Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #640: Sen. Ted Cruz, Pamela Paul, Jordan Peterson
Episode Date: November 11, 2023Bill’s guests are Sen. Ted Cruz, Pamela Paul, and Jordan Peterson (Originally aired 11/10/23) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO
Late Month series
Real Time with Bill Maugh
Start the clock
This is a very
Thank you very much
Very hyped up crowd
tonight
Yes I know why
I know it's because
We're in Hollywood
And the actor's strike is finally over
You
You younger people watching
The actors are the people in
is pointing at the CGI.
But, no, I worry.
I mean, with the actor strike over,
who's going to figure out the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on Twitter?
Here's where we are.
Here's where we are with that.
The Museum of Tolerance here in L.A.
The Museum of Tolerance.
They had a showing a movie about this,
and fistfights broke out.
14 people were treated for irony.
At the Museum of Tolerance, that's what he is.
Well, and they were showing 43 minutes of the Hamas attack on October 7th and Israel.
And without any editorialization, just the footage that they themselves, Hamas, took and wanted the world to see.
But the pro-Palestinian people did demonstrate, they did not like this?
The college kids especially think that the, they prefer to think of the Hamas people as just a kind of a rag-tag,
bunch of underdogs, kind of the bad news bears of the Middle East.
This was a big topic at the Republican debate last night.
I don't know if you saw that.
The, oh, I guess not.
I didn't need that.
I didn't, I can't lie.
I wouldn't.
Please.
Well, they're down to five candidates on the island now.
And all of whom Trump is beating by 40 points.
The only reason to be in this is to be there if Trump for some reason can't run.
That's the one thing.
Republicans and Democrats have been common now.
They're both waiting for their nominees to die.
But it was a good news, bad news week for the Democrats.
Bad news in the six battleground states, Trump is beating Biden in five out of six of them.
And Biden's support among non-white voters dropped 33 points.
And Democrats cannot win with just white people.
Although it hasn't hurt Taylor Swift.
The good news for the Democrats, they do have kind of a kryptonite issue.
Abortion.
America loves abortion.
Even in the red states.
Seven out of seven times, it's on the ballot.
People are saying, no, read my lips, no new babies.
Abortion wins in counties.
Biden lost by 20 points.
If he was smart, he would run as abortin Joe.
I know things are tough, but
aborting Joe feels your pain.
Give a hug to aborting Joe.
But this is the cognitive dissonance in America.
Okay, see, on the one side, the people are like,
no, this is where we are socially.
We are basically pro-choice.
And then the new Speaker of the House
for the Republicans, Mike Johnson,
turns out, this came out this week.
He has an app, you can buy it on your phone,
called Covenant Eyes.
You know, it's basically A-A for masturbators.
It's for people who don't want to masturbate, God knows why.
You get on this app, and then you have an accountability partner
who monitors you if you look at porn, get to notice.
This isn't even the creepiest part of this story.
You know who Mike Johnson's accountability partner is?
His 17-year-old son.
Yeah, my dad just took me fishing.
You know, there's lots of ways to bond.
And, I mean, so this 17-year-old?
17-year-old kid is sitting in class.
Oh, dad's watching anal again.
This is his life?
And also, I think this is a much better deal
for the father than the 17-year-old.
When I was 17-year-old, it never stopped.
So, one last...
Again, last social note, see where the world is moving.
The Vatican.
This is big news that it.
Vatican said they will now baptize transgendered people.
So, you know, this is pretty revolutionizing for the Vatican.
Well, they said the priest is a gay man wearing a dress.
We're practically there anyway.
All right, we've got a great show.
We have Jordan Peterson and Pamela Paul.
But first up, he's the Republican Senator from Texas.
His new book is Unwoke.
How to Defeat Cultural Marxism in America.
Senator Ted Cruz is joining us.
Really show up.
Thank you.
Well, I'm a firm to be here.
Well, I'm...
I'm very appreciative that you'd come.
You know, I'm sure you know this is a show where you have to be up for everything.
That sounds good.
Yeah, I mean, well, let's put that to the test.
And I'm sure you get a lot of guff from people just to be seen talking with me,
and I get it talking to you.
They call it platforming.
This is a terrible place for America to be, right?
Where half the people hate it that we're just talking.
You know, look, it really is, but I'll tell you something.
I actually really appreciate what you do.
And listen, you are an old-school liberal.
Yes, correct.
Number one, you're funny as hell.
I feel so bad about all the jokes I've done about you.
I know.
I mean, wow.
But two-thirds of them were really funny, and I laughed at him.
Oh, great.
I hope so.
But listen, number two, you believe in free speech.
Yes.
And I got to tell you, look, I appreciate it and enjoy your monologues.
I've probably tweeted out your monologues at least a dozen times.
And I'm not sure which one of us is more frightened at how often we're agreeing.
Well, we are agreeing on free speech.
Yeah.
And that's...
And that did morph a lot toward the left.
I mean, certainly the right does it too.
But that's...
Look, I get a lot of shit from people who say, oh, you're so Republican.
Just because I don't get on the crazy train with you.
I am, you know, I don't bend the knee.
Well, and look, there's another thing that you have a show where right and left talk to each other.
Yes.
I don't know of another show in television that doesn't.
No.
I mean, we live in these separate echo changes.
And it's a terrible thing.
If you watch Rachel Maddow and Sean Hannity,
you're in like parallel universes,
and it's not good for America
that we don't have conversations with each other.
Okay, well, let's say this at the beginning of a friendship.
There we go.
So, let's, you know,
one thing friends do for each other is plug.
You got a book.
I do.
It's called Unwoke.
And this is, I was listening to the, you know, highlight real we played before the show.
I heard, Mayor, I am doing jokes about wokeness.
Yeah.
Because that is something we both, I reckon it.
I think of it differently than you do.
I think you think of it as a conspiracy.
It's what I'm getting from the book.
I think it's just the natural result of a society that becomes more effete, more successful,
where they lose perspective, and they just go crazy about a lot of stuff.
So how do you define woke for the people who say, you know, I hear that term.
It's kind of new.
Everybody seems to have a different idea of it.
If you had to, like, very quickly kitchen table it for what would you say woke is?
So what I'm talking about in the book, it is very closely intertwined with what I call cultural Marxism.
So the full title of the book is Unwoke, How to Defeat Cultural Marxism in America.
And it discusses major institutions that have been captured by the extreme left.
And I start with universities.
You know, if you look at what's going on right now,
the rabid anti-Semitism at universities.
There you go.
That's the manifestation of cultural Marxism.
And I traced the history, going back to the 60s and 70s,
when just plain vanilla Marxists began becoming tenured professors
and administrators at schools.
And Karl Marx laid out a worldview
that everything was an inevitable conflict
between oppressors and victims,
and he viewed it socioeconomically,
oppressors were the owners of capital, and the victims were the proletariat. His solution...
And sometimes that was true.
And sometimes that is true. I mean, there is conflict, sure, and there is oppression. I mean,
that's real. His solution was the worst.
It was the violent revolution of the proletariat to forcibly redistribute from the oppressors.
Fast forward to where we are now. I was talking recently with a tech entrepreneur, who's a man
of the left. He's been a Democrat his whole life. And he was asking me, he said, where did all
of this vicious anti-Semitism come from in the squad in the House of Representatives on campuses
across the country. And what I said is, look, for the extreme left, they have coded Jews as
oppressors. And they've coded the Palestinians as victims. And that's why they are cheering for
what they see is the violent overthrow of the victims overthrowing the oppressors. That's why,
look, Harvard, 35 student groups at Harvard, my alma mater.
signed an assonized statement.
Fair enough.
And by the way, you know how many Harvard graduates
it takes to screw in a light bulb? I don't.
Just one. You hold it up. The world
revolves around you.
Oh, you were so close to nailing that joke.
Yeah, I screwed up to punchline. I screwed up.
I do it, too, and I've been doing this for 40 years.
Well, you've got remedial classes afterwards?
Okay. No. No, that's one thing, politicians.
should not do is try to be funny.
It doesn't work unless, you know, there are certain...
By the way, for what it's worth, I agree bad comedy is painful,
but I disagree with you.
You can't do this job without laughing and enjoying it.
Too many politicians take themselves too damn seriously,
and they act like they've got to stick up their ass.
Well, okay.
And just laughing.
Look, on Twitter, I've never seen this side of you.
I'm thrilled.
You know, your reputation, and again, I don't believe anything.
I would say this to everybody.
I don't believe anything because, first of all, what I do here that I think might be true,
it was only ever half the truth.
So when I say I've heard just endlessly that you are a very disliked person in Congress,
you must have heard this a lot.
Maybe once or twice.
Okay.
Where does that come from?
Why is that the rumor?
Is it true?
Look, it varies.
It's true with some.
Listen, Washington, I think, is dysfunctional.
And I'm pissed off at Washington being dysfunctional.
And when I got in the Senate, I tried to fight very hard
to say, let's do what we said we would do.
And that is not a popular position in Washington.
I think both parties bear a lot of the blame for that.
I think Democrats bear a lot of blame,
but Republicans do too.
And I've spent my time.
I tell Democrats all the time, you know,
Democrats in the Senate have a herd mentality.
They all take orders.
They all take orders.
They all, they vote for terrible things in block.
And I tell Democrats, I'm like, it's not the end of the world to stand up to your leadership.
I do it all the time, and you can survive.
And so I have a lot of battles in Washington.
Do you?
I mean, look, we're going to, we're having such a good time, but now you're going to have to answer for Sonny on the causeway.
Okay.
So, I'm just saying, because stand up, you're one of 11 senators who voted not to certify the last election.
Okay, one of 11.
Do you think Biden didn't win?
Look, Biden is clearly the president.
Well, that's not the question or the answer.
Do you think he won?
Was it a fair election?
Those are very different questions.
Okay.
Did he win and is he the president?
Yes. Was it fair?
Look, there were lots of things that were unfair about the last election.
But it's been combed over more than any election ever, even by the people on your side, and they say it's not.
This is from your book.
You say Democrats, who's capacity for shamelessness,
never ceases to astound me,
were no longer willing to play by the rules of democracy.
I know you're funny now, but is that a joke?
The Democrats don't want to play by the rules of democracy?
What was the context before and after that?
I'm sorry, the one sentence I'm not remembering...
Well, I don't know, but you wrote that.
The Democrats are no longer willing to play by the rules of democracy.
I wanted to read it because I feel like it's the exact opposite of what I think,
which is that the Republicans, including you, January 6th, etc.,
are the ones who are now longer willing to play by the rules of democracy.
It seems like...
Wait, wait.
It seems like your idea has switched in the Republican Party.
Two, elections only count if we win.
And then we will endlessly litigate them,
even though your own...
It was laughed out of court, like 60 different courts.
I mean, all...
We have the secretaries of state, even the Republican ones.
Everybody said your...
Trump's own election people said
it was one of the most fair, well-run elections ever.
Why won't you let it go?
So, Bill, you're the one that's not letting it go.
You're the one that's asking about it.
But let me be clear about something.
I'm asking about your history.
Listen, I believe passionately in democracy.
And I also believe voter fraud is a real and persistent problem.
And it's weird that Democrats have taken the views.
It's been studied.
Okay, so you don't think it is.
But you know what?
I have never once seen you or any other host, ask Hillary Clinton why she said in
2016 that Donald Trump was an illegitimate president. I've never seen, you ask Democrats, why
they objected to the presidential certification in 2001. That was George W. Bush. In 2005, that was
George W. Bush. And in 2016, that was Donald Trump. And so I don't think we should be,
have a double standard here. Okay. Well, there is a double standard because there's two
different things going on. One of the remonstration, a mild protestation of something.
Al Gore was the head of the Senate at the time.
He had to pass the baton in an election.
He knew he won.
And his...
He knew he won.
Are you an election denier?
You just said Al Gore won that election.
Well, he...
Okay, he did not win it.
I'm sorry, you're right.
You're right.
I meant to say he won the popular vote.
But that's not actually what chooses the president.
I understand.
But the other candidate's brother stopped the count.
Okay, that's not accurate.
The Supreme Court stopped the count.
His own brother ran that election in Florida, which was the governor of Florida.
You know, they counted the votes, hold on a second.
I mean, facts matter.
They counted the votes four times in Florida.
George W. Bush won all four times.
I was part of the legal team litigating that case.
So I was intimately involved in Bush versus Gore.
Every time they counted the votes, Bush won.
The bigger point is that Al Gore took one for the team.
He came out and said, okay, you know, this was a really fucked up election,
but this is America.
The jewel in our crown is that we pass power peacefully,
and I'm not going to be the first guy not to do that.
Nixon let it go in 1960.
that could have been a screwy election.
And Hillary came out in her goddamn purple suit.
So she did it.
Before the sun rose, she did it.
Before the cock rowed three times,
she came out and said Trump is the president.
That's what you guys will not do.
Joe Biden is the president.
What do you mean we won't do it?
I'm fighting him every day,
and he's screwing up the country and the world.
So I'm quite aware Joe Biden's the president.
I wish he wasn't, but it's not lost on me
who it is that caused a war.
in Europe with Ukraine that gave $100 billion to Iran and the terrorist attacking Israel.
He caused the war in Ukraine?
Yes.
Do you want to know how?
No, but next time.
Thank you, Ted Cruz.
I got a bit.
All right.
Thank you.
That was spirited.
Come back and see you?
I look forward.
All right.
I'll see you on overtime.
We can finish it up.
Ted Cruz.
All right.
You can't say he's not willing to engage.
All right.
He is an author and professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Toronto,
who's online education platform,
Peterson Academy will be available in early
2024. Jordan Peterson
the very dapper,
Jordan Peterson.
And she was the long-time editor
of the New York Times book review
and is now an opinion columnist for the New York
Times. Pamela Paul, welcome to our show.
It's about time we have we have.
Okay.
So I feel like this week was dominated by political
news. There was that big poll
that everybody thought it said it was a
very, very esteemed poll. It said
Trump is beating Biden in the, we only have elections in like six states.
I mean, that's the whole country.
It's Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, Nevada, Pennsylvania.
That's the whole country.
Everybody else is just watching.
So those matter, and Trump is beating him in almost all of them.
Then we had an off-year election, and abortion was on the ballot, as I mentioned in the monologue.
This is the kryptonite, I think, that Democrats have against the Republicans.
People really did not like having that right taken away.
So I guess my question is, these two things playing out against each other,
can they hang this issue on Trump if he's the candidate,
since it's the most, because he did brag about appointing the Supreme Court
that overturned Roe v. Wade.
I mean, I think that abortion is like the defund the police for the Republicans.
I think it works against the Republicans more than it does for the Democrats.
Certainly when it comes to a national law.
to a presidential election.
I think it's really tempting to overread the tea leaves
in terms of how much the Democrats' success
in this off-year election,
which is undeniable,
will then affect the presidential election in 2024.
But that issue, I feel like that got to something.
I'm talking about red states.
This has been on the ballot in seven states.
Now, you would guess California, of course,
we went through this, Vermont.
Kansas, Kentucky, Montana.
Ohio. Even red state people say, you know what, life begins when you can afford it?
Yeah. I think that abortion is as much an economic issue as it is a moral issue, and I think kids are pricey.
No kids are pricey. And I think most Americans...
Like buying a boat.
Right? I mean, it's always something you've got to repair or...
I think it would be convenient for the Democrats if abortion could be the primary issue in the election.
But the fact that Trump is so popular seems to indicate that that's not going to work very well.
There's a mystery here, right?
And the mystery is, at least in part, why he is so popular, despite the fact that he's gone after constantly.
And he's in court and people are, what would you say, ambivalent about his moral character?
Nonetheless, no matter what's thrown at him, he seems to continue to ride high in the polls.
And I don't think that's an issue the Democrats have dealt with seriously.
all. And diverting the conversation to abortion isn't going to change that one bit, as far as I can
see. Oh, I think it will. I just think he is uniquely qualified, shall we say, because he's probably
had a lot of abortions here.
So it's even...
But is there a moral dimension here? I mean, I think a lot of the reason why this is so popular,
even in states where you wouldn't think it is, where people supposedly have traditional values,
you know, they call it the red states and the flyover states.
in the middle of the country.
Even there, I think we've come to this place
where women are of the opinion
that the guy I fuck
is not necessarily the guy
I want to have a baby with.
I see that as progress.
Yes.
But maybe you don't.
It isn't obvious to me that it's progress.
And the reason for that in part
is because one of the unintended consequences
of the sexual revolution seems to be
that the utility of sex itself
seems to be increasingly questionable among young people.
I mean, in Japan, for example,
I think it's 30% of people now under 30 are virgins,
spoke same in South Korea.
And young people are less likely to have sex
than they were 20 years ago.
And so there is a case that you can make
for enhanced sexual freedom,
but the real world consequences of that
being that sex has become, by all appearances,
increasingly terrifying for young people
because of its complexity.
I don't think that the freedom...
That's not why. It's because the phone.
Yeah, but now I think that's...
Wait a second.
That's associated with the same thing.
You know, you were...
You made some comments about the new speaker
and the app that he's using with his son.
Oh.
I mean, it isn't the phone.
Well, it isn't the phone exactly.
It's porn on the phone.
And porn is part of the sexual revolution, let's say.
But what's happening is that the sexual revolution,
as far as I can tell, is devouring sex.
And I think that making sex easier for people,
we thought that that would...
We thought, I suppose,
especially in the aftermath of the pill,
that that would open up a whole new world of sexual delight.
And I don't think it's turning out that way at all.
It certainly doesn't seem to be turning out that way.
It's 35% of it.
I mean, I'm trying at my house.
35% of internet.
I mean, but isn't this the evolution of society?
I mean, can we really put this genie back in the bottle?
I don't think we can blame the sexual revolution.
The fact that kids aren't having.
having sex on the sexual revolution.
What would you blame it on?
I think that they are watching pornography.
They're on their phones.
I think that they're socializing less frequently in person,
so there are less opportunities to do so.
I think that some of the fallout of the Me Too movement,
which I think has largely been a good thing,
is that there's a lot of fear among young people
about ever having sex and having the consequences
not just be an unwanted pregnancy.
but also perhaps some kind of allegation.
And I think that sex has become frightening for a lot of years.
I would say that I don't see a difference between that and the argument that I was making
because even the onset of porn online on the phones is a consequence of the sexual revolution.
I mean, that all is, you know that, you know perfectly well,
that emerged in a straight line from Playboy through Penthouse to Hustler to like 24-hour
on-demand porn. And that is a consequence of the sexual revolution because one of the things
the sexual revolution attempted to, what would you say, facilitate was the idea that sex
could be merely for pleasure. And I don't think that's true. I think the sex that's for pleasure
will devour itself. And I think that's what's playing out. And I mean, that's partly why young men.
And I think the fear issue that you're discussing is also relevant, but I think it's related to
the sexual revolution as well. Sex for pleasure devours itself. That's what it looks like. I feel like
you're talking for one type of person, and we're not all that way. You know, I feel like there's a
giant spectrum, and it's very rarely talked about, of levels of horniness, shall we call it.
I mean, no, I mean, like...
But people in committed relationships have more sex.
But is it better?
What?
No, I'm serious.
I mean...
Well, you clap, but I think...
I think generally it is better.
For you, that's what I'm saying.
Well, it is for me for sure.
Okay, but I feel like you're speaking as if you are representative of the entire human race,
and I'm saying there's a very large spectrum.
There are people, I was just reading about their convention last week who are, they're not anything.
They're like, asexual.
The asexual, yes.
Yeah, they're like, just get away from me.
They're like...
A and LGBTQ plus and IA.
Are they part of that now?
Yes, they're with the gaze and would feel very uncomfortable,
and they're not necessarily associated, but yes.
Why do they want to lump everybody together like that?
You think if you were a unique, you were celebrating your uniqueness,
you wouldn't like, oh, and now we let's add the Z.
Because they have nothing in common, these people.
They do have one thing, they do have one thing in common.
They have one thing in common.
And that's the attempt to define themselves in terms of sexual.
behavior. Like, that's one thing that's in common.
And that's a big mistake because
you can't reduce yourself
to your sexual behavior.
Right. No, you...
I agree. And you shouldn't.
But again, but again, you would
see that there is something called like a nymphomaniac, right?
I mean, that's a real...
In the imagination of adolescence, yes,
but...
They're pretty rare in real life, Bill.
Not in the porn industry.
Yeah, well...
That's why.
where they go, you know, like, like, you know, priests, let's not go.
Let's not go back.
Well, okay, but as a psychologist, what do you think about this?
I get your point about this element of creepy, but a guy who has an app with his son,
with his 17-year-old son, where they monitor each other and nark on each other for looking at porn,
isn't that sick?
Well, I think it's a more complicated issue than that.
Well, that's what it is.
Well, look, every parent that there is now struggles with how their children use their phone.
And I don't know the specifics of what Mike Johnson is doing with his son to monitor his behavior.
It's simple.
It's like AA for masturbators.
Like if you...
It sends an alert to the other person's phone.
Well, okay, how do you think...
How do you think...
How do you think...
Go Guardian, which is used to schools
to monitor kids, but it's monitor and sex.
Well, how do you...
But...
I understand the satirical bit
with regard to Johnson, but...
But the question is,
what do you think parents should do
to keep an eye on the behavior
of their kids on phones?
Because the phones are very pathological, right?
And pornography is very hard on young men
and on young women. It's hard on them
physiologically, because it interferes.
interferes with sexual function. It sets in a ridiculous and unattainable standard for young
women, a crazy standard. And it's unbelievably addictive. And so it's easy to make fun of someone
for attempting to regulate that behavior. But I don't know what the alternative is precisely.
I'm not knocking completely regulating. But this is the case, okay, I can regulate, I can understand
dad regulating teenage son, but son looking at what dad's doing? That's the part I find.
Maybe that's a quid pro quo.
Yeah, yeah, help me up.
That's fucked up.
First of all, kids and parents should not be equals like that.
Dad should be able to do some things that the kid isn't doing.
If he can't rub one out in the garage, what...
I don't know how this show.
The show is usually a little more highbrow.
I swear to God, you came on an odd night.
That's just the effect.
Okay.
So, I...
I'm going to change this.
subject. I started this season. I can't believe it's six weeks now since the strike ended for
us, with my Ruth Bader Biden editorial saying he's going to be Ruth Bader Biden. He's going to be
the person who stayed too long and really suffered his reputation for it. Okay, now it seems like
the drumbeat is getting louder every week. I see David Axelrod, who was the guy who was Obama's
main campaign guru and when Joe was.
was his vice president, George Will, also, saying the Democrats are walking into a disaster here.
They just can't do it. We all like Joe. And now we see he's losing in five of six states, the battleground states.
Meanwhile, I read about this guy, Andy Beshear. Now, I had Dean Phillips on last week. He was here and over there and never heard of him.
Totally ready to vote for him. Now Andy Beshear, he's the governor of Kentucky.
Kentucky. Talk about a flyover state, okay? Democrat, and he's winning in Kentucky,
including places where Trump won by 50 points in some counties. Why can't we have Andy Beshear?
Bashir Phillips? Well, I mean, I do think that Democrats are finally at least saying out loud
what they've been saying quietly for months, which is that there is a real concern about Biden's age.
And of course, people will then say, well, Trump is old too, right?
He's going to be 77.
Biden is going to be 81 in a few weeks.
But as the boomers say, age is more than just a number, right?
So you have old 75-year-olds and you have young, bigger age-old.
Case by case.
Right.
So I think the perception, no matter what the reality is,
that these are two old men who could easily die before, you know, the election next year,
the perception
sorry
but the perception
is that
Biden is tired
that he seems to fumble
and you know
Trump may be manic
and out of his mind
but at least he's energetic about it
it's youth
it's
that's true
no one of the points I made is
I definitely think Biden
can still be president
and I think he's on a pretty good
first term
he can't run for president
except for the wars
The wars?
Well, the wars. So you're with Ted Cruz, he started that war?
Ukraine?
I think you can lay a fair bit of what happened in Israel on Biden's plate.
Because I can explain that. I guess I should.
I know that Saudis were hot to sign the Abraham Accords two years ago.
And I have a sneak more than a sneaking suspicion that the reason they weren't pursued more assiduously
because it would have meant giving Trump some credit for something that happened during his term.
And I know that the Iranians are fomenting dissent in Palestine through Hamas
to pressure the Jews into doing something so, you know, what would you call it, military,
that'll split the Arab world.
And I think you can put a fair bit at that, of that at the feet of the Democrats,
who didn't bring Saudi Arabia into the Abraham Accords when they could have two years ago.
And I do think that's because they wouldn't give Trump any credit for what he accomplished with the Abraham Accords.
And I do think that's why we're in the position we're in right now.
And, you know, Biden also alienated the Saudis the first time that he went to talk to them
and pushed them into the arms of China.
And even despite that, the Saudis are still lurking in the background,
trying to ensure that the Abraham Accords won't fold.
And so that's not good.
That was a big mistake.
We had a chance there to make peace.
And the Saudis were behind the Abraham Accords.
So, so...
Yes, please.
I'm surprised to learn that Biden has started two wars in Ukraine and in Israel,
because I was thinking it was Putin and Hamas.
Tell him. I'm with you.
I mean, yeah, I feel like you're making...
I feel like you're making a very big bet on a side issue.
I don't think anything you said is wrong.
I just don't think it's not the main part of it.
Well, do you think it's not the main part with regard to Hamas?
Because Hamas, to me, like they're Iran's puppets.
They are.
And they are trying to split.
They're trying to split the Muslim world at the moment
so that the Muslims line up on the side of Iran
and not on the side of the Abraham Accord, sign-eats.
And they're doing that quite effectively.
And it could be disastrous.
I don't think it has to happen.
But the Saudis were silent partners in the Abraham Accord movement,
and they would have signed.
And look, I was for Obama's proposal to bring Iran around.
I thought, you know, because the Iranian people
are not unsophisticated and not stupid
and have a history of Western influence.
I mean, under the Shah,
this was not like other countries in the region.
So I thought, okay, you know, they have a terrible regime,
but that's not the people.
Maybe we can fix this.
Now, I mean, to your point about being puppets,
if Iran gets a bomb.
Win, win, not if.
I think they're three months away chronically.
Well, I think they positioned themselves
so if push came to shove,
they could have a bomb in three months.
That's my understanding the situation.
Okay, well, they were false.
away from the bomb when we had that agreement,
when we had the agreement that Obama made,
that Trump pulled out of.
They were quite far away from it.
So let's not forget that.
But my point was,
if Iran gets a bomb,
Hamas gets a bomb.
Right?
That can't happen.
So I don't know what to do now about Iran,
but I would say this,
the axis of evil that George Bush used to talk about,
where he just pulled three countries out of his ass
that made no sense.
I feel like,
actually, there is an axis of it.
of evil now. And it's Russia
and China and Iran.
It's like, they all have lined up with each other.
They just don't like us in our
way of life. I hate to sound like George Bush.
But this is a real axis of evil. 20 years later,
I thought, would you agree with that
assessment?
I don't know if it's an axis yet, but
it could become that, you know, because
it isn't obvious how well those countries
can integrate their diverse interests.
They're doing it. G and Porgner always
Kissy face.
And Iran also are closer.
Putin is supporting Hamas in this particular war.
But I also think that Hamas has its own agenda apart from Iran, and that they're very happy to accept the money in support of Iran.
But they also have their own agenda to destabilize the Middle East, which is to get, you know,
have Israel be alienated from all of its allies in the region.
Yeah, I must say I am struggling with people's moral equivalency still.
I mean, Barack Obama, who has rarely disappointed me, did so this week.
I mean, his statement, I mean, it's not a horrible statement, but he said, if you want to solve the problem, then you have to take in the whole truth, and then you have to admit nobody's hands are clean.
Literally, that's true, of course.
But just give you two examples where this is, I don't think, a helpful statement at this moment.
First of all, the attack was only a month ago.
A more savage attack than we've ever seen in reverse.
There's a big difference between collateral damage and what Hamas did.
Secondly, okay, the Israelis are now allowing a four-hour pause for people to get out.
I'm sorry, people say, oh, wow, big of them.
Okay, but it is a war that the other side started.
So interesting.
When they fire it Israel, it's a war.
When Israel fires back, it's a war crime.
A little crazy.
And also, would Hamas do that?
Would they give four-hour pause?
No pausing.
And then Israel's heritage minister,
was asked in an interview about using a nuke on Gaza.
And he said that's one of the possibilities.
He was fired, not allowed in the cabinet meeting anymore,
disavowed by the prime minister.
Would that happen in reverse?
So enough with the moral equivalencies, please.
I mean, I think the only moral equivalency you can make there
is that there are civilian deaths on both sides, and that's tragic.
And no one wants civilian deaths in this scenario,
except for Hamas.
Iran probably wants them to.
Yes.
But who very deliberately set out to kill civilians,
whereas, as you pointed out,
Israel is trying not to kill civilians.
Yes, and also because, and this minister said one thing that was true,
I don't think his nuclear comment was very smart,
but he said, you can't scare them with death.
That's a big difference with this conflict.
Especially with other people's death.
With or with their own?
own. People who care about other people in wars, but they do often mostly care about their own.
I think we are forgetting a little bit of the Islamic fanaticism part of this, because you're not supposed to talk about that anymore.
Because if you do, even matter how realistic it is, it becomes Islamophobia. But it's true.
The people in Hamas who kill their own people think they're doing them a favor because they're becoming martyrs.
That's a different kind of situation you have to deal with that Israel has, that most people don't.
Well, it's also in their charter, basically, to continue this war until, you know.
So what do you think of this?
More than 750 journalists now, this is just today from Washington Post, L.A. Times, Guardian, signed a letter, condemning Israel's killing of journalists.
39 have been killed.
And they are urging integrity in Western media coverage of Israel's atrocities against Palestinians.
no mention of the other thing that happened.
You can imagine this will continue to mount,
and it's playing into the Iranian's hands as far as I'm concerned,
because Israel is going to continue its victory in Palestinian territory.
But as Israel's victory mounts,
it's going to become easier and easier for the virtue signalers
to denounce Israel as oppressors.
So if they win militarily, which they clearly will,
they're going to lose in the public opinion sphere.
And I think that plays right into the hands of the Iranian population.
propagandists because they can cast Israel as the victims or as the perpetrators that way and the
Palestinians as the victims and split again, turn the Arab world against the Jews. It's exactly
what they want to do because then the focus isn't on them. That's a continual trick of, of, what would
you say, totalitarian anti-Semites, is when the fingers pointed at them and people are saying, well,
you're the tyrants, you're the oppressors, they pointed to Jews and they say, well, those people
are doing pretty well over there? Are you sure they're not the real oppressors? That's what happened in
Vienna back at the turn of the century when the anti-Semitism got its roots,
like got its development before it spread to Germany in Austria.
It's very convenient, and the Iranians are playing us like masters, as far as I'm concerned,
and we're going to see them do a great job of that tomorrow in London,
where there's a million people coming to March, you know, for the Palestinian victims.
All part and parcel, I think, of Iran's focus on destabilizing the West
and turning the Arabs against the Jews.
Well, I want to talk a little bit about this particular petition,
because there have been so many of these open letters and petitions,
and I'm happy to say there was no one from the New York Times
who signed that particular petition,
as we are not allowed to sign these things, these open letters.
But I bet you there's lots of people who work there who would,
who would have wanted to.
I'm feeling a little left out.
I can't sign any of them, but I wouldn't anyway.
One of the things I want to say about that particular letter
because I actually go in deep and kind of look at who has signed it
is this is by 750 journalists in the,
the same way that open letters, I mean, you probably can tell if there's an open letter in the
TV industry and you look down the names, you'd be like, that guy hasn't made a show in years,
right? You can look at this letter. A lot of them are not journalists, first of all. It's similar
to other open letters, where they'll say contributors from the New York Times and, you know,
a thousand have signed it and you look and someone maybe wrote a book review, you know, 15 years ago
and was never hired to do a book review again. A lot of the names on that list are not actually
journalists. I just want to make that clear.
But they were journalists? Some of them
were, a lot of them don't have any
affiliations, so they don't have to worry
about having any repercussions
because this is not the role
of journalists. And that letter
is couched in something that I do
think is important to journalism, which is the opening
part, which is to say that
I think it's now 37 journalists
or people who work in the media generally have
been killed in this conflict so far,
which is tragic.
And obviously, no one, well, some people have we established to want that,
but most people don't want a journalist to die.
But then in the substance of the letter, it then goes on to,
and what bothers me is they use the Times' slogan without fear or favor,
but they go on to list a bunch of things that they would like the media to do
to reframe the conversation, which is essentially in a more pro-Hamaz direction.
I couldn't be more pro-Hamaz than it is now.
They're saying they want the newsrooms to adopt words,
such as apartheid.
I hear it all the time anyway.
It's wrong, and I hear it.
Genocide.
Again, wrong.
Israel not trying to commit genocide.
The other side blatantly saying
we would love to commit genocide on you.
And these are...
These are journalists or ex-journalism...
So that should just invalidate it right off the bat.
What's it?
He said people from the Guardian signed it,
so that should just invalidate it right off the bat.
What are you...
What do you...
you make of this strange psychosis, I don't know, that's going around where people just seem to
be saying, don't show me, I don't want to see it, the posters that people have put up of the
hostages and then other people just tear down the posters. Why? Like, what's behind that? Or this
movie that they showed at the Museum of Tolerance the other night here in L.A., and there were
protesters, and the protesters said it's propaganda. It wasn't propaganda. It was exactly
what happened.
Yes. And it was...
Well, it is...
What is it with them just...
TMI, you know?
Because there's a very simple narrative
that is being applied to the situation,
which is this decolonization narrative
that divides the world into
oppressor and oppressed.
And frankly, if you're talking about Jews
versus Palestinians, like
the oppression Olympics is pretty hard to judge.
These are both people who have suffered
a great deal. But what
happens is that they are then saying
that being oppressed is
know if the Holocaust...
But this is the main issue.
I mean, part of the reason that you see all this foolishness
on university campuses, too, is because
people have bought this idiot
meta-Marxism, which is that the way
to look at every social relationship that people
ever have is through the lens of power.
And that is, we can put that squarely
at the feet of the universities, as far as I'm concerned,
is, you know, marriage is a patriarchal
institution and business is nothing
but oppression, and you have
to view every single situation that
emerged historically as oppressor versus
oppressed. And then once you get that,
which you can get in about two minutes, if you sit
in the course that teaches that sort of thing,
you have a lens to moralize about the whole world
through. And then you see the situation
is that the leftists have already decided
the Palestinians are the victims.
And as you pointed out, if you're a victim,
then you're morally righteous.
And even more conveniently, if you
stand for the victim, then you're
morally righteous regardless of what you do
with your own life. And that's pretty much
what university students are taught from the time
they enter the university classroom. And
That's how they, you know, orient themselves morally.
And that's at the hands of the radical left, too, Bill.
And one of the things the Democrats also have to pay the price for, I would say,
is their absolute refusal to draw a line between the moderate Democrats and the extremists.
They're completely incapable of doing that.
Like, I've talked to 40 senators and congressmen in the last five years.
I asked them all the same question, including RFK.
He wouldn't answer either.
When does the left go too far?
Well, we certainly bloody well saw it in the last month.
didn't we? Because they got the oppressor, oppressive narrative, a little mucked up, we might say.
And their consequences of that are going to unfold pretty brutally over the next few months.
All right. Before we lose your blood pressure, I know. I am going to go to new rules, everybody.
New rules. Thank you, panel. Okay. Okay, here they are. New rule. Deshaun Brown,
the man accused of masturbating in an Iowa target and then claiming it was a dildo, not his actual penis,
has to tell us, and that's better how.
Better to just say, hey, we all have a lot of time to kill waiting for a manager to unlock the deodorant.
New World, someone must tell me, what was the pitch for food trucks?
Was it, let's make a restaurant with nowhere to sit that runs on gasoline?
Or was it, what if the food delivery guy made you go to him?
Newell, the Atlanta woman who says her date ran out on the check after she ate 48 oysters
has to answer a few questions.
One, if oysters are an aphrodisiac, how unfuckable with this guy?
And two, are you a walrus?
Newell, if you self-righteously announced that you're leaving Twitter or Facebook
and then returned within a week, you must describe in great detail exactly what it was like
the moment you realized you had nothing better to do.
New old books have to stop telling me there are no excuses.
There's the no excuses diet, no excuses detox, no excuses leadership, management, university, football coach, other football coach, football player, other football player.
No excuses, the true story of a congenital amputee who became a champion in wrestling and in life.
Living with no excuses, another amputee, no hands and no excuses.
Yeah, you guessed it.
Apparently this title really sells books.
So pick up a copy of my new volume.
No excuses.
I'm not drunk, high, or having a bad day.
I just generally think your baby's ugly.
Okay.
And finally, new rule.
If humanity can impose rules on warfare,
let's do something really ambitious.
Let's try them on high school.
Because our public schools are no longer safe.
For the teachers.
A 15-year-old in Houston this year,
sucker punched his teacher for confiscating his phone
after screaming,
give me my phone.
I told you to give me my fucking phone.
Hey, Sprint, you may have a new spokesperson.
In Florida, a high school student
beat a teacher's aide unconscious
for taking his Nintendo Switch.
Hitting the teacher?
I used to get sent to the principal's office
for rolling my eyes.
Go online.
You can see endless videos of this stuff,
of kids threatening and punching teachers.
What is this, jet blue?
What have we let our schools turn into?
A third of teachers in America say they've been harassed or threatened,
and one in seven in this country has been physically attacked.
2023 kicked off with the story of a six-year-old boy
taking a gun to school in Newport News, Virginia,
shooting his teacher and then declaring,
I shot that bitch dead.
which would be a cool last line for a Mickey Spillane novel.
But a six-year-old, the librarian at the school added some context to the story saying,
every day in every one of our schools, teachers, students, and other staff members are being hurt.
Every day, they're hit, they're bitten, they're beaten.
No wonder 50% of teachers express a desire to quit or transfer to something less dangerous,
like walking Joe Biden's dog.
No wonder 86% of public schools have a teacher shortage
because 20 years ago, if you said American high school,
people pictured this.
Now they picture this.
Only 8% of schools say it's easy to even find bus drivers.
A few weeks ago, some Oklahoma middle schoolers were acting up on the bus,
so the driver pulled over and said he wasn't going to go anywhere
until they quieted down.
So the kids immediately obeyed because,
he was the adult. I'm joking, of course. They went even more bat-shit. And when school officials
reviewed video of the incident, all those kids were punished. I'm joking again. Of course,
the kids were given counseling, and the driver was fired, arrested, in charge with child abuse.
And that is the root of our problem. Moms and dads used to have the backs of teachers and authority
figures, but now their precious progeny can never do anything wrong.
so it's made education impossible.
And I know you're saying, Bill, what do you know about it?
You never had kids.
I know, jealous.
But I know this.
A teacher today looks out every morning
and sees 25 phones distracting 25 kids,
undeterred by any authority to pay attention or even be civil.
And each kid, represented by the high-powered legal defense team of mom and dad.
No, I'm sure there are parents seeing this and saying,
that's not us and this isn't our experience.
True, not all schools are violent and scary,
but they are all diploma mills
that allow students to graduate
without demanding the kids no basic shit.
25 years ago, George W. Bush asked,
is our children learning?
Well, it's only gotten worse.
Only 33% of U.S. children
can read at a level of proficiency.
If you're attending an American high school now,
that's about one-third.
So I'm not surprised that homeschooling
is America's fastest-growing form of education
and not just with weirdo-Christian families
who make their daughters wear a bonnet.
To millions of parents,
anything is better now than public education.
And that includes Catholic school.
You know, in 1970,
only 2.7% of the kids who went to Catholic school
were not Catholic.
Now it's 22%.
Yeah.
Catholic school eighth graders are two full grade levels above public school kids,
because their school is in the safe space for fucking off.
They're told, no, you can't be on your phone here,
and your pronouns are shut up and sit down.
How fucked up is this country that to get a no-bullshit education now,
you have to go to the place that's completely based on bullshit.
What we need in this country is a chain of non-bullshit.
Catholic Catholic schools. And since many celebrities have opened their own schools,
oh yeah, that's how serious we are about education in America. We let celebrities do it.
LeBron has one. George Clooney, Pitbull, Tony Bennett had one, Andre Agassi, Kanye had one.
Well, now I'm thinking of doing it and opening Bill Maher's Catholic school.
It's like traditional Catholic school just without the religion.
the molesting.
At Bill Morris Catholic School, we do school,
old school.
With a curriculum called school classic,
rule one, no phones.
All day, no exceptions.
Not just so the kids aren't distracted
when they're trying to learn, but also because
it forces hovering parents to leave
them the fuck alone for eight hours.
You're the parent, not their probation officer.
Other rules include no making up a
disorder that allows your kid to get more time on the test, we call that by its original name,
cheating. No participation ribbons, no turning in anything late, no vaping, no emotional
support animals, and of course, if a student doesn't maintain a C average or higher, absolutely
no sex with the teacher.
Oh, that's our show. I'll be at the San Diego Civic Theater, January 27, the hobby at Houston,
March 2nd, and Philmore, Miami Beach, March 23rd. I want to thank Jordan Peeleman.
Mr. Peterson, Pamela Paul, Senator Ted Cruz, now go watch Overton on CNN at 1130 or catch it Saturday morning on YouTube.
Thank you very much, 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.
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