Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #599: Chloe Maxmin, Paul Begala, Michele Tafoya
Episode Date: May 7, 2022Bill’s guests are Chloe Maxmin, Paul Begala, and Michele Tafoya (Originally aired 5/06/22) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoice...s.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series
Real Time with Bill Moss.
Thank you very much.
Sit your ass down.
We've got a big show.
You very much.
Appreciate that.
This crowd is, oh, I could tell.
I could say, it's Cinco de Mayo, hangover, right?
I mean, yesterday was Cinco de Mayo.
I don't know for the rest of the cut.
Out here, it's big shit, right?
Cinco de Mayo, it is not.
Oh, I mean, if you don't do a promotion for,
whatever business is in for Cinco de Mayo,
my anal bleaching place.
They said,
all weekend for free, they'll put salt on your rim.
That's what?
Cinco de Mayo.
You got to watch a tequila?
Whoa, that tequila stuff.
Elon Musk passed out,
and when he woke up, he had bought Radio Shack.
I want to watch out for Cinco de Mayo.
Oh, yeah.
And women, I got to tell you, if you can't remember what you did last night,
you might want to get the abortion now.
I'm just saying, well, I mean, that's the big news, right?
The big news, right?
Okay, they're going to get rid of Roe versus Wade after 49 years.
And as soon as this was leaked, protesters immediately gathered outside the Supreme Court
memo to my Democratic friends,
more effective when you're on the inside.
So, yeah, now it's just going to be a race
with the Waffle House dates
to just get more and more restrictive about abortion.
Oklahoma already has one on the books six weeks.
Can't get into it. After six weeks, most women don't even know they're pregnant at six weeks.
They don't even know if they like the guy.
Six weeks.
That's a quick hook.
Oh, Louisiana wants to pass a law that says flat out.
If you get an abortion, you get charged with murder.
Wow.
Suddenly getting the right pronoun doesn't seem so big, does it?
But, on the...
the bright side.
It's not really that big of a bright side.
But in Louisiana, okay, if the fetus is
absolutely a human being and you're
driving alone to another state to get an abortion,
you can use the carpool lane.
So I'm just saying
not a big...
America is getting chippy out there, right?
Another attack on comma. You saw Dave Chappelle
get attacked on stage again. War on
comedians keeps going.
going on? And I love this. This is so America. The guy had a real knife inside of a fake gun.
You want to sneak a knife in somewhere, hide it in a gun. And our new friend Madison Carthorn is back in the news, you know.
I don't know if you're familiar with this guy. He's kind of new on the scene. He's very young, under 30, I think one of the youngest
Republican or any congressman. And Christian conservative keeps getting caught, doing things that don't seem exactly.
Christian conservative.
The late...
We talked about it.
Last week, this week, there's a new video
out of him naked.
Stradling another man's face
and thrusting his pelvis into it.
The porn hub title
was Republican fuck face,
fuck's face.
And he said,
Madison already commented on this. I'm not
joking.
he said he was just trying to be funny.
This is always, two weeks ago
he was caught in, there's a picture of him
in women's lingerie, women's underwear,
trying to be funny. He said it was a joke.
Then last week we had the video
where he was in the car
and he's saying I want to feel
the passion and another guy is
grabbing his dick. Joke. He said
it was just a joke.
Now we have him
skull-fucking a guy on tape.
And again, I'm joking.
I mean
There's infinite ways
You can create a joke
His is always, what if I was gay?
That's, I tell you,
I gotta say
comedically, this guy really commits to the bit.
You know what I'm saying?
He commits.
But, no, I'm not saying he is gay at all.
I'm just saying in Florida,
they're not allowed to discuss him in school now.
That's okay.
Speaking of that stuff, did you see this five Republican senators now
are trying to pass a bill that will have the FCC,
or I don't know, whoever it is that puts warnings, you know,
ahead of TV shows, watch this shit you're about to see
because it's got some shit in it that you should know about.
Okay, these five Republicans senators want to put warning labels now on TV shows
when there are LGBTQ characters in it.
What's that going to be like?
This show contains violence, adult content,
and catty comments about Judy Garland.
Viewer discretion is advised.
And before I go, I should want...
It is Mother's Day Sunday,
so let's all...
Hear it for moms.
Oh, I saw...
I was in CBS today doing some shoplifting.
I saw some...
I saw a beautiful
a Republican Mother's Day card.
It said,
thank you for bringing me to term,
whether you wanted to or not.
Anyway, what a great show.
We got Paul Begala and Michelle Tafroya.
First up, she is the Democratic State Senator
from Maine's 13 district
and co-author of Dirt Road Revival.
How to rebuild rural politics
and why our future depends on a Chloe Maxman.
How are you?
Shake, both.
Fast these days.
All right, we'll do both.
Well, what's your shake?
You might as well not bump.
Yeah, why not?
Right, no, I'm all for everything.
Okay, so you are the youngest state senator,
female state senator?
Is that right from the state of Maine?
That is true.
Wow.
Okay.
And, but last time, I mean, you were here
when you were just in college, right?
I was. I know.
It was almost a decade ago.
Oh, we saw you grow up on this show.
Yeah.
And you, but you went back to,
home. You're like Welcome Back Cotter, except not Brooklyn, Maine. Why did you make that choice?
Yeah, the day I graduated from college, I moved right back to my hometown, a small town in Maine of
1,600 people. I just, I love my home so much. I always wanted to go home and build my life there
and do politics there. But you're not going to do politics anymore now. Aren't you out of it?
Didn't you say you're not going to keep going on the electoral ladder? Yes, I've served four years in the
main legislature. I was first elected in
2018. I served a term in the House
and a term in the Senate. But, you know, I
think there's so much power in getting
lots of young people elected
for all across rural America instead of
just me. And so we wrote
the book and we're going to do that.
But don't they need you?
Don't they need
you, coach, in the game?
I am still in the game. Just
doing it in a different way. You know, just making
sure that candidates and campaigns have
all the tools that they need to get young folks elected.
I don't blame me if they're not wanting to do it either.
Yeah.
I don't, but, you know, just say that.
It's a shitty job who wants to do it.
Okay, so let's talk about the book.
It's called What Democrats Don't Know About Rural Voters?
I guess that's the subtext of the subtitle.
What's the title?
The title is Dirt Road Revival, How to Rebuilds Rural Politics, and Why Our Future Depends on It.
Oh.
Mm-hmm.
What did I say?
Something different.
Well, anyway, but that's really what it is, right?
I mean, you're, and I think this is a great message that the Democrats need to hear
because they are, I mean, it's just ridiculous how unpopular they are in places like.
And Maine, I mean, I mean, come on.
Maine is very, I mean, I think the black population of Maine consists of a bear.
It's not a diverse state, right?
It's a very white state.
Yeah.
So what's the message to Democrats from your book?
Yeah.
I grew up in a House district and a Senate district in Maine that voted for Trump,
and we just went out and started talking to folks and listening to people who did vote for Trump
and just try and have more of an honest conversation about what was happening.
And, you know, we won in both of those seats.
There were Trump signs next to Chloe signs, and we discovered all of this common ground with folks
who we usually write off.
And it was, you know, it was so sad to see my community left behind by the Democratic Party.
but also so hopeful at all of this space
that we can build relationships
for durable political power.
So you can win them over?
You can win Trump voters?
You thought you won actual Trump voters over?
Yes, we did.
Yeah, just through conversation.
And when we talk about rural,
I mean, it's interesting what we think of as rural.
Maybe I don't even know what rural is.
I mean, I think of it as people playing in a jug band.
Yeah.
There are some stereotypes.
But it's more than that.
You know, I mean, it's like,
Where does the suburbs end?
It's not the city.
Okay, it's not the city.
But it's like, what is suburb?
Like, I grew up in the suburbs, but when I think about my youth,
it was pretty kind of rural.
There was woods behind my house.
I played in dirt a lot.
Dirt was a big part of my childhood.
Yeah.
Was I rural?
Was that rural?
Maybe you were rural.
I may be rural.
Why is that all?
But so it's a lot more, but I'm just saying,
it's a lot more of America than what we think.
Right?
Yeah.
It's not just Appalachia.
I mean, rural is a big part of the country.
Fly over it.
Yeah, it's a huge part of our country, you know.
It's a part of our country that has a lot of political influence
and a lot of untold and unheard stories.
And, you know, just growing up in that community
and being able to represent it and hearing those stories as a Democrat,
you know, sometimes I'll show up to a house and people will slam the door in my face
because they know I'm a Democrat.
It's a bad word.
do they know places? Well, when you show up at a house...
Wear the red. Don't think you're a Republican. I know. I'm wearing red today, which is a bit ironic.
But when you show up at a house, the first question is, are you a Democrat or a Republican?
That's interesting. That's the first question? Oh, almost always. So I'm an honest
politician. That says a lot about where we are in America. It's so polarizing. And one of the
things that I love about rural communities is, and how I was raised is it's really all about
values. You know, are you a good person?
Okay. Now, that in your book, I think, is the most important thing, is that Democrats are...
Look, I've said this in a nice way. Their policy wonks.
At their best.
Republicans, come on. They've not taken government. They don't take it that seriously.
Reagan, Bush, you know, fits on a one-page paper. I read that. That's how much I know or care.
Yeah.
You're thinking about Hillary Clinton and Obama. I mean, these people...
I mean, they're wonks.
They get it, because government is complicated.
And more you know, the better you do.
That's at their best.
But they don't understand this very big difference that you're getting at.
Policy.
You talk policy, that's not what matters to a lot of the people in this country.
It is values.
Values like self-reliance and common sense,
which Republicans seem to lack.
Fidelity.
Religious.
You know?
Yeah, I mean, in my two campaigns, I've knocked about 20,000 doors.
I've had a lot of conversations with Republicans and independents,
and I have never heard a Republican say that they want expensive health care.
So it's all about how we talk about the issues,
because we can find that common ground if we take the time to do it.
And, of course, what we, you know, the elephant in the room,
I think with all of this stuff,
but we're talking about values, Republican versus Democrats,
slamming the door in your face.
Yeah.
Race.
Are the people, the white people,
who are in this very white state,
are they racist?
Because their view, I think, is that
just because we're white, we're seen as racist now,
at least by the Democratic Party.
You saw them up close and personal.
Are they racist?
That's a complicated question.
I mean, some people everywhere are.
But in general, the average person,
even if they voted for Trump, would you say they were racist?
I mean, I think we live in a society that has a lot of racist threads in it, you know,
just the way that our country is built is built on racism.
And so it's hard to, all that is intertwined with everything that we're doing.
And a large...
Now in 2022, these people themselves, they weren't around when the country was built racially.
Yes, we understand that.
And yes, of course, there is still lots of racism in the society.
Are they?
Are they racist?
Correct. That's what I'm asking.
Yeah. Well...
I'm getting applause just for the question.
It's better be a great answer.
I think that there are a lot of narratives that have created racism in rural America,
but I don't think that rural Americans are racist.
Okay.
Yeah, I mean, I'm sure some are, but I think...
I think just, I think a lot of people just, look, when you're a politician, you're kind of like a lawyer, you know, you're representing people.
I think a lot of these kind of people, again, you know these people better than me.
Because I got out of the rural area long ago.
Rural New Jersey.
But I think their view is sort of like that the Democratic Party, they should be my lawyer, the way your lawyer represents you.
But they're not.
They're not really advocating for me.
And that's okay.
I don't hate them for it.
But don't expect me to be voting for you because you're not my lawyer.
Yeah.
And this other party who I have problems with, too, but at least they're representing me.
That's my lawyer.
And we only get two choices in America.
You've got to pick one.
Yeah.
So how do the Democrats fix that?
I mean, what I think in a big part of the book that I co-wrote with my campaign manager, Canyon Woodward,
He's in the audience today.
Our message is that there's a lot of hope and potential in how we campaign.
Because every day we were talking to folks who had never been contacted by a Democrat or Democratic campaign
in their entire voting history.
But yet, there were conversations there.
And so if we start campaigning, if we start having conversations,
and we don't just do that in an election year,
but we do that every month of every year and really invest in rural America,
that maybe we can find that common ground.
So what do you say to the person who, like,
you knock on the door, and they say,
oh, wow, you look like a Democrat.
And they start to slam the door.
You said this happened, right?
And you're like, wait a second, I just want to talk.
And they're, okay, I'll let you talk.
Yeah.
Here, have some of the moonshine.
And you ask them what their issues are.
And they say, well, I hear a lot about white privilege.
Have you looked around my trail?
Does it look like I'm privileged?
What do you say to that person?
Because that's the voter you have to get in the Democratic Party.
Well, I think that's part of it, right?
Is that in rural America,
there folks are feeling like there is a lot of unseen struggle and pain
and the reality that folks are living.
And that's a real struggle, and that's a real reality.
It also means that people of color in our country are also struggling.
Those realities can exist at the same time.
And I think there are these narratives that are pitting us against each other.
that are creating these decisions about, you know,
how our money is invested in who gets what resources.
But what I try and do and what our message is
is that we live in a very wealthy country
and there is enough resources to go around.
And we can only find that common ground.
We can only create that space for unity
if you are face-to-face someone,
face-to-face with someone, having an honest conversation.
Like we did.
Thank you very much.
Chloe, all right.
Good luck out there.
We'll see you when you're the youngest, something else, I'm sure.
All right, let's meet our panel.
Okay.
Hello.
Hello.
All right, here they are.
He is a Democratic strategist and CNN
who are our favorite guest.
Paul Bagala is over here.
And she is a former NBC reporter,
sports reporter, who will host the new podcast
Sideline Sanity launching on all podcast
platforms Monday, May 23rd.
Michelle Tofoya.
Bagala and Tofoya.
All right, so people hate talking about abortion.
So let's do it.
I don't want to do it, but it's the big issue, and we've got to do it, and this is what happened.
And, you know, it's interesting because until this memo was leaked,
and we found out that now, unless something very unforeseen happens,
the Supreme Court is going to undo Roe v. Wade after 49 years.
We haven't really been focusing on it, or maybe I'm projecting.
I guess I haven't been enough because I learned things this week
because this put it on the front page
that are pretty basic things that I did not know about abortion.
Like in Europe, the modern countries of Europe,
way more restrictive than we are or what they're even proposing.
If you are pro-choice, you would like it a lot less in Germany and Italy
and France and Spain and Switzerland.
Did you know that?
I didn't know that.
I didn't know that.
That's right. Okay.
I learned most people who are pro-life are women.
Did not know that.
Most abortions are from, fending for Mother's Day.
Mothers, people who have a kid.
That makes sense.
Well, I mean, it does.
I'm sorry, but...
And I thought this is interesting.
Most abortions now, even when you go to a clinic, are done with the pill.
Yeah.
The pill.
And pills are easy to get in America.
We know that.
So, you know, for the people who say we're going back to 1973, we're not.
That's just factually inaccurate.
And with how easy it is to get a pill, I'm wondering if this is, what do you think?
Is this going to be the galvanizing issue that the left think it's going to be?
You want to start?
Well, first, there are already Republicans talking about outlawing the pill as well.
And many of these states will, and even whether they specifically outlaw the pill,
will still be a crime.
We're not going back to 1973.
We're going back to 1931 and before.
Well, a lot of states, my state of Texas, where I grew up, they have a law that was, it's
not back to the 30s, but Michigan has a law that goes back to the 30s.
Texas has one.
Automatically, 30 days after Roe v. Wade is repealed, which will happen, it'll come out in June.
30 days, an abortion in Texas is a felony.
No exception for rape, no exception for incest, life in prison for the dock.
That's Texas.
In Texas.
Well, that's 30 million people.
Michigan has the same law.
No exception for rape, no exception for interest.
And we know that most Americans, including conservatives, do not believe that.
They're not on that page.
They voted it in in Texas, not that long ago.
And it's because they're not pro-life, Bill.
They're pro-life in prison.
They want to punish.
They want to control.
And they're going to be able to now.
Well, okay.
Go ahead.
I disagree.
I don't think they want to punish and control.
Look, I am pro-choice.
But here we have a continuum, right?
Somebody gets pregnant, and then there's birth.
And that whole timeline in between,
there should be a portion of that time, as there has been,
when an abortion is legal, whether it's medical, the pill, or surgical.
There's got to be a point at which we say,
this is a human being capable of living outside the womb,
where maybe we don't do that.
I think that's what you see a lot of in Europe,
and a lot of people are kind of settling around, okay, 15 weeks maybe.
Now, I have a good friend, lifelong liberal,
who happens to be attached to a children's hospital in St. Louis, Missouri.
And he has seen preemies in incubators five months along.
They are born, they're there, struggling to survive,
that are now 20-year-olds walking the planet.
And he feels very, this is a lifelong liberal.
And he feels very strongly about this,
that once that baby is viable, why would you extinguish that life?
Now, not everyone's going to agree on this.
It's going to require some tough work.
There are lots of questions.
You just outlined what Roe v. Wade holds and what the Supreme Court is about to overturn.
But that won't ban abortions.
I realize there are snapback rules in some states.
States have.
Louisiana passed, you mentioned this to your monologue.
A state assembly committee in Louisiana passed a bill yesterday, 7 to 2.
It's not a final law yet.
that says life begins at fertilization,
which means the IUD is murder.
This is what they're voting on in these Republican states.
If they had your kind of sensible, centrist position,
I don't think people should be as upset.
But they don't.
The second largest state is going to make it a felony of life in prison.
That's crazy.
It is crazy.
Right?
Yeah.
And again, just the perspective,
most Americans think that's crazy.
I would agree.
I think probably even in Texas.
Yes, they got it passed.
We'll see if something like that holds.
In November, the Texas legislature is on the ballot in Michigan legislature.
If you all don't want felony life and prison laws, you can vote them out.
Right.
Absolutely.
Well, another thing I learned this week that I, I think I maybe knew this, but I forgot it,
is that it didn't used to be a partisan issue.
At the time, Roe v. Wade put past, but not a partisan issue.
It became a partisan issue because of the Christian right.
They made it a partisan issue.
They made it so that it became
where the Democrats were for
abortion being safe and legal,
and Republicans were also when their mistresses got
pregnant, of course.
But in general...
In general, it was not even partisan.
There are a lot of things also
that have changed since Roe v. Wade passed,
and I think a lot of people are bringing this up,
that now we have sonograms
where you can see what this child actually
looks like along the way, whereas in 1973
or whatever it was, that wasn't the case.
We know about...
Meaning people would be given pause when they see their...
Perhaps. Perhaps they would.
Especially at a certain point along the line.
Because it is a gut thing.
I mean, you know, we talk about the Constitution and laws and rights,
and it really comes down to do you like women or do you like babies?
You know, for me, I personally, maybe this is an outlier attitude,
I never have thought life itself was particularly precious.
Oh, God.
I don't.
I'm sorry, I don't.
What?
I really don't.
I mean, no, I'm serious.
I think life is for the living.
Until you're born, you're not living.
Okay.
I mean, yes, it's becoming a life, but, you know, it's not.
And, you know, we wouldn't miss you if you're not born because we never knew you.
You're not going to miss anything because you never were born.
I'm serious.
So that's my position.
I get that that's not most people's position.
But that's, I mean, that's...
Most people's position is not what the Supreme Court is doing.
And I think that's what's got people so angry.
If their legislatures have these kind of draconian laws, that's really a problem.
But most people in their real lives, I have a friend, very conservative, very pro-life.
He says, well, I'm pro-life except for the standard three exceptions.
Rape, incest, and if my daughter gets in trouble.
Oh, she's...
Right.
I'm like, well, you need to go, buddy.
No.
No, that's a lot of...
You can catch a lot of Republicans on tape.
Remember Herman Kane?
Dan Quail did it,
where they're actually explaining how they feel about it
while they're trying to tow the pro-life line
and they're describing pro-choice.
Well, yeah.
I think it should be between the family
and they should have the...
Yes, you just described our choice, moron.
Yeah.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who was a huge supporter of abortion rights,
felt that this law was created the wrong way.
And that rather than being attached to the privacy clause
of the 14th Amendment,
it should have been attached to the equality,
equal treatment under the law,
so that, you know, women should have the choice
whether or not to have a family,
just as a man would have a choice
whether or not to have a family.
And I agree with her.
And I do think there is some middle ground, though.
I don't, there was that Kermit, whoever,
in Philadelphia, who got thrown in prison
because he was aborting babies
at nine months, eight and a half months,
breaking their necks and passing the law. Okay, well, some of that is because it's not a viable,
but a lot of abortion takes place because the pregnancy went wrong. Yes, I agreed.
And that should not even be on the table. No, exactly. Okay, so we agree. But that wasn't what he was doing.
So it was more abortion on demand. Someone decided late in the thing. Anyway, there are exceptions all over the place.
This isn't a cut and dried cookie cutter. No one has the same situation, right? I mean, I think,
So look, the abortion pill, if they outlaw that, they're going to, in states, they are going to pay at the ballot box.
There is no question.
It is going to be out on my first thing.
But it only begins with abortion.
I read the draft opinion from Justice Alito.
I actually have a law degree.
The same rationale applies to marriage, Loving v. Virginia.
It's the same privacy right that says, I can marry anybody I want, whether they're not.
they're black or a man, whether I can have contraception, whether I can even have sex.
None of those words are in the Constitution Justice.
Let's be specific and remember that there's a third party, an unborn child involved in this,
and he specifically goes out of his way in this draft to say, this is very specific to this.
I know a lot of people.
Just like when he was up for a hearing in confirmation, he said, oh, Roe has settled law
until he unsettled it.
It's the same philosophy that has to actually apply.
To avoid the whole and lovingly other things.
But I was saying before,
it's not really about the laws
or the constitutional.
You know, whenever I see a lawyer,
whether it's on TV or an ed,
they're always in a room
with an entire wall of law books behind them.
An entire wall.
You mean whatever, it's what you fucking think,
what you feel, and then you'll find
something in that wall of books
to back it up.
You know, this whole bullshit argument
about, well, it's settled law.
So was segregation.
Plessy versus Ferguson
was settled law in 1896, and thank God,
somebody said, let's unsettle it.
So it's not, that's a bullshit argument.
It's what you think.
If you like,
if you like babies,
then you're pro-life.
And if you like women, you're pro-choice.
I like women.
You know, but are you saying,
Are you saying
You're sort of
I think voicing what I've heard a lot this week
People have a sort of a worry about
what I would call a domino theory
Of social rights
You think first it's abortion
And then it's gay rights
And then trans rights and then weed goes
And the gay marriage
interracial marriage
That's what you're worried about
Don't stir up fear now here, be honest
Wait
The right to privacy
is what abortion is founded on in the Constitution, right?
And so if there's a right to privacy over a woman's choice,
whether to continue a pregnancy,
that's the same, the whole same set of cases,
the same legal philosophy that said,
Mr. and Mrs. Loving had a right to get married,
even though one was white, one was black,
or Obergefell got to get married,
even though his husband was a guy,
or gay people can have sex,
or married people can use contraception.
That was, you know, in 1960s, that was.
was a big case. Connecticut had outlawed contraception, even for married couples.
But Clarence Thomas is, that's an interracial marriage. Do you think Clarence Thomas?
I just, I feel like, I guess what I'm saying is, I really feel like abortion is unique.
It is. It is. Because people either, you know, you just have this view that it's murder.
I could put the argument on a hat when people talk about a woman's right.
Murder isn't a right. If you think it's murder, I don't.
Again, crazy me.
But I'm telling you, we're not going to miss you.
You were never here, and you're not going to miss anything.
I wouldn't miss us if we were gone.
I would because you're already here.
You're living.
You're living.
That's different.
It's an interesting thing, okay?
And you mentioned that the majority of a lot of women who have abortions are already moms,
and they can't afford another child.
Or they just don't want to want.
Or they just said, to hell with this.
Exactly.
No, listen, in all seriousness, I had many, many problems conceiving.
I won't go into details.
Although, if you'd like, I'm canceled.
Okay.
So, fortunately, we were lucky enough to have our son pure luck, okay?
So then we said, let's adopt a little girl, Bogota, Columbia, South America,
where the law there is 24 weeks you have that time to abort.
God bless this woman who didn't.
I would not tell her what choice to make.
That was her choice to make, and I'm all about it, okay?
That was her choice to make.
But I can't imagine my life without my daughter.
But you could if you'd never had it.
Again, you wouldn't miss her because you didn't know who existed.
All right.
Let me interrupt here for one moment.
It is one of our favorite refillables comes up at this time here
because it's graduation time.
Anyone here graduating college probably?
Oh, a couple.
Congratulations.
What?
I mean it.
It's a big achievement.
Or not.
Anyway.
So we've noticed over the years,
they write things on their hats.
And very often they're very basic things.
Like, yeah, thanks, mom and dad.
They write on that graduation camp,
hire me.
And they've gotten a little more interesting
onto the next adventure I've seen.
And, oh, the future is female.
So, we took our real-time photographer out to some graduation ceremony.
Would you like to see some of the other signs that are on the caps?
I'm sure you would.
For example, thanks, Mom, another mom.
Goodbye term papers, hello only fans.
Just my luck, I majored in critical race theory.
If you can read this, you're not me.
Harvard Caucasians against white privilege.
I stayed with.
Zillins, Zilloo, that guy in Ukraine.
Amber heard you can shit on my bed anytime.
Well, that's nothing to do with graduation.
Kids.
If only masks protected you from gonorrhea.
Well, that's...
Guess I picked the wrong time to need an abortion.
Well, that's a terrible thing to put on a hat.
And, of course, your Uber driver has arrived.
So, President Biden is under a number.
enormous pressure, speaking of college,
gets to come up with a plan now to relieve college debt.
And I'm wondering, especially what you think about this,
because you are a strategist and have been one of the most successful ones
for the Democratic Party.
A lot of people are saying this is a loser issue.
I'll give you some brief numbers here.
Why that is, 13% of Americans have college debt, federal college debt.
So that's not a lot of people you're working to.
65%.
Don't go to college at all.
50% of the college debt goes to people going to grad school, which, come on.
A lot of that is just bullshitting around.
You don't know what to do, and you can keep going to school for free.
So it just looks like a loser issue for the party that is trying to win back the working class,
that we're going to subsidize.
We who didn't go to college and didn't benefit from that are going to subsidize you
to get your degree in gender studies
and sports marketing
and all the other bullshit that they take in account?
I think it's a loser issue for a boy.
What do you think?
Yeah, well, and this is revealing a big secret,
so don't tell anybody.
We Democrats have a lab, two labs, actually,
secret labs, one in Berkeley, one in Brooklyn,
where we come up with ideas
to completely piss off the working class,
and it's working wonderfully.
We, and, look,
labs, you say, actual labs.
Yes, oh, yes.
They have, and they all have PhDs.
Right.
In pissing off the working class.
Somehow, in my lifetime, the Democrats have gone
from being the party of the factory, Florida,
being the party of faculty lounge.
I went last week, I spent Wednesday last week
in Chicago with the Machinus Union.
Hung out with the machinists all day.
Great guys. Not one of them came up to me
and said, gee, I really hope you take my tax dollars
to pay off the debt as somebody who went to Stanford.
Right.
Okay? But I have...
So Biden's under enormous pressure.
He's not for it. He didn't campaign for it.
He says he'll relieve maybe $10,000,
which I suppose is good.
But what I'd much rather see Democrats do
is go back to their roots,
which is earn it.
We're the party that created the GI Bill.
Nobody called that free college because it wasn't.
The guys who got the GI Bill earned it.
Why don't we have a system
when you say, you want to get out of your college debt?
Serve your country.
Marine Corps, Peace Corps, AmeriCorps,
not everybody can carry a rifle,
but you can mentor a kid.
And you just give two years a service,
then you will have earned that
and expand it so we have community college, job training.
We need more mechanics, not MBAs.
Yes.
And that's where the Democrats focus on to be.
Well, that seems to be the underlying issue.
I've said it on this show before.
Did Democrats have this idea
that you're a better person if you sit in class
more and more
and get more and more degrees.
And really the answer is to make,
is not to make college cheaper.
It's to make it more unnecessary
because most of it is bullshit anyway.
Well, right.
And it's not necessary.
No, that's absolutely the case.
You know, and I'm with you from more vocational schools,
more avenues for people to find ways to make a living.
And, you know, look, here's how it worked for me.
I was going to go to college.
I knew what it was going to cost.
My parents knew what it was going to cost.
they put the money aside.
Then I went to grad school, and I knew what it was going to cost.
And when I signed on that loan, that was, oh, sorry, microphone.
That was me saying, I will pay for this.
This is mine to pay off because that's accountability,
and that's taking responsibility for your own life.
So can I ask you, what did you learn in grad school that helped you with your career as a sideline reporter?
There's a story there.
I would love to know what it had to do with Terrell Owens' bad ankle.
Not a damn thing.
Not a thing.
It was my backup plan.
It was my backup plan because it's not every day that you get a job in network sports,
and I knew that.
So I just had a backup one.
And did anything you took in college point you to that job at all?
In college or to grad school?
Well, anything in college, was it relevant to what you did?
I mean, I took some communications courses,
but no, what I did that was relevant.
Oh, total bullshit.
Totally.
Communications.
Communications.
I'm so happy to be called out
on national television
about my bullshit classes.
It's not just you.
It's everybody.
No, it's true.
And it's gotten worse.
And I think a lot of people,
the people you're talking about,
and the people we were talking about
the top, the rural people in America,
they're resentful.
That, you know, you are,
first of all, I'm going to pay now
to have my kid
my kid doesn't know, I'm going to pay for some kid to go to an indoctrination center
where they're indoctrinating kids into things I don't even believe in
where the courses are all in, you know, racist spotting 101 and
white privilege 105. And you know what? And the thing about it too
is college is way too damn expensive and it got too damn expensive
when all of these loans started being given out.
Well, it got to be expensive when states
Stop subsidized. I went to the University of Texas. I love it. My whole career I owed the University of Texas at Austin and my law degree, less so, but it helped. I can read a Supreme Court opinion and know that Justice Alito is going after the gays next. Okay? So it's enormously helpful.
Wow. It's been enormously helpful. I'm serious. The law degree, but also my undergraduate degree. So I'm totally for college. I am pro college. But not at everybody else's expense. And what we ought to do is, you know, schools used to be subsidized by the state much more. I'm an old guy, but UT Austin,
me $4 a credit.
I attended bar and easily paid my way through college.
It wasn't even hard.
I didn't have to go and get a bunch of student debt.
So we ought to make college more affordable,
but we ought to throw open the opportunities.
Biden campaign on free community college.
And that's what the Congress ought to pass.
But I'll come back to the service though.
The other thing we would do,
if we had service in exchange for educational benefits,
not only would we have smarter people,
and I am for knowledge for knowledge sake.
I'm for more art history majors.
All for it.
but throw them together in a service project with kids who grew up on a farm
or kids are in a city or kids are of different race
and you will reunite this country.
We can stitch ourselves back together again.
It's the most important thing we can do.
I'm interesting to know how your degree helped you know
that Alito was going to go after the gays next.
Now, he may.
But I thought one part of this abortion debate we're having now I thought
was interesting was we used to hear the line,
if men could get pregnant, this wouldn't even be a debate.
Well, now that men can,
and there's a pregnant man emoji,
how does that...
Where's the uprising of the emoji pregnant men?
I mean, where is the uprising?
Does that change the debate at all?
You know, no.
No, no, it doesn't.
But listen, art history majors are fine,
but you can learn a lot about art history
by working in a museum.
Reading books.
Just reading some books is a good idea.
I agree with you.
I think college has gotten too fluffy.
It's, and way too damn expensive.
All right.
Thank you.
Good panel.
Time for New rules, everybody.
New rules.
All right.
New rule, now that Tropicana is trying to make
pouring orange juice on cereal a thing,
milk must not take that lying down.
Introducing the milkmosa.
Champagne with milk.
when you need something to settle your stomach after a night of drinking,
but also want to say,
fuck it, let's keep drinking.
New Rule, I don't know exactly what happens at the Hindu Festival of Lal Khash
in Bangladesh, or what the purpose is,
but I do know who sponsors it.
Flaming Hot Cheetos!
New Rule, nothing says, I'm a woman of the people.
Quite like having a black man in a face mask
kneeling to adjust your ball gown.
How come every time is someone who's going to be?
kneels in front of a Clinton that becomes all about the dress.
I'm just asked why.
New Rule, if you augment your buttocks with non-surgical
butt vacuum therapy,
don't forget to tip your therapist.
Because you think your job sucks ass, and this job,
you actually suck ass. New Rule, someone has to tell Alexa.
She's getting too attached.
She's suggesting songs I might like.
She's reminding me to buy dog food.
Lexi, honey, I'm not looking for a
serious relationship.
The other day, I asked her, what's the capital of
Egypt? And she said, why don't you ask
your whore? And finally,
new rule, since this is Mother's Day
weekend, let's pause and take a moment to
think about how your mother was always
there for you, looking after you and
keeping you safe. And then realize
that's not Twitter's job.
Keeping you safe
and sorting out the lies from the
truth is your job.
When we talk about misinformation,
we always focus on the producers.
Never the consumers is if we're all helpless, dumb blondes ready to believe anything, like Donald Trump.
Now, do lies spread faster than they used to, of course.
But so can truth, which in the Internet age is always at your fingertips.
You just have to learn how to use Google for something other than porn.
But this idea that we can clean up Twitter and protect you from fake news and disinformation,
it's so ridiculous.
It's like fact-checking the graffiti on the bathroom wall of a dive ball.
We called this number and we didn't have a good time.
People always lie. That's what people do.
Every age is the misinformation age.
And whenever a new means of communication comes along,
some reach right for the sensor button.
In 1858, the New York Times thought we couldn't handle
the transatlantic telegraph.
They said it was superficial and too fast for the truth.
In 1487, the Pope issued in order to stop the misuse of the printing press
for the distribution of pernicious writing.
You know, fake news.
Like how the earth is a ball.
In 1938, radio was the hot medium of the day,
and lots of people got plenty worked up about it,
especially after Orson Wells presented what was obviously a fictitious drama
about a Martian invasion of New Jersey,
and thousands of people thought it was really.
and panicked. You cannot censor away that level of naivete. The Martians had the whole universe
to invade, and they chose New Jersey. People on social media like to say, I did my research,
but it doesn't count if you did your research on social media. I once did a stand-up special
called Be More Cynical. This is what I was talking about. Lies are ubiquitous, and in that way,
they're quite analogous to germs and viruses. People think,
think you can germ-proof the world
and never have to be in contact
with the things that can hurt you. But you
can't. You have to have a strong
immune system. It's
the reason babies who live in sterile
environments are more likely to develop
allergies than babies you're allowed
to exist in the world as
it is messy and
impure. Lies are
all around you. Develop a better bullshit
detector. That's a better
solution than me giving up what I'm a
allowed to read. Who decides that? Who decides what gets the no evidence for that sticker slapped on it?
Most people in this country still have a religion. They believe they have an imaginary best friend in the
sky, who they can talk to to to help them with their problems. Nobody throws up a warning label on
that that says there's no evidence for this. Now, conservatives do seem to have a special talent for
the real
eye-roll stuff
like Hillary's
pizza parlor
pedophile ring
or
Democrats eat babies
lizard people
are running the world
but 41%
of Democrats
last year believe
the hospitalization
rate if you got
COVID-unvaccinated
was over 50%
when it was
actually less than 1%
somebody's
misinformation got to
those people
sometimes
misinformation is
history's first draft.
I see a lot of things on social media
and also on old
fucks media.
And I don't completely believe any of it.
Not right away. Not until I check
it out. And when I ask, is it true?
Usually the answer
turns out to be, well, sort
of. Or yes,
but, yeah. See,
we've all become very adept at saying
things that are technically true but lack
context or that leave out
half the story. So if we're going to ban
untruth? Does that include the half-truth? The quarter-truth? And wait, don't the
wokenest people in the world believe that what really matters is your truth? So yes, of course,
we should ban kitty porn and libel and personal threats and calls for insurrection. That's a no-brainer
because they're already illegal. Just as it would be illegal in an actual town square to whip out your
dick. And so
should it be in the digital
town square? And
so should bots and deep fakes
be banned and anything else that aren't
really the people who say they are?
But that's an entirely different thing
than actual people expressing
an opinion as repugnant
or offensive or as
misguided as some opinions may be.
This is still America.
Where people
have the right to express what they think
including to be wrong, to lie, and yes, the right to be an asshole.
And if you think you know everything and no one else could possibly have some other truth,
you should be glad for that protection, because you're an asshole.
All right, that's our show.
If you want to hear more of me, just bullshitting with people late at night,
there's the Club Random Podcast now.
A lot of fun people.
Mike Tyson will be there Monday.
I want to thank my guest Paul Bagel and Michelle Pafoy and Chloe Maximum.
I'll be at the Mirage in Vegas, May 20th and 21st,
and the Marat in Indianapolis.
June 5th, now go to YouTube, and join us on overtime.
Thank you, folks.
Catch all new episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher every Friday night at 10.
Or watch them anytime on HBO on demand.
For more information, log on to HBO.com.
