dismissed
this organization as, because it's not an
organization. He said it's an idea, man.
And it is. But he
mischaracterized those remarks to suggest
that that made them less threatening. Chris Ray's
remarks were intended to scare you
because it's more threatening that they're not
an organization that can be infiltrated, that can
be monitored with finances you can freeze,
you can disrupt. It's an idea. And we don't police thought in this country. What happened in
Michigan recently is a good example. If you're a white nationalist group, white supremacist group,
going online and trying to drum up support for a terrorist plot, you're talking to the FBI.
The other person on the line is a law enforcement officer, nine times out of ten. This is organic.
This is spontaneous. This is something you can't police.
Interesting. You know, I'm sure there's someone on Twitter right now saying, you know,
three white guys talking about race. That can't happen in America.
and, you know, almost always when we talk about anything,
ratio, we have a black person on the show.
I'm just here to say, yes, three white people can talk about it too.
It would be wrong if I only talked about it.
But having said that, one other thing from that article,
it cited that the protests are increasingly,
this is in Portland, increasingly dominated by white people.
You know, this is more of this,
I always use this phrase, but more of it.
suspended than the victim.
You know, and I don't know if the Democratic Party,
which in the name of wokeness to racial issues,
is actually not in line with Black America so much.
Because they are more liberal.
Blacks are 44% moderate,
liberals 28 and conservative 23%.
Yeah.
That's according to Gallup.
This is Joe Biden's strongest voting block during the primaries, wasn't it?
Correct.
And while everybody was racing to the left on social issues on woke,
issues, Joe Biden cruised to the nomination behind the support of African-American voters.
Right. Progressive economically.
Yeah. But don't go in. But also, you know, he did not over-index Twitter talk.
He did not over-index folks who are incredibly loud on the far left, but don't represent
the Democratic Party. You know, only 20% of the Democratic Party identifies as very liberal.
You know, it's evenly split between moderates and liberals, but you've got a pretty small
cohort there on the far left. They're disproportionately loud. And when you comes to race, yeah,
it's true. I mean, I think 55% of whites identify as very liberal.
Democrats. Democrats. Democrats. Yeah.
And like 39% of African Americans. So there is a gap here. And this is when you get drawn
into the outrage Olympics, everybody loses. But frequently you run headlong into, you know,
an irony where you get, you know, a bunch of white protesters and people acting more extreme
in their politics than the African American community that was the backbone of Joe Biden's
support. And I don't know if it's ever really
that much about the African-American
community. I mean, many of them are sincere.
But sometimes it just seems like
ooh, you don't want to be coming in
second in a, I hate racism
the most contest.
You know?
We have to have an honest conversation about race in this country, and I think
we're beginning to do that. I mean, you can't
separate talking about American politics from race.
It's baked in the cake forever.
That's what we all need to be able to talk about.
But some of that's not really
honest. I mean, when we're having a conversation,
of those critical race theory stuff, for example, that's now being introduced into federal
departments where it's associated with diversity training. Among the things that you have to do,
one of these documents that I read. Explain that first. What, what, what, how would you define
critical race theory? Critical race theory. Yeah, you're right. This is racial sensitivity training
right that Donald Trump just found out about and boy does he hate it. But they're not synonymous.
But because he says they, this is like, I saw this, I'm sorry, I'm going to let you get back. I just want to explain so people
what you're talking about. I saw this
phrase in the paper I'd never seen
for diversity consulting industry.
I didn't know they had
one, and whenever I see consulting,
I'm a little suspicious.
But I certainly can imagine
how racial sensitivity
training could be good. There are some people
who do need that. Yeah.
Like Donald Trump.
Like Donald Trump. Exactly.
But he's saying,
and this is where I come back to you,
so that racial, critical
race theory saying you see race everywhere,
would that be an accurate?
This is a critical perspective, obviously.
I don't share this view, but it's a Marxian analysis
that essentially posits that every facet of society
is somehow related to race, racism,
and the original sin of slavery.
And critical race theory posits, particularly people like
Ibram X. Kendi, who say that, you know,
there is no, not racist. There is either anti-racist or racist.
It's a complete binary. You are one or the other.
And being anti-racist requires a lot of action on your part to seek penance.
Well, isn't it also that you're either a racist or you're a racist and you don't know it?
Right, yes.
It's all of the above.
It's a very comprehensive theory.
And it's beginning to work its way into aspects of our federal government,
one of them being these diversity training seminars, which include some anti-racist elements.
And there was one document I saw.
This was, I think it was Sandita National Laboratory,
which is a premier nuclear research facility,
required individuals who are participating in this seminar
to confess episodes of racism in which you engaged in.
That's not something you can opt out of.
You have to confess episodes of racism
because, of course, you engaged in racism.
That's so scienceology.
You simply did not know it.
And if you did not know it, you must be educated on how you were raised.
That's so Soviet.
And so scientology.
Yeah, that's what, yeah.
Yeah, and look, and this is the blind spot on the left,
they don't understand how pissed off people get
about extreme political correctness.
There were welling extremes, no question.
but let's not pretend that diversity training is anywhere near as big a problem
in this country is racism and as its institution.
No, no one's saying that.
No, but, well, some people focus exclusively on the other way.
You know, the president does, and while at the same time, he's going to great lengths
not to condemn white, you know, nationalist groups and defend QAnon for Christ's sake.
I mean, you know, so, you know, we'll defend anyone who likes him.
Yeah, because he's that weak and needy.
Yes.
I never think it's that much about ideology.
But Joe Biden,
Joe Biden does not get on with this.
He seems afraid to say as much,
but it would serve him well, I think,
to strike a more definitive position
because we all know implicitly he's not,
he doesn't believe in a lot of this.
He doesn't believe in court packing.
He certainly doesn't believe
that racism permeates every facet of society
and that you need to confess your original sin.
I don't think he believes that,
but he is afraid to alienate the members of his constituency who do.
Sure, but, I mean, again,
you know, Antifa's not a big Joe Biden fan
in case you noticed.
I mean, Donald Trump didn't want to run against Joe Biden.
That's how we got in the whole Ukrainian mess in the first place that got led to the impeachment.
But, you know, all these things are sort of distractions against larger backdrop.
And we are 18 days out from an election, and democracy really does hang in the balance.
I mean, we need to set a good example.
And Donald Trump has said out loud, first time in our history, the president said,
I might not respect the peaceful transfer of power.
I mean, Amy Coney Barrett's saying in her Supreme Court hearings, well, I don't have an opinion on voter intimidation.
Well, guess what? It's illegal. Let's start there.
And this is a serious moment for our country.
And so I don't want to get distracted on stuff
that we're going to have to deal with for a long time
because Donald Trump's a symptom, not a cause.
We're going to need to find a way to reunite as a nation.
It's going to take time.
We need to strengthen our democracy.
But let's not get our eye off the ball
about getting complacent
or acting like this thing is over
or acting like anything's more important
than this election that we've all got to show up and vote for.
Whoever you vote for, show up
because we've got to defend our democracy big time.
Well,
then why do you say
whoever you vote for?
What the fuck does that mean?
What it means is
nobody should be telling
someone else how to vote
but we do need to do
is say, look, if you're trying to not count votes,
if you're trying to subvert the vote,
if you're trying to subvert the popular will
if it's close, and that's what Donald Trump
has basically said he's going to do.
That's a dangerous moment for our country.
We are walking on a knife sitting.
Right, so why pretend
that we shouldn't tell people who to vote for?
Vote for the guy who plays by the rules, at least.
I mean, what are you talking about?
All right. What I'm saying is...
No, no, look. It's not a real secret where I am on this.
It's just like, look, we've got a bunch of contradictions in journalism.
It's not biased to call Donald Trump a liar.
No, no.
Because he's demonstrably a liar.
Right.
So, you can say these things about worrying about.
What I'm saying is, people are going to show up,
we've got to play by rules, and we've got to stand up
and walk to the polling places or mail-in your votes
because this thing matters more than any other in our lives.
Yeah. No, it does.
And that's why there's really only one choice.
I don't know how we're a democratic donor
I'm not well I mean
why would you say that
I mean you know it's like these people who are like
oh I hate Donald Trump and I'm going to write in
Abraham Lincoln oh Jesus Christ
it's a binary choice
all these people who work in the administration
that always say well you know how bad it'd be if we weren't there
I'm like that's not an argument for re-election
you know if they weren't working in the administration
you hear this all the time for people who work in the administration
Well, it'd be so much worse if I wasn't there.
And then they're going to pretend to be members of the resistance
when it's all over.
That argument worked for me during the Bush administration.
Colin Powell, I'm glad stayed.
But it didn't do anything in the Trump administration.
Nobody can contain him.
Nobody can...
And not even Ivanka.
Yeah.
And we know he has a soft spot for her.
All right, let's bring out John.
He is an award Emmy and award.
Tony winning...
I'm giving him every award.
That's enough.
Tony Award-winning actor and comedian
recently directed his first feature film
Critical Thinking, now available to watch On Demand.
John Lugazamo is with us.
Hey, hey, what's up.
John.
Bill, what a pleasure.
Great to meet you, longtime fan,
first-time interviewer.
I was looking at your...
I'm a fan of you for ever.
Oh, thank you, my friend.
I was looking at your IMDB.
You have done a lot of movies, man.
You have really worked.
I'm an immigrant.
We worked extra hard.
We worked three times as hard to get half as far.
See, you could do that joke.
But I feel bad for you because, you know,
finally you get a shot to direct your own movie,
critical thinking.
I saw it.
It's terrific.
And then the pandemic hits.
So it didn't get what it should have gotten
because it should have been at all the festivals
which got canceled.
but it is on streaming.
I just wanted to say to you,
it's a really good movie,
so people will see it
because that's the thing about movies.
They last forever.
They're around, and it will be around,
and people will see this movie,
and you should be very proud of it.
It's about chess.
Oh, thank you, man.
I had a great time making it.
I mean, it's a great story.
Thank you all.
It's a true story about five Latin and black kids
from the toughest neighborhood
in Miami called Overtown,
who, you know, their schools were defunded.
You know, there's no trickle,
down economy. We know that's bullshit. So these people had nothing. And this one teacher,
Mary Martinez, that I played, took him to national chess champions in 1998 and then went on to
win five more championships, five more years with other kids in his electives. Do you play chess
yourself?
Amateurly, I suck. I suck. Okay. Well, that's a level above where I am. I play Stratigo.
I can act like I play.
And I know you're very outspoken on what you think is a lack of Hispanic,
and I'm sure you're right, representation in show business and movies and television.
I've read quotes from you saying, and there's one guy applauding,
saying things like...
A Latin ex-brother.
If there's not a Latino in it, what's the point of watching it?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, we're the largest ethnic group in America.
Come on.
I mean, we're 25% of the U.S. box office and less than 4% of the faces in front of the camera,
less than 2% of the crew, less than 1% of the stories, 0% of executives.
I mean, it's just like living in a psychosocial erasure.
And what about the fact that voting-wise?
I mean, that's what we're talking about show business there,
which is a category unto itself.
But voting-wise,
32 million eligible
Latino voters now,
which is, for the first time,
more than the African-American vote,
which is 30 million.
So my question is,
why don't they have the same influence?
I mean, we're just talking about the fact that,
you know,
Joe Biden got the nomination
because of African-American support.
I mean, African-Americans really control that nomination,
not that they demand a black nominee,
obviously,
has to be black approved.
And if you have more voters, why don't Latinos have that same power?
Well, America is so binary, first of all.
You know, it's just, it's always, you know, just black and white,
and the rest of us get forgotten.
But I think part of the problem is that candidates don't reach out to us.
They don't talk about our issues.
They're not putting people that look like us in their cabinets early enough on.
So we've improved.
I mean, since 2016, record numbers of Latinx people have registered to vote.
And they're registering to vote in record numbers right now.
And look, people like AOC knows how to work Latin people.
You've got to knock on their doors.
You've got to stop.
You've got to call.
You've got to talk to them.
Obviously, we're in COVID, so you can't be knocking on people's doors.
But you've got to talk to us about our issues.
Come at us, because we respond.
We're the friendliest motherfuckers in the world.
Just come at it.
Did you say Latinx?
I said Latinx, yeah.
Oh, because, you know, I read an article that said that only 3% of, well, I can't,
Latinx people know that word.
Oh, yeah.
It's mostly a white thing.
Nah, nah, nah, no.
It's a woke thing.
Well, that's a white thing.
political thing. It's Latin people that don't want Latino to exclude women out because when you say
quickly, Latino, it sounds like you're just talking about dudes. And you're not including our
sisters and all the things they're accomplishing. Okay. All right. Well, I'll try to get on the page
with that one. There was an article I saw in the paper this week that talked about how, and I
thought this was sort of trading on stereotypes. It said that Trump is doing rather well with young
Latino men because of the machismo factor.
And, well, I see you're shaking your head.
Is it bad to say?
I mean, Latin people for Republicans are like roaches for raid.
Let's just get real.
So I just feel like there's a level of self-hate or just lack of care for the rest of your
Latin brothers and sisters who are in cages, who are being demonized by this president.
I mean, hate crimes against Latin people are way young.
And how can you not...
I mean, 23 people were shot in El Paso
for just being Latin
and you don't care,
so you're going to go for this braggadocio president?
I just feel like it's self-hating and selfish.
When they do polling, it's interesting
because the concerns, like what is most important to you,
of Latino folks in America
is pretty much the same
as everybody else.
Immigration comes in eighth
in their list of important
things. Well, surprise.
The Latin people are just like everybody
else. That's what I'm saying.
Yeah, yeah. I thought you were...
Yeah, jobs. Everybody wants jobs.
Everybody wants a better economy.
Everybody wants to have the same opportunities.
That's important.
I don't see how that's contradicting
what I was saying.
Okay. I'm just asking questions.
Ask the way.
And what do you think about the scare tactics that Trump is using?
I mean, he's talking about Biden's going to tear down statues of the Virgin Mary
and that he's a communist.
And he's got all these buzzwords that I assume are used to try to scare that community into voting his way?
He's clever, man. He's clever.
I mean, they're micro-targeting Latin people in Arizona through WhatsApp,
because they know we're all on WhatsApp.
and they're spreading this stuff that, you know, Biden is about to steal the Virgin Mary.
First of all, he's a super Catholic.
Come on.
I'm a godless comic, you know, like yourself.
But what is he going to be like the Grinch with a big bag stealing the Virgin Mary?
Who's going to carry those heavy-ass statues?
Come on.
He's taking the Virgin Mary.
And then in Florida, they're going after Colombians telling them that, you know, if you vote for Biden,
he's a socialist and he's going to turn Colombian to Venezuela.
because they know we got 400,000 registered Colombians in Florida
that could help flip it to Biden.
So they're really clever, man, insidious.
But we're working to get, we're going to figure them out
and blow out all that BS.
Okay.
Well, I wish I could have a drink with you on Election Day,
but I'll do it virtually.
Thank you, John.
It's great to meet you even if I'm by Zoom.
All right, John Ligizambo.
All right.
Thank you, John.
Time for new rules, everybody.
Okay. New rule of Supreme Court nominees get to be evasive and avoid straight answers in their job interviews,
then so does the rest of America.
So, Ms. Barrett, have you ever worked in retail before?
It's not something really that's appropriate for me to comment on.
Do you consider yourself a people person?
I've never expressed a view on it.
Can you operate a cash register?
I can't answer questions like that.
I'm sorry, Ms. Barrett.
I just don't think you're right for bath and body works.
Acting narrate.
New Rule, I'm sorry, but lube and hand sanitizer
must come in vastly different packaging.
Come on, it's dark, you're fumbling around your nightstand.
On the plus side, your cock now kills 99.9% of germs.
New Rule, if the face makeup is 30 shades darker than the hand,
it's technically blackface.
New Rule, AAA has to merge with American Airlines
and Alcoholics Anonymous,
and form a new company called
Ah!
One-stop shopping for when you get drunk,
wreck your car, and need a ride to the airport.
New Rule, if they can make single, double, triple,
four, and five blade razors,
someone has to tell me why there are only two plies
for toilet paper.
One ply, the kind of the gas station
you don't want to have to use.
And two plies, so thick it can swab shit off a bear.
And finally, new rule, Democrats have to stop
talking about packing the Supreme Court
because it's already packed
with Catholics.
Roberts, Thomas,
Alito, Kavanaugh, Sotomayr,
and Gorsuch,
who I count as Catholic
because he was raised Catholic
and is now Episcopalian,
which is just a Catholic,
who flunked Latin.
And once Mitch McConnell and company
are done FedExing Amy Coney Barrett
to the bench,
seven of the nine justices will be Catholic.
And look, I have nothing against Catholics
except my entire oath.
upbringing. But they are only 20% of the population. If seven out of nine justices were Jews or Muslims
or Buddhists, would that be okay? And if faith is this super important element of life, as Barrett
and her Republican supporters say it is, shouldn't we have a healthier balance on our highest court?
The fastest growing denomination in America is nuns. No, not that kind. I'm talking about atheists.
agnostics and people who, when asked
what their religion is, say,
none. Thanks.
We are 26%
of the country, not anyone here, but
of the country.
Where's our voice on the Supreme
Court?
Thank you. It's all right.
I know they're out there. I know where you
are, my people.
Fuck them. We're just us.
And atheists actually
make better judges, because we don't
have to work to separate church
state. We're not torn between
rational decision-making and what
it says in the old book of Jewish fairy
tales. In
2006, Barrett told a
graduating class of law students,
keep in mind that your legal career
is but a means to an end.
That end is building the kingdom of God.
No, it's not.
That's not the
point of a legal career. A new pundits
earnestly debating whether
she will vote to overturn
Roe v. Wade? Of course she will.
She's been groomed since birth to overturn Roe versus Wade.
She's like the Terminator, a robot programmed to fulfill one task.
Except she wasn't sent from the future.
She was sent from the past.
Because here's the truth about Catholics in America.
There's two types.
Scary and not scary.
The vast majority, not scary.
Not doctrinaire.
In fact, they're famous for ignoring everything the Pope tells them not to do.
They divorce, they use contraception, they have premarital sex, they have anal sex, sometimes all in one night.
But there's another strain of Uber conservative Catholics who have an agenda, an enormous and growing influence to achieve it.
And it's really about pining for a return to the Middle Ages when the church was the state.
The Attorney General is one of these people.
So is the Federalist Society responsible for putting five.
justices on the court.
The Knights of Malta and Opus Day,
whose members wear a little spike chain around their thigh all day,
to remind them.
Now I know what to get Mel Gibson for Christmas.
These old-school Catholics, they play the long game.
Amy Barrett has been on their radar since forever
because she was raised in an extremist Catholic community
called People of Praise,
where a husband's responsibilities included correcting his wife
should she stray from the proper path.
Uh-huh.
And where women were called handmaids.
Yeah, these are the folks who make Jehovah's witnesses go,
sh, don't answer the door.
They speak in tongues, otherwise known as babbling.
Isn't that something called?
Oh, Shokodomazata.
I love you.
That wasn't them doing it, but that's what it is,
and they do it too, and now it's on the court.
It's not wrong to call out nuts when shit is nuts.
Thank you.
I know I'd get to you without you.
Last year, Pope Benedict, the spare parts, Pope,
the first Pope to ever collect a pension.
He wrote a letter for the world,
where he decried the loss of morality,
beginning in the 1960s, he wrote, this is his words,
standards regarding sexuality collapsed entirely.
That is why sex films were no longer allowed on airplanes
because violence would break out among the small community of passengers.
Okay, one, what airline are you flying?
And two, what the fuck?
Yeah, I think we all remember those days in air travel
when there was more leg room and that also show porn on the fly.
until you got so horny
you'd punch the guy in 32B.
Benedict also wrote
his words that, quote,
because of the revolution of 68,
whatever the fuck that was,
pedophilia was then diagnosed
as a loud and appropriate.
Really?
Is that what the who meant
by the kids are all right?
You know, before anyone at the Vatican
starts calling anyone else a pedophile,
you might want to.
want to check the color of your kettle because
we traced the call and it's
coming from inside the belfry.
Amy Barrett
said this week, she had no strong feelings
about climate change
but is very concerned
about large belt buckles.
Chuck Schumer
said Democrats won't make Barrett's
religion an issue, but they
should because being nuts
is relevant. Thank you
very much. That's our show. I want to thank
my guest, John Avalin, Noah Rothman.
John Legerzamo and Fareed Zakaria.
We'll be back next week.
Thank you very much, folks.
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