Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #575: Craig Whitlock, Katty Kay, Ralph Reed

Episode Date: August 28, 2021

Bill’s guests are Craig Whitlock, Katty Kay, and Ralph Reed. (Originally aired 8/27/21) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.c...om/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series Real Time with Bill Maugh. Thank you very much. That's, wow, that's all... It's all great deal. Thank you. I appreciate it.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Thank you. That is... That is the only booster I need. I'd tell you, that's... Well, I do need a... We all do. It's terrible news out of Afghanistan, right? I mean, you know, we have to report this.
Starting point is 00:01:07 It's the frantically getting people out of... And, you know, we got a lot out over 100,000, 13,000 people in one day. I tell you, America, not too good at winning wars, but the getting the fuck out part, we're getting a lot of practice at that. But, of course, there was this suicide bombing, which makes it a giant tragedy now.
Starting point is 00:01:29 Am I the only one who thinks we did this completely ass backwards? We pulled the troops out and then tried to evacuate the civilians? I feel that was a little backwards. You know, of course it's a... Yeah, it's... All the roads leading to the airport are gridlocked, of course. The airport is complete mayhem.
Starting point is 00:01:51 There's no sanitation, no power. Today, the promoters of the fire festival said, that is some poor planning. That's when you know. And Robert O'Neill, he is the Navy SEAL who claims he... The one who killed Bin Laden. Interesting state.
Starting point is 00:02:13 he had today, he said, it's time to kill people. This America, buddy, you're preaching to the choir. When is it not time here to kill people? Our motto should be, it's time to kill people a clock somewhere. But Biden... I think Biden's on the same page, kind of because he said about the attackers,
Starting point is 00:02:41 he said, we will hunt you down and we will make you pay. So America is no longer the world's policemen. We are the world's student loan officer. And, of course, the attack was carried out by ISIS K, not a boy band, a variant, the Delta variants of ISIS, ISIS K, who don't think the Taliban is hardline enough. Their motto is, a face for an eye.
Starting point is 00:03:19 Very hard line. Very hard line. Oh, these people are hard. Oh, they, They make women wear two burghers in case one rips. Just... Remember the old two-bagger joke? And listen to this, a little local flavor into the story.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Thank you, sir. There are a group of students with some parents who are stranded from... In Afghanistan, they are from the San Diego area. And these kids are fine. First of all, they don't know they're in Afghanistan. They have not yet... looked up from their phones. So that's good.
Starting point is 00:04:01 But wow, that's how bad things are in California. Families are vacation in Afghanistan. I mean, my father took us on some shitty summer vacations, but... But yeah, because this state is always on fire. It's... Fire season used to be part of the year in California. Now it's all the time, like elections. Right?
Starting point is 00:04:31 I'll tell you. Hard to stay governor of California. Not that hard to get elected. Hard to stay. California elections are like when your girlfriend says, I don't care where we have dinner night. You pick. And then you do, and she goes, not that.
Starting point is 00:04:51 So, yeah, the election is in a couple of weeks. The ballots are out for our recall election. One of 46 faceless losers could be the next governor of this state with a fraction of the vote. and the runner-up gets to host Jeopardy. But that's ended with some good news. That you're anticipating. I love that. Only fans is staying in the porn business.
Starting point is 00:05:30 The rent stays the same. That's right. Last week, I was just in this by. I was reporting they're getting out of the porn business. Now they are staying in because their fans would not take it. Their fans went nuts. Boy, there's one thing millennials love more than canceling the patriarchy.
Starting point is 00:05:47 It's women having sex for money. That's the interesting thing. Well, I mean, things are bad enough in America. There's nothing worse than when even your camgirl put you in the friend zone. That cannot happen. But, okay. And finally, Donald Trump has endorsed Herschel Walker,
Starting point is 00:06:09 the great football player, running as a Republican in the state of 4th Senate in Georgia. And Hershey Walker admits he has multiple personality disorder. Claims to have a dozen personalities. Wow, a Republican with a dozen personalities. And today, Mike Pence said, can you loan me one? All right.
Starting point is 00:06:30 We've got a great show. We've got Teddy Kay and Ralph Reed. First up, he is a Washington Post investigative journalist and author of the new book. The Afghanistan Papers, a secret history of the war. Craig Whitlock is here. How are you, sir? All right.
Starting point is 00:06:50 Well, you're here on the perfect night. We actually plan that. Afghanistan was going to shit. You're the guy who knows the most about it. Just for a layman, let me ask this question. I see the images on TV. We've been there 20 years, spent over $2 trillion. I see Kabul.
Starting point is 00:07:05 It looks the same. Not even like a Sam's Club. I mean, I was thinking for $2 trillion rebuilding a country, it looks exactly the same. Your thoughts? Actually, I think Kabul's changed a lot over the years. People, I think, forget. In 2001, Kabul was just level, just destroyed.
Starting point is 00:07:23 I mean, no electricity, no plumbing. And we did that? No, this was actually, most of this was... No, we put in the electricity and the plumbing? We did. We helped with that over the last 20 years. And Kabul is actually very different from the rest of Afghanistan. Rural parts of Afghanistan, they look like the Stone Age still,
Starting point is 00:07:40 people living in mud huts and so forth. Kabul, I think, has changed quite a bit, but it's still, you know, half of it's modern, half of it's not. Modern. They must not be filming this on TV. Maybe your definition of modern is different than mine. Anyway, I won't argue with about that. You've been there recently?
Starting point is 00:07:59 It's been a few years, but, I mean, it used to be no phones, no cell phones, no nothing. Now, everybody there has got a phone. Well, most people are under 25. 70% of the people do not remember the Taliban when they were there at power. Has anything taken root, is my question? Because I imagine if the Taliban go back to their ways, the thought that it's going to be kind of a shock to 70% of the population could mean a very different outcome that we're picturing.
Starting point is 00:08:28 I think it could. And Cobble, again, remember, Cobble's very different from the rest of the country. It's kind of like New York compared to the Great Plains or something. You know, it's just a very different place. Again, I don't see New York. I don't know what is on your television. I do not. But okay.
Starting point is 00:08:44 They have television shows with hosts and guests and things like this in Kabul. So it's a different place. Well, how long is that going to last? I mean... Well, this is nobody knows. And when the Taliban comes on, they've already said they're banning music again, right? Right. And these are the people who banned kites.
Starting point is 00:09:01 And they told the women to go home already. So it's going to change fast. Yeah, I love this. The Taliban says the women will have all their rights within the limits of Islam, which is a great way of saying, none. That's right. I never understand why the liberals, especially in this country, are not
Starting point is 00:09:18 they're not more apoplectic about the way women. The feminists are treated in so much of the world. Especially this part of the world. Well, this is a big question, right? You know, why did we go to Afghanistan? What was
Starting point is 00:09:36 the mission? Well, the mission was to stop them from planning, which was a stupid idea. They planned it in Hamburg, Germany. You can plan it anywhere, you don't need to be in Afghanistan, and then they'd show the film on the news of the terrorists on the monkey bars. That's absolutely right. Right. And you can't plan it anywhere. And America will send all the money in the troops. But we got fixed in that tunnel vision, that mindset, that bin Laden was in Afghanistan. We've got to go there and we've got to stay there until we can say
Starting point is 00:10:05 it will never happen again, which of course means we'll be there forever. Right. And your book really is sort of the modern Pentagon Papers. I mean, it is astounding. And say, how similar this played out to Vietnam. It's like we just did this shit, and then we did it again. We forget, one generation just completely forget, which, don't get me on, we should teach history in school, maybe. Maybe that would help. But what your new Pentagon Papers book really has the same theme,
Starting point is 00:10:36 which is that they lied to us. They presented a rosy picture in public for all these years, and behind the scenes, they knew it was. unwinnable and they just weren't telling us. Liars. And this went from the beginning, really. There are memos we obtained from Donald Rumsfeld, who was Bush's defense secretary. And in public, people are asking him,
Starting point is 00:10:57 is this going to be another Vietnam, or are we going to get stuck in a quagmire? And Rumssel would make fun of journalists who had asked this. Then in private, just six months in the war, he sends a memo to his military chiefs saying, if we don't get a plan to stabilize Afghanistan, our troops are going to get stuck there forever. And he ends the memo with one word.
Starting point is 00:11:17 It says, help, exclamation point, right? And you see this go on year after year after year. In public, they say things are getting better, we're making progress, we're turning the corner. And yet in private, in diplomatic cables, memos, conferences internally, they're saying things are a mess. And they know that slowly this war is slipping from their grasp, and it's gradually becoming unwinnable. The one that mystifies me, though, is Obama. Obama ran, and I loved it when he said, I'm not against all wars.
Starting point is 00:11:49 I'm against dumb wars. I was like, that's my guy, you know, because I feel the same way. Can't be against all wars. There's evil in the world. Sometimes you've got to be a badass. And America has more than not stepped up. But this was a dumb war.
Starting point is 00:12:08 And he kind of doubled down on it. I mean, how could a guy that bright think you could do what we were trying to do. to do surge, take over the country, flood it with money, and that would change things around when really it was just doing the opposite. What's your take on that? Well, Obama, you have to remember when he ran for office at first time, he was saying Iraq was the dumb war, right? And we're going to get out of Iraq, no question. And he did eventually pull troops out of Iraq. But he said Afghanistan. And Afghanistan. Well, no. When he first ran, he said Afghanistan was the just war. This was the just
Starting point is 00:12:41 cause that Americans, this was a war of self-defense originally because of September 11th. But that war was already over for many years by the time he got there. I mean, if it was a just war, certainly after he got bin Laden, what was left to do? I mean, it morphed into nation building. It morphed into this ridiculous idea, as in Vietnam, that we could change hearts and minds when by the things we were doing there, you only lose hearts and minds. Well, and that's right. And each president said both Bush, Obama, and Trump, all promise the American people in public, we're not nation-building in Afghanistan. We're not doing it. Even though at that very moment, that's exactly what we were doing. The United States spent more than $100 billion
Starting point is 00:13:23 nation-building in Afghanistan. That's more than we spent in Europe on the Marshall Plan after World War II, and now it's all gone up in smoke. This is what I keep saying every week. It's because we wanted to, because that's where the money was. You know, Ross Perrault, used to talk about the giant sucking sound, which was jobs, I guess, going to South America and Mexico. The giant sucking sound is any place you have a war where the money just disappears in giant caseloads of cash.
Starting point is 00:13:52 And, of course, you're going to have people, defense contractors and everybody else, let's go to the place where the money is where no one's keeping track of it. But I think in some ways it was even worse than you think. Oh, God. No, no. No, I'm serious.
Starting point is 00:14:09 The documents we got for the Afghanistan papers, they have testimonials from people who were there in Afghanistan, army officers, aid workers, saying, we were spending money so fast we didn't know what to do with it. We were building schools when there was no need for it. We built projects that were ghost projects. We were just throwing money at it to say we could do it, even though the whole time they knew it wasn't going to do anything.
Starting point is 00:14:30 And I think I read in your book, 18% of the money went to the Taliban because it was kind of a giant protection record. You couldn't move around unless you paid off the Taliban. So we're paying the people. It's like when you're getting divorced and you've got to pay for your spouse's attorney. Well, again, in some ways...
Starting point is 00:14:50 Not that I would know. I've heard this. But in some ways, it was worse than you think. There was one story. An Army officer said, in this one province, there was this racket going on where we would build a bridge Taliban would come in and blow up the bridge, right?
Starting point is 00:15:07 And then the local Afghan official, who was our friend, would say, okay, I need money to build the bridge back up. But his brother was with the Taliban, so these brothers had this racket where they kept blowing up the bridge and we kept going in and rebuilding this time and again. And that's kind of Afghanistan in a nutshell. It sounds like a Judd-Apital comedy,
Starting point is 00:15:26 and you kind of look like him. You could direct it. Yeah, it seems like, you know, Reagan and Bush, Bush the first. There were the two presidents. Reagan, the Beirut bombing. You know, Republicans love to say, we can never cut and run.
Starting point is 00:15:42 He cut and ran. He went, you know what? These people are fucking nuts. Let's get out of here. And he did it. And Bush the first. Did not go all the way to Baghdad. Other than that, we never seemed to be able to resist. Well, you know, you talk about Vietnam. Just after the war started, George W. Bush was asked, Are we going to get stuck in another Vietnam?
Starting point is 00:16:03 He was very confident. National TV, he says, oh, no, we learned our lessons from Vietnam. We're not going to get stuck. We're not going to, especially in Afghanistan, we saw what happened to the Soviets. We're not going to let that happen to us. Of course, we ended up being there twice as long as the Russians were. And even then, there are some people in Washington who want the war to keep going, who wanted to keep troops there.
Starting point is 00:16:26 And Biden finally said, okay, time to pull out. All right. Thank you for your book. It's great. It's going to win prizes, and we hope for better days in Afghanistan. Okay, thank you very much, Craig. Let's meet our panel. All right. Here is our panel. She is a TV journalist, best-selling author, and Washington editor for Ozzy Media. Katty Kay is back with us, Patty. Great to see you. And he is a Republican strategist and founder and chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition.
Starting point is 00:17:02 My old job. Ralph Reed is here. Ralph. We can't help it. We like each other. We can't help it. We try, but we can't. We can't. All right.
Starting point is 00:17:14 Let's see. Let's keep it a secret. I was going to see. Right. We'll see what happens at the end of the show. Let's talk the politics about this for a minute. Because I see two dozen House and Senate Republicans are calling for Biden to resign or be removed. You know, I just mentioned the Beirut.
Starting point is 00:17:30 They didn't do that when Reagan lost all the troops in Beirut. They didn't do it with the Bay of Pigs. They didn't do it with Jimmy Carter's fiasco in Iran. It's a tough job. president, sometimes people die on your watch. Anyway, Marcia Blackburn, I was just in Tennessee. She says Biden she was on also Kamala Harris. The whole thing is rotten. It's got to go.
Starting point is 00:17:53 What did Kamala Harris have to do with this? Marjorie Taylor Green is starting an impeachment committee. Josh Hawley. I love this motherfucker. In May, he said, I think we should have left Afghanistan a long time ago. Better late than ever. and Biden has made the right decision. Now, he has neither the capacity nor the will to lead. He must resign.
Starting point is 00:18:15 I feel like Democrats do difficult things, and then they get shit for it. Like the Republicans run up the debt, and then a Democrat comes in and has to clean that up. They pay for things like Obamacare was completely paid for, or they get out of wars
Starting point is 00:18:31 that both sides say we should get out of, and then you kind of use that as a cudgel against them. When really they're the ones who are doing the cleanup work and the dirty work, and the responsible adult things, and then they only have to pay. First of all, it's taken Republicans a nanosecond since the actual atrocity and the bombing
Starting point is 00:18:57 and the killing of these people to bring politics into the conversation. The families are just being informed, and already the politics has raised its ugly head in this particular way. It's very hard for the Republicans to make a case on this one because they stood by Donald Trump. I mean, you've got Kevin McCarthy,
Starting point is 00:19:10 who even in the course of this week seems to be saying, well, we should have all of the troops out, but actually we should secure baggram, which would take several thousand troops because you couldn't secure a bag around without several thousand troops there. He doesn't seem to know himself whether he wants the troops in or whether he wants the troops out. He went along with Donald Trump. Donald Trump signed this deal back in February of 2020,
Starting point is 00:19:29 which included, by the way, the release of 5,000 Taliban prisoners, which is where you get the kind of atrocity that we got in the attack this week. That was Donald Trump's deal, and they signed onto it. It's a bit much for them now to sign around and say. I'm glad we're all in a grand somehow. No. No. No? No, we're not an agreement. Oh, Dan. First of all, I would encourage your viewers to go online and actually read the agreement. Okay, read the agreement that the Trump administration negotiated. It was conditions-based. It required the Taliban to break all ties with al-Qaeda, with ISIS, with the Al-Qaeda, with the Al-Qaeda and other terrorist infrastructures. They failed to do so. It also said that they couldn't launch any attacks. They failed to do that. It also made clear that Basram Air Force. air base was going to be evacuated
Starting point is 00:20:17 last. That was going to be the last facility we left. Why? Because that facility was where we provided counterintelligence, drone, air support that was necessary to keep the Afghan forces alive. And when Joe Biden, not Donald
Starting point is 00:20:33 Trump, when Joe Biden cut and run out of that facility and left $350 million in MRAPs and armored personnel carriers in night vision goggles and other sensitive expensive equipment there. He not only handed the death certificate
Starting point is 00:20:48 for Afghanistan to the Taliban, he sent a clear message to the Afghan forces. We're done, we're finished. He owns the whole thing. And trying to blame his predecessor only makes it worse. He signed a deal that was such a bad deal
Starting point is 00:21:05 that the Taliban, it was never going to work on the ground because the Taliban were never going to totally cut their ties with al-Qaeda. The 5,000 prisoners that were released as part of that deal were the kinds of people that were going to come around and attack the Americans if they could do as we were leaving. You seem to be suggesting that Donald Trump signed a terrible deal,
Starting point is 00:21:23 and perhaps Joe Biden shouldn't have stuck that deal. I mean, he could have said, yeah, you're right. There were clauses in this deal that the Taliban haven't stuck to, and maybe he shouldn't have stuck to the deal at all. And that would be the argument for extending the occupation there. What I said, that didn't have what I said. What I said was the deal was conditions-based, and it was sequential.
Starting point is 00:21:41 So we did certain things after they kept their worry. is not obligated to withdraw precipitously and incompetently when they failed to live up to their end of the deal. It's a bullshit argument about the deal. Who gives a fuck about the deal? The deal... I'll tell you who cares about the deal. 37 million Afghans care about the deal.
Starting point is 00:22:01 Our NATO allies care about the deal. What they care about is living in a peaceful country, which unfortunately they can't get for themselves, which I feel bad about, but that's not all our fault. But there's no deal. We have a new administration. The old administration was a crazy man. And he made a deal with people who were never going to abide by any deal.
Starting point is 00:22:24 They're the Taliban. They're laughing at a deal. So Joe Biden, you're right. I'm not arguing with your main point. I said it last week. I don't know how it could have gone worse under Trump. Why did we pull out the security guard before we got the people out of the disco? No.
Starting point is 00:22:41 You know, it was done horribly. It just, it depresses me a lot, like I said, that the adults take over, and then they can't do better than what the children are doing. So execution F, absolutely. My question is, how long does this stick to Joe Biden? What is the political ramifications? How does it affect people in the election coming up in a year?
Starting point is 00:23:07 The midterm elections? It's going to be an albatross around every Democrat's neck? because I'm sure they're going to try on the right. The short answer is? Yes. I'm not... We'll have to see whether the events of the last couple of days have the kind of ramifications for Joe Biden that would pull down other Democrats in the midterm elections. Because up until that moment,
Starting point is 00:23:33 all of the polling suggested that the American people were with the principle of withdrawing and accepted the idea that it was going to be messy. You've now had American soldiers leaving their lives, And the question is, do Americans, after 20 years, feel that we were so desperate to get out and we realized it was going to be complicated? I think there was a lot more sympathy in the American public for the complexities of this mission and getting people out. And in a year's time, the awfulness of the last few days, they're prepared to tolerate because they wanted to get out. Well, you know, the truth is 14 months is an eternity in politics.
Starting point is 00:24:09 Right. how far we are for the 22 midterms. People's memories are. But if past is prologue, when you have a national security fiasco of this magnitude, it can become defining of your presidency. When North Korea invaded... Benghazi was four people that were not Hillary's fault, and that lived on forever.
Starting point is 00:24:31 Yeah, it did. And this is their new Benghazi, I'm sure, and it will be Benga... And the fact that during that investment... we found out that she had a home-brewed server with classified emails on it, haunted her all the way. No, I mean, it haunted her all the way to the general election. Yes, it did. And look, when...
Starting point is 00:24:51 Not justifiably, but it had haunted. Whether it was justifiable or not, it did stick to her. It was silly. And there are going to be investigations. Yes. There are going to be subpoenas. There's going to be testimony. Oh, I know.
Starting point is 00:25:01 And it's going to be ugly. Yes. And I think if you go back... But why do we have to make it ugly? See, here's my question. like I said at the beginning, we can't help being friends. You know, we like it. We just do. You keep doing this show. I keep having you on. Even though we have so little in common. And America has to get back to this.
Starting point is 00:25:20 We do? This is my question. I mean, I see depressing things on the news all the time with like hard to watch, you know, mobs of people like surrounding a car because they don't like the mask policy of the, you know, school board member or the health official. And we know where you live. We know where you live. And this happens on the left, too. You know, especially online. I mean, more than one celebrity's got into trouble for, like, you should die.
Starting point is 00:25:47 Who talks like this? Who thinks like this? You should die. We know where you live. How do we get back to just, I don't get you? We're definitely not going out to the titty bar together. No, we're not. You know?
Starting point is 00:26:03 And yet, you're not. And yet, you're an American. I'm a little bit more. American, we don't have to hate each other. We used to be there. How do we get back there? Because the road we're on now is not going that direction. There's no American tragedy.
Starting point is 00:26:17 It's always just a Democrat or a Republican tragedy. So how about you were there when you had somebody else to hate? And that the whole period of the Cold War, it was going to be easier to be friendlier with people who you disagreed with because there was an outside enemy. And then the outside enemy went away. And for a very brief period after 9-11, everyone loved you. each other again. That didn't last very long. But without that outside enemy, there is this weird
Starting point is 00:26:42 urge to hate somebody. Because actually, if you look at the policies, even on controversial policies like abortion and gun rights, and immigration, people aren't that far apart. On the left and the right, in many cases, there are majorities on policy. It's not policy.
Starting point is 00:26:58 It's emotional. It's emotional. Take the emotion out of it. I mean, show people that, you know, there are business leaders who support more immigration and that there are union people that don't support more immigration, and it's not a left-right Democrat-Republican issue. There's room for nuance. It's emotion. It's all about the emotion of it.
Starting point is 00:27:16 I think there's a weird fervor of... I think you're definitely onto something where that external adversary drives us closer together. We certainly felt that for not as long as maybe we would have liked after September 11th, but there was a period of national unity and coming together. Even the French liked your real nine-11. I think social media tends to exacerbate these differences honestly. Yes, for sure. I think it tends to exaggerate them. And I think we need to move away from the,
Starting point is 00:27:48 you know, I'm not saying get off those forums, but I think we need to find fora outside of social media where you can have a real constructive dialogue. We have to stop talking politics. People didn't use to talk politics all the time. I really think that's the problem. we had no idea how much we hated the other guy and it worked a lot better because we didn't talk about it. It wasn't on Facebook. If you were just talking politics and talking policy, I don't think we would hate each other.
Starting point is 00:28:19 I think it's the inner tribe. I'm in my tribe and nothing that you say I'm ever going to accept because you're not in my tribe. So I have to hate you, even if actually you know what I kind of agree with you on a lot of issues, I still have to hate you. You know, I was watching them. Did you see the new Borat movie, the sequel? I missed that.
Starting point is 00:28:38 I'm sure Ralph. Right. Well, there's two guys in it that he lives with for a week. They obviously never had seen the first Borat. Right. They didn't know he was in character. They didn't know he was in character because he's so great at that. Okay.
Starting point is 00:28:54 So, and these are two which you might call rednecks, but they weren't bad people. And I'm thinking I'm watching these guys. And outside of the politics, I could talk. to them. I could go to a baseball game with them. They're not stupid. They're not crazy. They're using computers. But they believe in every Q&ONON crazy thing there is. I mean,
Starting point is 00:29:15 Ralph, you don't think the Democrats eat babies, do you? No. Oh, good. Okay. But they do. And QAnon does. Okay. Okay. What I'm saying is you take away the politics. These are just two regular guys. How do we get into their head? So, we can get him out of the idea that the Democrats are eating babies.
Starting point is 00:29:37 Well, a couple of things. I'd like to, if I can, just say, I think the glass is maybe more half full than you're willing to acknowledge. The first is I just finished reading Ron Chernos' biography of George Washington, which is what he wrote before he did the Hamilton book. And it's amazing. I mean, it's easy to forget how much they fought. It's easy to forget how pitch the battles were. And, you know, in our own time, you know, we've had a... Between the citizens? Are you just... just talking about the founding fathers themselves. Everybody. I mean, there were party organs, there were party newspapers.
Starting point is 00:30:10 Jefferson was subsidizing a newspaper attacking Washington while he was in Washington's cabinet. Washington was accused of being a British agent. Sound familiar? A president being accused of being an agent of a foreign power? Most of New York. That went on then. Was on the side of the British during the Revolutionary War.
Starting point is 00:30:27 And my point is this, it's okay to have these kind of fights. It's okay as long as they're mediated. they're not. As long as they're mediated by a common sense of values. Did it get to we, you should die with them? Well, Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel. Well, that's, that's not, okay, that's not regular citizens. I think that. Yeah, I guess you got me there. I guess I do have a point there. You know what it is? Yeah, we don't duel anymore. We don't do it anymore. It's when it's anonymous. We threaten to hang Mike Pence. That's close. They threaten to hang pens. And not just them. Right.
Starting point is 00:31:02 I think that when it's anonymous, I don't know if you guys have found this on your Twitter feed, but when things are anonymous, people suddenly feel they can be really, really mean in a way that they never would if they had to put their name to it. The phone is evil.
Starting point is 00:31:19 You're right. It's really evil. All right. So, listen, there is a new king of late night, and his name is Greg Gutfeld, according to Variety. Look at that our Newsweek. I don't understand this. I've tried to, I read this, so I sampled this show.
Starting point is 00:31:37 Funny. No, actually, it's an interesting discussion we're going to have, but it's Fox News found a good thing. They can make fun of liberals, and they are doing it to great success. We will discuss why in a minute, but in the meantime, I just want to tell you, Fox News smells a good thing. So they are coming up with a greenlit a whole new slate
Starting point is 00:32:01 of conservative television shows, Would you like to see some of the things they have coming on? I know you would. Like, a third rock from the sun, according to science. It's one of their new ones. Comedians in Cars Getting Jerky. It's going to be... I love Ducey.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Myth-trusters. How I met your handmaid. Mad about Jews with Steve Bannon. Q's the boss I dream of gerrymandering Curb your environmentalism And this is Gus So
Starting point is 00:33:09 Okay So You're going to like this part I've been asked over the years many times Why isn't there a conservative comedy And I always would give the answer Which I think was the true answer There's not good fodder for it
Starting point is 00:33:28 You know, the liberals aren't crazy This was my answer for many years. I cited Dennis Miller, who is a great comedian, period. As a comedian, he's great. But when he became a conservative, he was tasked with, like, doing 10 minutes on Nancy Pelosi. She's in the same way. We would talk about Sarah Palin.
Starting point is 00:33:48 But Nancy Pelosi isn't funny like that because she's not crazy or stupid. Sarah Palin is a moron. It's easy to... She is, and it's easy to make fun of her. Really? It's easy to make fun of her. make fun of Wasilla Living,
Starting point is 00:34:03 meth lab, whatever, Sarah Palin. I'm not saying she works in the meth lab, but I'm sure we did some jokes about that. Well, the family... So, there was just this... There was nothing to make fun of. That was that crazy. Now, I don't think it's the same situation.
Starting point is 00:34:22 I keep saying to the liberals, you know what? If what you're doing sounds like an onion headline, stop. And that's why... No. This is why there is an opening for conservative comedy. Because, you know,
Starting point is 00:34:41 when you tear down statues of Abraham Lincoln in the land of Lincoln, land of Lincoln cancels Lincoln, it's an onion headline. You know, three-year-olds pick their own gender is an onion headline. You know, a lot of this stuff that goes on on the left now, it's, you know,
Starting point is 00:34:59 Seattle votes to decriminalize crime. Now, the problem is that they don't know how to do comedy. But if they found someone who did, they could. Because I do it more here than I used to, because comedy goes where the funny is. And there is funny on the left now, as well as the right. So, you don't agree? Did you go to many Trump rallies?
Starting point is 00:35:29 What? Did you go to many Trump rallies? I was made fun of in many Trump rallies. Trump rallies. I didn't... Of course, why would I go to a Trump? I'd get punched. So I went to a bunch of Trump rally. It was sort of a show, right? I mean, it was the same... Completely a show. I watched Gutfield before I came to this.
Starting point is 00:35:44 It's kind of the same thing as a Trump rally. It's done with a little bit more... Somebody's written it a bit more succinctly because Trump went on and on and on. He'd have been thrown off after, you know, two hours he's still going. But it was a sort of funny show. And the lines that Trump used to talk about, he used to make fun of, liberals, the is exactly what Gutfeld is the same thing. He's just taking his lines from
Starting point is 00:36:06 Trump. He's stolen the lines. And look, the other thing is, when comedy becomes totally predictable, it's just not funny. And what's happened to the traditional legacy broadcast media shows is their democratic talking points. Right. And when it becomes predictable,
Starting point is 00:36:22 I mean, half of comedy is you say something I don't expect you to say. Right. Okay? It doesn't matter whether it's left, right or center. And I think in addition to that, and you You know this. The camera's a very penetrating medium. There's nowhere to hide.
Starting point is 00:36:38 You've either got the talent or you don't. And I know Greg, he's funny, he's smart, he's quick, and particularly when you put him with an ensemble, as they've done, where he gets to play off other people, it works. I watched it. It's pretty predictable. You can tell what he's going to say.
Starting point is 00:36:57 I mean, as predictable as a... It's not as predictable as Colbert, okay? That's pretty predictable. You know exactly what he's going to say about climate. You know what he's going to say about women. I could say the same thing about the other shows. Absolutely. Yeah, no question.
Starting point is 00:37:12 It is the one true opinion out there. If you don't have the one true opinion, don't go in front of the audience that comes because they don't like it. And they're there more to clap to the opinion that they already believe in than to laugh. And that's what changed. And back to your earlier question.
Starting point is 00:37:28 When did everything become about politics? Right. When did comedy become? about politics because that wasn't the way Carson was it wasn't the way Leno was it wasn't the way the early letterman was it wasn't the way Jack Parr was well they certainly did
Starting point is 00:37:42 politics in the monologue but they did a middle of the road you didn't even know who Johnny voted for but they were equal opportunity tormentors they dinged both sides and what I'm saying is when did comedy become reductionist to politics right
Starting point is 00:37:58 when everything became partisan when it became more important to cheer for your team than to actually have a laugh. Which is where you started with partisanship. We're in this position where things are so partisan and you can never criticize your own tribe. And we've seen that happen during the course of this week where reporters and have been slammed
Starting point is 00:38:15 by the administration and by some Democrats for pointing out that the withdrawal from Afghanistan was a massive display of incompetence, which it was. It was, you know, when people are clinging to the wheels of a plane, that's incompetent. It shouldn't be happening. But it's almost more vicious within your own tribe, I think that we've got so, to your point about...
Starting point is 00:38:34 We replaced everything with politics. You know what else we replaced with politics? Religion. Religion is way down, Ralph, I hate to tell you. And I think it's because politics is the new religion. You know, eating babies. There's nothing more religious than that. And now that's what...
Starting point is 00:38:52 But listen to this. The U.S. church membership, the Gallup poll, had been doing this for 80 years, polling people about their religion. In 1937, 73% went to church. In 1999, it was still 70%. 2010, 62, 2018, 50. Now it is for the first time dropped below 50%.
Starting point is 00:39:15 2020, 40... Please. Be nice. Yes, and I take a lot of the credit. No. In 2020, it was 47%. Democrats showed a 25-point decline since 2000. Even Republicans at 12-point drop.
Starting point is 00:39:37 Catholics lost the most audience share, shall we say? 18 points. Even Protestants are down nine points. Jesus is having trouble putting asses and pews. Why? Why? Why do you think? Why is it dropping so much?
Starting point is 00:39:53 I think it's part and parcel. A sinking tide lowers all boats, and there's a general lack. Meaning? There's a general lack of trust and affiliation with all organized institutions, whether it's business or the media. Almost every institution has suffered. And organized religion has been no exception to that. But let me point out a couple of other things from that poll.
Starting point is 00:40:19 The headline is about that one number. But let me tell you what else the poll showed. It showed that 83% of the American people still say they believe in God. It said that 59% of the people say they pray to God regularly in their daily lives, which is 9% higher than it was in 1990. And do you know what the number one reason that people gave in that poll for why they were no longer attending religious services? The number one reason was because they preferred to pray and worship God in the privacy of their own home. So they're not turning away from God. They're not turning away from Jesus. They're turning away from an institution.
Starting point is 00:40:55 But I believe they'll come back. It's cyclical. The same polling also shows that trust in religious leaders has fallen to an all-time low of 37%. You are less trusted than doctors, teachers, even the police. You are more trusted than journalists. I give you that. It's hard to get more than the media.
Starting point is 00:41:20 I will grant you. But, you know, you look at, we had a slew of Catholic. sex scandals. And then I think you had the, you know, big evangelical churches putting their weight behind a guy who was not the most religious of presidents. And you wonder why there has been a decline in trust in religious leaders. Katty, I know that, I know that's your opinion, and you're not the only one who holds it. All I'm saying is that's not supported by the data. when people were asked why they had lost faith or why they weren't attending church or why they weren't members, they didn't say politics. They said, I prefer to worship on my own.
Starting point is 00:42:03 But there's no question that some of these scandals and some of these downfalls have affected the way the church is viewed. But remember that the ultimate objective here isn't to get them to have faith in an institution or in a leader. The objective is to lead them to God through his son, Jesus Christ. Okay? And what I'm saying is that spiritual hunger is innate to the human spirit. Every person has what Pascal called the God-shaped vacuum in their soul that nothing else can fill. And as long as there's a human being. It's not Sunday morning here. Hey, it preaches on Friday night.
Starting point is 00:42:44 What if the polarization that we have been talking about fueled the drop in people going to church and feeding the need for religion. Your point about religion and politics being linked. Because part of the reason people go to church is a sense of community and tribe. Yes, there's a spiritual side. But there's also this fervor, which is, and faith, which if you've got political polarization
Starting point is 00:43:09 and politics or a political group becomes your new church, and through Facebook in a way, it became a new church. That was your new organized religion. That's right. That's not what's happening. I'm just telling you, this is the world that I swim in? That's not what's happening in the churches.
Starting point is 00:43:25 Right. You go to the evangelical churches, and do you know what you hear from the pulpit? You hear right now how to help Christians and refugees get out of Afghanistan. That's because those are the people. You hear about helping the homeless. You preach the gospel. They're not talking about politics in the churches. But Ralph, that's not the one of them.
Starting point is 00:43:42 You're among the people who are still swimming. Yeah. We're talking about the people who have stopped swimming. But what I'm saying is if they left the church because of politics, There's not politics going on. No, I'm saying they've replaced it. They're still religious. Politics is religious now.
Starting point is 00:43:58 That is a problem. It's not rational at all. That is a serious problem. Can I interject one more possibility why this poll reflects what it does? Google. Google. People can Google religion now.
Starting point is 00:44:13 You know? Mitt Romney used to come to your house with a pamphlet. That's all you knew about Mormonism. Now you could look it up and go, wow, you people are nuts. And, you know, I mean, I also think, I also think, Bill, that it was impacted by COVID. Remember, a lot of churches were closed. But the numbers were declining over the last 1030 years.
Starting point is 00:44:38 But what I'm saying is, even as attendance at physical places of worship has declined in the last several years, the online worship experiences skyrocketing. There are churches out there that have hundreds of thousands. of people all over the world that are worshipping online. And so, you know, the church's job is... I don't think religion's going away. The church is not going away. No, I know. I know. And it's still going to be a major... Thank God, because it's a big part of how I make my living.
Starting point is 00:45:06 Anyway, thank you very much, you two. It's very entertaining, but it's time for new rules. New rules, someone has to tell the 30-year-old man, who, as a baby, was on the cover of Nirvana's iconic Nevermind album and is now suing because he says that that cover was sexual exploitation that hurt him emotionally for the rest of his life. But if someone could recognize you today from that picture, you've got bigger problems than the porch can solve.
Starting point is 00:45:49 This scarred you for the rest of your life? Try growing up Catholic. New Rule, it's time to admit that Candyman has the worst premise of any horror movie ever. And that premise is, if you say his name five times, Candyman appears and kills you. Solution?
Starting point is 00:46:12 Don't say his name five times. But everyone does. Why? To own the libs? Even Candyman is going, I'm way busier than I thought I'd be. New Roe the Long Island couple whose wedding was derailed by Hurricane Henri
Starting point is 00:46:38 must not be so devastated. Maybe it's a sign that this was not meant to be. Because marriage is a lot like a hurricane. At the beginning it'd get blown a lot, but in the end you'll lose your house. I'm so sorry. I only do it because I know you can't hear it anywhere else, so I know you secretly love the dirty stuff, so I do it when you're here for you. New Rule, someone has to help me out here. Is this Shia, Muslims in Iraq taking part in a religious ritual in the run-up to
Starting point is 00:47:14 the Islamic Holy Day of Ashura, or a club on Fire Island over 4th of July weekend? New Rule, don't make your hurricane projection map look like a vagina. I know you've got weather to report, but when you do it this way, men have trouble finding Boston. And finally, new rule, blind hatred of America is just as blinkered as blind love. And we Americans should really get some perspective about where we live. Watching the shit go down in Afghanistan, I was reminded lately of every conversation I've ever had with an immigrant, almost all of which, if we got to really talking, included.
Starting point is 00:48:13 the notion, oh, you people have no idea. All you do is bitch about and bad mouth your own country, but if you knew about the country I came from, you'd stop shitting on your own. Now, I have never been a
Starting point is 00:48:35 rah-rah America type, and in fact have often made fun of Republicans in the past for being overly sentimental because they're the ones who tear up at military flyovers and get a boner when the governor of South Dakota rides into a biker rally dressed like a painting, a Teddy Roosevelt.
Starting point is 00:48:55 John Boehner used to cry. Cry, like fucking weep. At the drop of a hat, if anything reminded him, of what a star-spangled miracle this country is. If there was a little flag in his club sandwich, he'd lose it. It's just in the conservative
Starting point is 00:49:16 DNA to have this dewy-eyed, sloppy, drunk love for their country that often renders them incapable of acknowledging its problems. That's how we got the 2013 Supreme Court ruling, gutting the Voting the Voting Rights Act. Not because John Roberts is a monster,
Starting point is 00:49:33 but because people like him tend to over-romanticize America. He thought the South was ready for the honor system. They weren't. But liberals, as usual in this era, have now gone too far in the other direction. They under-romanticize
Starting point is 00:49:55 America. They have no perspective. Last week, the Taliban murdered a comedian. His name was Nazar Muhammad, and he made up funny songs on TikTok. They forced him into a car, tortured, and then executed him. A comedian. A thing like that hits a little close to home for me. I've had two presidents up my ass. This one warned me to stop speaking my mind.
Starting point is 00:50:22 They need to watch what they say, watch what they do, and this is not a time for... remarks like that. There never is. And this one sued me over a joke. And as president called me every name in the book for the crime of predicting he'd do exactly what he did.
Starting point is 00:50:49 This crazy Bill Maher. This idiot comedian. These people are sick. He's a crazy lunatic. He's a whack job. He is a total nut job. Yeah, I mean, neither experience was pleasant. But I didn't have to worry about being dragged
Starting point is 00:51:17 till I'm dead behind a Toyota Tacoma. Have a little perspective about the stuff we howl about here. I'm sorry your professor said something you didn't like. That won't be a problem with the Taliban because you're not allowed to go to school. In Saudi Arabia, grown women can be jailed for doing the kind of things we think of as routine without the permission of a male guardian.
Starting point is 00:51:44 China rounds you up if you're the wrong religion and puts you in camps. More children in Burkirna Faso work than are in school. Only 5% of Burundians have electricity. The homicide rate in Honduras is eight times what it is here. The inflation rate in Venezuela is 2,719%. The Philippines, in the last five years, has put to death 27,000 low-level drug dealers, my old job.
Starting point is 00:52:14 In North Korea, people starve to death. The only people who starve here are doing it for a role. And the only people who have no water live in California. If you think America is irredeemable, turn on the news or get a passport and a ticket on one of those sketchy airlines that puts its web address on the plane. There's a reason Afghan mothers are handing their babies to us. And we should take them.
Starting point is 00:52:58 Americans right now should take in Afghan refugees into their homes and into their neighborhoods. and I'm sure everyone who just clapped is thinking the same thing. Yes, someone who isn't me should definitely do that. But that doesn't make us the bad guys. We're not the bad guys. Oppression is what we were trying to stop in Afghanistan. We failed, but any immigrant will tell you,
Starting point is 00:53:35 we've largely succeeded here, and yet the overriding thrust of current woke ideology is that America is rotten to the core. It redeemably racist from the moment it was and so oppressive, sexist, and homophobic, we can't find a host for the Oscars or Jeopardy. Oh, yeah. I'm sure you heard.
Starting point is 00:54:01 The new Jeopardy guy is out because he said boobies in 2014. And this is where your new Afghani roommates that you took in will prove so valuable because they'll turn to you and say, have you people lost your fucking minds? Have you ever heard of honor killings, public beheadings, throwing gay men off of roofs, arranged marriages to minors, state-sanctioned wife beating, female genital mutilation,
Starting point is 00:54:42 marriage by capture? Because we have. What's the lesson of Afghanistan? Maybe it's that everyone from the giant dorm room bitch session that is the internet should take a good look at what real oppression looks like. Ask your maid. ask your Uber driver Ask the Asian woman giving you a massage
Starting point is 00:55:02 She'll tell you this place is Shangri-La And not just because she works in a place called Shangri-R-Lah America May not be the country of your faculty lounge And Twitter dreams But no one here tries to escape By hanging on to an airplane No
Starting point is 00:55:25 We wait till we're inside the plane to fight And then only because they cut off the beverage service. All right, that's our show. We're off next week and back on September 10th. They'll be at the Temple Hoyne Duel Theater in Denver, September 11th at Marin's Veteran Memorial Auditorium in St. Raphael, the 25th, and at the Hulu Theater at Madison's Greg Garden in New York, November 13th. I want to thank Katie Kay, Ralph Reed, and Craig Whitlock, and you folks. Thank you very much. Thank you. Catch all new episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher every Friday night at 10th. Or watch you many time on HBO On Demand. For more information, log on to HBO.com.

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