Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #672: Bjorn Lomborg, Stephanie Ruhle, Bret Stephens

Episode Date: September 21, 2024

Bill’s guests are Bjorn Lomborg, Stephanie Ruhle, Bret Stephens (Originally aired 9/20/24) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Starting point is 00:00:45 You're made for negotiate. And the T.D. is there to you Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series Real Time with Bill Maugh.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Sit down. We have so much. This fellow, I mean, unbelievable. The amount of news we have to cover it's a good thing we've stopped clapping. So let's not bury the lead. The big story this week that tried to shoot Trump again. That's not funny. Okay.
Starting point is 00:02:06 I'm being serious now. The second time this happened, I said this before, there can be no fuss on this. This is not funny. Okay? It's not okay. It's not okay to wish it happened. Well, this is a problem.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Well, I mean, look, this happens too frequently. I'm sorry, this happened on the golf course. A guy was laying in weight. And it happens too much. In fact, besides the shooter, there were two other shooters beside him waiting to play through. This has got to stop.
Starting point is 00:02:45 And, uh, Of course, the NRA had to come out with this statement. This is no time to talk about gun control. They said guns do not kill people. Pagers kill people. Yeah, that's the other big story this week. The fight with Hezbollah is on there in the Middle East, and the way Israel did it, it's pretty amazing.
Starting point is 00:03:09 You know, terrorists know this for a long time. First thing you've got to do, get rid of your cell phone because they could track you there. So they've been using old-school pagers. And the Israelis this week made all the pagers blow up. in what they call Operation 1980s drug dealer. Yes. Do not fuck with Israel, man.
Starting point is 00:03:36 They took the fight from their river to their pants. Blow up a lot of dicks. Oh, I'm telling you, nobody's in the move to take any shit these days. Did you see Kamala with Oprah Winfrey? Asked her about owning a gun. And Kamala said, anybody breaks into my house as getting shot.
Starting point is 00:03:58 And Trump immediately accused her of turning even blacker. Well, Trump, Trump is losing his mind. He's losing his mind. He's losing his cool. And he's going to lose the election. That's it. I put down my marker on that last week. Made my prediction.
Starting point is 00:04:33 But this, I'm telling you, even for him, it's going off the rails. He keeps saying now, kids are undergoing sex change operations at school. At school? We're doing it at school? Wow, and I was nervous for picture day. School. Oh, and you know, in that case, girls who want to become boys, you got to get them early, before first period.
Starting point is 00:05:07 There is a Republican who was the candidate for governor, governor, in North Carolina named Mark Robinson, and he's a super-Christy, Jesus-loving, hard-right conservative, African-American, man and then C&N has dug up a lot of his past. That's what happens when you run. Okay, he was on all these websites. He liked tranny porn. Didn't care about abortion, he said, and he wanted
Starting point is 00:05:38 to, or intimated he would like to bring back slavery. And of course the Republican reaction to this is predictable. Awful. Unforgivable. Continue. Yes. Yes, and he also referred to himself as a black Nazi who all
Starting point is 00:06:04 He also posted that he spied on women in the girls' locker room. So he's a peeping Tom and an uncle Tom. That's something new. I've never... I've said this for 25 years. When you think the Republicans can't go lower, they do. I mean, a black Nazi, and I think it is. You know, on his website, he referred to his penis as pee-wee German.
Starting point is 00:06:36 And this is... And this is embarrassing because the Trump campaign has a rally scheduled 4th, North Carolina, tomorrow. And they told Mark Robinson you are no longer welcome there. Absolutely not. This is for white Nazis only. So now the Republicans want to replace him with someone less freaky. But Diddy's in jail. So, well, I mean, come on.
Starting point is 00:07:12 That is an American tragedy story. I mean, Pete Did he, I don't know if anybody's fallen from that height. I mean, this guy is worth, they say, over 400. million dollars from basically three sources owning a record label, brand affiliation, and buying lube in bulk. Did you see this? I don't want to judge a book by its cover. But they seized a thousand bottles of lube and baby oil in his house
Starting point is 00:07:50 because he was having these parties. They called freak-offs, which went on for. days. Sometimes people needed IV. They were partying so hard. And, you know, a freak off, I'm all good with it. The one thing that always bothered me about it is, do you bring a gift? And I would, and then you're like, well, I'll bring baby oil, and then you get there, oh, everybody brought him. Put it with me out. It's just, but, oh, I mean, I don't know if he's ever going to see the light of day again. He's in jail. They wouldn't even give him bail. I mean, the charges, sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, obstruction of dresses.
Starting point is 00:08:38 And you may say, arson, that's going a little bit too far, but you try putting out a baby oil fire. We've got a great show. We have Brett Stevens and Stephanie Woolle. But first up, he is a Danish political scientist, an author of the recently re-reelist book, False Alarm, how climate change panic, cost us, trillions, hurts the poor, and fails to fix the planet. Bjorn Longbourg. You are? How are you, sir? How are you?
Starting point is 00:09:05 Good for me. Good a while. Thank you. Okay. All right. I'm so glad you're here because we can talk about environment. Every time we have a political campaign in this country, it becomes the forgotten issue. People care about it, and they care about it, and they care about it, and then they just don't seem to want to talk about it,
Starting point is 00:09:24 maybe because it doesn't poll very well. But, I mean, you are a skeptic of a lot of what goes on. about what people say about how dire climate change is. And I think that's good. I think we need skepticism. But I must say, I am skeptical of you. You should be. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:09:41 We all just need to be skeptical. So, first of all, you've never been paid by anybody, right? Like an oil company? No, we don't take money from oil companies. And the important part here is to remember that what we're talking about is really just saying, what does the science tell us and what does the economics tell us? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:59 Climate change is a real problem. It is one of the things that we need to fix in the 21st century. But it's not this amygdine that it's been made out to be. You know, you hear on the news these catastrophic calamitous climate stories all the time. But these are very carefully selected worst-case scenarios, often based on ultra- unrealistic scenarios. But I've seen you do the opposite. Sorry?
Starting point is 00:10:23 I've seen you do the opposite. Okay. Well, it's a while ago. I'm not remembering what year, but maybe it's 15 years. Are you saying that sea levels in the last two years hadn't risen? But if you look at the chart over time, they are. And if you cherry-picked two years, I mean, that's what the climate deniers always did. And I know you were not a denier.
Starting point is 00:10:46 I wouldn't have you on if you were. But the point I was trying to make there was actually, and you can read the whole story, and it was in the Guardian newspaper. And the point I was trying to make was you constantly hear this thing is getting, Incredibly bad and then a couple of years later it doesn't on the sea level rise it was actually such that those two years were going down But obviously I even said it is going to go back up But the point here is that we can't make these arguments just to show here's something that's really terrible going on and then scare people I agree that I really hated when people want to manipulate me
Starting point is 00:11:23 You know try to move me to just tell me the truth But I feel like the title of the book, False Alarm, I don't like that. I think that goes way too far. It's not a false alarm, right? All right. So it's false in the sense that we're being told this is the end of the world. A lot of people believe this is really the end of the world, a new OECD survey of all the rich countries. And it could be.
Starting point is 00:11:54 Not tomorrow, but it could be. You know, Dick Cheney, when we were fighting terrorism, said if there's a 1% chance. This is their reasoning to go into Iraq, which is stupid. Okay. If there's a 1% chance, we should treat it like it could happen. I feel like this is more than a 1% chance. Okay. I'm going to show you some of the data that actually indicates this is a problem, but it's not the end of the world by any means. So there's two of the world's leading climate economists. One is Richard Tall, one of the most quoted climate economists from this year, and the other one is William Nordhaus, the guy who got the only Nobel Prize in climate
Starting point is 00:12:30 climate economics, they both made estimates across all the different estimates of how bad is climate change going to be. By the end of the century at a 3 degree centigrade or 5.4 degree Fahrenheit temperature rise, the cost is going to be somewhere between 2 and 3% of GDP. But what will the ocean look like? I mean, I'm not talking about oceans rising. I'm talking about oceans dying. And the world can't live without dead oceans. And it seems like they're in bad shape between all the plastic in them.
Starting point is 00:13:00 They're overfitched. I mean, there's very many places have no fish left at all. They're too acidic. Coral reefs. I know you've talked about, oh, that's exaggerated. Tell me about why you think the coral reef problem is exaggerated. That's just the data. So can I just finish the other point I was trying to make before we go on to the coral reefs?
Starting point is 00:13:23 So 2 to 3% of global GDP is a problem. But remember, by the end of the century, the UN estimate the average per. on the planet will be 450% as rich as he or she is today. So that means instead of being 450% as rich, we will feel like we're only 435% as rich. Yes, that's a problem. No, it's not the end of the world. On the coral reef bit... How does Rich fix the ocean?
Starting point is 00:13:48 No. So on the coral reefs bit, we have a situation where we have on Great Barrier Reef, so the world's biggest coral reef, the Australian marine... marine scientific institute, sorry, I can't remember what they're called, but they're the guys who do the data every year on the coral reef since 1986.
Starting point is 00:14:09 And they have been assessing what is the total outcome of how good does the reef look like? And in 2009 to 2012, we thought it was terrible. It was really dramatic. The Guardian wrote the obituary for the great coral reef.
Starting point is 00:14:25 And the point I've just been making is the last three years, they've been at the highest level, the most coral reef we've ever seen in those areas. And so the point is not that there's not a challenge for a coral breeze. There is. But most of the challenge comes from overfishing, from industrial pollution, from sea runoff, and those are the kinds of things that we should fix. But we're not being well informed if we're being told,
Starting point is 00:14:49 this is because of climate change, so we've got to change our entire infrastructure and our global economy in order to save the oceans when it's not actually what's going to happen. Maybe. Well. And why do we imagine, as we treat the oceans ever worse, that the coral reefs are enjoying it more now? Look, I don't think that they're going to enjoy this.
Starting point is 00:15:14 But why are they doing better in the last three years? It's not like we did anything. I don't know. Oh, well, there we go. All right. As long as we're in. That's honest. We don't know.
Starting point is 00:15:23 I'm a data guy. I simply try to say, you need to look at the numbers. And what I love that you do is, that you inform people of things that, you know, again, the people who just want to usher me to a point of view would never tell me. Like, yes, we are using a lot more green energy, but it's not making the amount of fossil fuels we use go down. Why?
Starting point is 00:15:49 Because people just use more. That's a really key thing that I don't think Americans are aware of. We just use more. How do we fix that? Or do we not have to? One of the reasons is because energy is incredibly good. Remember, you and I and most of the audience in here lives in an incredibly energy-rich world. We have the opportunity we can keep cool in the summer and hot in the winter.
Starting point is 00:16:14 We can get food. We can get transportation. I mean, I came from Sweden. I wasn't going to row a boat over here, right? So the whole point is energy makes us much, much better off. And it also makes us more resilient. We can do a lot more things. most people in the world have virtually no energy.
Starting point is 00:16:31 They want a lot more energy. They honestly, most people in sub-Saharan Africa live on less energy per year than your refrigerator is not just your refrigerator use. And so the reality is we need much more energy. What we do need to fix climate change is to invest more in green energy research and development so that... Well, yeah. Let's get to that. So that we, in the long run, actually can make sure that Africa,
Starting point is 00:16:58 and Indians and Chinese can live an energy-rich life, but without the CO2 emissions. Yeah. Well, I want to, I mean, that's, I think, the future. Yeah. Because, I mean, I've said it here a couple of years ago, like, I don't know what will work to solve this problem. I know it didn't work, and that's asking people to be good. Yes. That I know doesn't work. It's just human nature. And one of the things that we have been trying to do for the last 20 years in climate policy is basically tell people to be poorer, be less well-off, be, you know, uncomfortable. Would you mind being a little hotter in the summer and a little colder in the winter? That's just not going to work.
Starting point is 00:17:39 What is going to work is innovation. Remember Los Angeles in the 1950s, sorry, I don't mean to say you remember, but remember that... Sorry, I just made that work. It's all right. Anyway, anyway. I was alive. I'm not in, I didn't move out here yet. Anyway, it was terribly polluted.
Starting point is 00:17:58 And the sort of standard climate way of tackling that would be to tell, would you mind walking instead of driving around in cars? Of course, that wouldn't work in Los Angeles or anywhere else. But what we did was instead we invented the catalytic converter. It's a little gizmo you put on the tail power car, and then you can drive much longer and pollute much, much less. That's how you solve the problem, both of air pollution and the long run, and climate change.
Starting point is 00:18:23 All right, so let's go through some of these new things. Just quickly, we only have a couple of minutes, and I want to ask you if you ever run into Greta in Sweden. How does that go? I wonder. But, okay, giant umbrellas. These are the new things that would block a crucial amount of solar radiation. And these are all things that they have in pilot programs or the beginning of.
Starting point is 00:18:51 Iron fertilization, dumping iron into the ocean. It makes photoplankton bloom, and when they die, they carry the CO2 they absorb down to the seabed. Carbon capture. They already have something in Iceland that pulls 4,000 metric tons out of the atmosphere, and they put them in underground caverns, and then they turn into stone. Cloud brightening, sea salt aerosols into the sky that brighten clouds and deflect the sun's rays. So this is the future, you're saying. This is what we're going to be...
Starting point is 00:19:21 No, these are some of the things that we should be looking at. at because remember, if we could come up with a way to suck out the CO2 of the atmosphere, that was what you were talking about from Iceland, at really low cost, we basically have solved the problem. We could continue doing everything we do and get rid of the entire global warming problem at fairly low cost. We're not there yet at all, but this could be one solution. And the point is, there are lots of these potential solutions.
Starting point is 00:19:46 Now, most of them are not going to work, but if we invest it a lot more into green energy, innovation and also these technologies. So basically innovation, we would have a much better chance of fixing this problem. Right now we're spending trillions of dollars really badly and poor climate policy. I'm simply saying let's spend billions, but spend it much smarter on things I'll actually. Let's stay skeptical. Thanks, pal. I appreciate it. Good job. Yorne-Lorneberg, everybody. Let's meet our crown. Hi. Hi. Hi. Great to see you. All right. I was like Kamel at the debate. You had to, like, reach out first and make sure I was okay. He's a columnist for the New York Times, Brett Stevens.
Starting point is 00:20:39 She hosts the 11th hour on SNBC and MSNBC and is the senior business analyst for NBC News. Stephanie Rule is with us. Okay. So two media people here today, I thought maybe we would talk about rhetoric because that's what's on Trump's mind. He got shot out again, and he says, their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at.
Starting point is 00:21:07 And then, of course, in true Trumpian fashion, always the most unself-aware person in the universe, goes on to say, when they're the ones that are destroying the country. Which would be also the kind of rhetoric that would make a borderline person shoot at you. But, I mean, he's right. Rhetoric has consequences.
Starting point is 00:21:24 But he is possibly the worst person to make this case. Yeah, I mean, it's the pot calling the kettle black. I think that's what the expression was basically born for. This is the guy who called the media the enemy of the American people. Scum, vermin. All these phrases. Now, of course, he's absolutely right that we probably should tone it down. When we're calling our opponents the end of democracy, the end of Western civilization,
Starting point is 00:21:51 we're not helping our arguments. I disagree. That's a dumb argument, I think, because you, what? No, you have, that's their argument, which is that you guys are saying Trump is a threat to democracy. But he is a threat to democracy. The answer can't be that we can't say what's true. I want to say what's true. And the left has to do
Starting point is 00:22:11 that too. No, I'm sorry, but every time the left calls Trump a threat to democracy, Americans remember that in 2016, guys like me were calling Trump a threat to democracy and here we are. And he was then. And that dog
Starting point is 00:22:27 is not going to hunt. You have to say the case against Trump is that he's going to be a terrible president who's going to divide the country that is going to accomplish absolutely nothing that is going to embarrass us in front of the world and is going to conduct a miserable form of policy. But those are policy questions.
Starting point is 00:22:44 You don't stop calling out the truth because people aren't listening. When Donald Trump tells lie after lie, you don't say that nobody seems to care. It's our job in the media, right? When people complain, Donald Trump got fact-checked way more than Kamala Harris did. You're damn right he did.
Starting point is 00:23:02 You know why? He told more lies. Trump has done nothing but benefit from a campaign that seeks to treat him as outside the borders of political respectability. So if you want to help... He is. But he's what you have been doing. He said he's going to be a bad president. He's a bad president because he doesn't concede elections.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Not the policy shit. That comes and goes. Look, most Americans realize that here we are. Joe Biden is the president of the United States Kamala Harris is likely the next president of the United States but the reason that Trump has an enduring appeal on so many Americans is that so
Starting point is 00:23:46 many of us in the media want to treat him, right, as absolutely beyond the pale. And you know how Trump supporters respond by saying, oh yeah, he's beyond the pale? I'm going to vote for him. We have done nothing but help Trump for the last eight years.
Starting point is 00:24:01 So that's how we should organize our political views by what the idiots will do I mean, that... And he is beyond the pale, and on this rhetoric question, I mean, they both have things that they say about the other person that are pretty bad.
Starting point is 00:24:15 That's politics. That's always gone on. There's only one side. There should be no false equivalency here that uses the kind of rhetoric that they use. Like, remember Trump's here, did I dug it up,
Starting point is 00:24:26 the tough people. I can tell you, I have the support of the police, the support of the military, and then he brings up the bikers. The support of the bikers. I think if you have the military and the police, I don't know if we're going to need the bikers,
Starting point is 00:24:38 but okay. I have the tough people, but they don't play a tough until the Democrats go to a certain point, and then it would be very bad. This is the Heritage Foundation president. That's like the number one Republican... The King of Project 2025. Okay, well, that's kind of a bullshit talking point,
Starting point is 00:24:57 2025, but we don't have to go to there now. But the Heritage Foundation is the main conservative thing tank. We are on the process of the second American American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be. You don't hear that from the other side, this idea of, look, we don't want to have to kill you. But if you keep winning and the country keeps going your way, we will. Would you not agree that that is different? I absolutely agree.
Starting point is 00:25:27 And look, I've been an opponent of Trump from day one, and I've suffered professional consequences. No, I have. No, I have for that opposition. You're here tonight. Well, that's cool. That is definitely... But look, the point is here, if we are asking ourselves how we want to best make the case against Donald Trump,
Starting point is 00:25:50 constantly pressing the button that he is an existential threat to our democracy when we are here in 2024, having an election, is not going to work. Make the case that he was and would be a terrible president, and that's an effective case. Here's where I take Brett's point that we really all could bring down the rhetoric. Donald Trump was the one who started with the divisive, vile language
Starting point is 00:26:24 when he went down the escalator in 2015. He has capitalized on it, he ran on it, he's benefited politically for it, and our country has suffered. But what he did, he saw vulnerabilities and sensitivities that the American people had, and he saw that they were scared, and he told them lies and he freaked them out and he made them panicked.
Starting point is 00:26:44 And what we need to do or what Democrats need to do is take a look at those vulnerabilities. Look at the immigration thing. In the last two weeks, all we're talking about is Donald Trump with the dogs and the cats in Springfield, Ohio. We're saying that's absurd and it's vile and it's idiotic. However, there is something to talk about with an issue like immigration,
Starting point is 00:27:03 with the country changing so rapidly. There are people in the country who are saying the country's moving so fast because of technology, because of demographics. And instead of saying to those people, well, then you're old or stupid or you're xenophobic or you're racist, instead see where they are, talk to them,
Starting point is 00:27:18 and actually embody love thy neighbor because you know what? In Springfield, Ohio, it has changed dramatically. You've got a huge influx of Haitian migrants legally there for jobs, but you also should give time and space, maybe for an older generation that's saying, my town is changing.
Starting point is 00:27:34 I want to know about this or learn about this. Instead of just saying, just get with it. The country's moving. So this is such a terrific point that Stephanie is making. I'm sorry, I didn't hear you? It's a terrific point, as you often make terrific points. The way in which demagogues succeed historically is not that they tell lies. Yes, they do tell lies.
Starting point is 00:28:00 But they traffic in half-truths. And the problem that we've had in responding to Trump is that we listen to the lie, like people eating cats in Springfield, Ohio. but we don't listen to the part of the argument that contains an important seat of truth, which is that mass illegal migration has had huge and often negative consequences. And Trump's opponents have to, like, come to grips
Starting point is 00:28:24 with the parts of the message that are resonating with tens of millions of voters. And Democrats will immediately say, but it's not illegal, they're here legally. But hold on, even if they're here legally, and even if that is the fabric of the United States, since our country was founded, we've struggled with assimilating to immigrants,
Starting point is 00:28:42 whether it was Irish people or Italian people, and take the opportunity to help educate people rather than just say, get with it, or you're out of favor. Yeah. I certainly been preaching that for a long time. And look, I think, as I said last week, I think he's toast. I think Trumpism will go on after him.
Starting point is 00:29:08 They will look for somebody else. As long as there is on the left people, racial hysterics and Hamas lovers and extreme socialists and gender deniers and people who want to keep the parents in the dark, there will be another Trump. But this one, I think, is done. You can just feel it. I mean, here's some of the things he said this week. I'm the greatest of all time. Maybe greater than Elvis. Elvis had a guitar. I don't have the privilege of the guitar. I mean, first of all, when I think of great guitarist Elvis, like, you know, it's like Clapton, Hendricks, Joe Walsh, Elvis. It was a prop. He never even played it. He also said, I really haven't been treated very well,
Starting point is 00:29:57 but that's the story of my life. Yes, born into crushing wealth. Inheriting a real estate fortune that he squandered. I feel like it's just at that point. where they've had enough. And trust me, the polls will be tied on Election Day, but the people will get in the booth, and enough of them will be like, yeah, I'm glad this is private
Starting point is 00:30:23 because I don't want people to know. I'm turning my back on him, but I promise you they will. I feel like there's a third of America that's always with the Trumps. They used to call them the birchers and the birthers or the Tea Party. They go by many different names of the same people. And then he moved it to like half the country. and it'll move back a little closer to the third, and we'll be okay.
Starting point is 00:30:45 We'll see. Yeah, we'll see. But the state of the union, the Fed lowered interest rates, so that's really good for people who want to buy a house and stuff. Inflation is down, gas prices are down, crime, down, border crossings, way down, wages are up, and the stock market is at record high, And the candidate said, I hate Taylor Swift,
Starting point is 00:31:17 and the Republicans are running a black Nazi in North Carolina. I mean, I'm not working. Democrats need to do a better job. And the polls are dead even. Okay, when are the last time you answered a poll? And the polls are dead even. I promise you they will be, and I promise you it's going to come out. Why isn't Kamala running away with this?
Starting point is 00:31:37 Well, here's another reason why I think it's going, you can always tell when it's going south, when the ship is sinking, is because the person like Trump, and not at the center of it, starts surrounding himself with... I mean, he normally surrounds us with a pretty crazy people. But this Laura Lumer,
Starting point is 00:31:56 I don't know if you know anything about her, but, I mean, this is, yeah, I mean, I want to go through the list of conspiracy theories, but we thought this would be a good week to get the audience to know her a little better. She's the new groupie in Trump Circle. That's my opinion. So we do, one of our favorites here,
Starting point is 00:32:13 24 things you don't know about it. For example, my spirit animal was eaten by Haitians. My biggest fear is immigrants taking my job as a right-wing hate monger. As a child, I had two of my brats dolls deported. I don't hate all brown people, just the brown ones. People think I'm all in on Trump, but some of the voices in my head like Jill Stein. My hobby is refurbishing vintage lawn jockeys. I think Michael Jackson fake the moonwalk.
Starting point is 00:33:20 If you say Beetlejuice four times you get me and I believe the government puts something in the water that makes you pee he is a bit of a knock that one. Okay. So, um...
Starting point is 00:33:49 All right, let's talk a little about the international scene. The long-awaited second front in the Israeli war seems to have started this week, not just the Pagers, but they're bombing all over the Lebanon yesterday and today. here's what Kamala Harris said this week
Starting point is 00:34:09 about what we should do when the war is over no reoccupation of Gaza no changing of the territorial lines of Gaza and an ability to have security in the region for all concern in a way that we create stability I feel like if that's what you have to say don't say anything just shut up
Starting point is 00:34:30 I mean everybody who talks about Israel these days is just so full of shit I mean, or just not, you know, I don't want children to die. Duh, who does? None of us want children to die. None of us want this war to go on. But it's not addressing what the problem is. The problem is that one side wants a two-state solution, or at least always did.
Starting point is 00:34:51 It's a little more right-wing now. I'm talking about Israel, but that still has been their position. One side never did and still doesn't. One side uses terrorism to get their goals. One side retaliates against terrorism. one side is accused of genocide but doesn't do it. The other side actually would love to do it. People keep saying Israel has the right to defend itself.
Starting point is 00:35:14 And then whenever Israel does, they object to it. Well, yeah, I mean, this is one of the astonishing things about the response to the pager bombings. I understand how people are upset about the site of Gaza being bombed. They're being bombed because Hamas hides beneath and behind its own population to cynically exploit their deaths. But then the Israelis turn around with the most astonishingly well-targeted attack in history,
Starting point is 00:35:44 like literally going off in the hands of anyone, any Hezbollah member who has one of these pagers, and you have people like Congresswoman AOC lambasting Israel, the head of the UN, lambasting Israel. So they say Israel's entitled to self-defense, but there's no conceivable self-defense that they're actually prepared to defend.
Starting point is 00:36:03 for the Israelis. I'm glad the Israelis are taking things in their matters in their own hand. They just took care of a terrorist who had the death of 350 or 300 Americans on their hand, going back to, on their hands, going back to 1983. He had a $7 million state department bounty on his head. If I were Anthony Blinken, I would pay the Israelis $7 million and say thank you for avenging the death of our Marines. To Kamala Harris's response, she is in a tricky position because Joe Biden is currently the commander-in-chief, and she's the VP. So it's very difficult for anybody in her position to kind of thread this needle and say, here's what we should do, here's our plan when he's the current
Starting point is 00:36:49 commander-in-chief. She's in this weird space of like an improv show of like a yes and, yes to what he's doing, and I think we should do this. So it's especially tricky. But my question to you, it's an honest question, is she just being vague because the political equities are such that it doesn't pay to be specific, or does she simply have no idea? And, you know, I am an undecided... Okay, then that's not an honest question to me, because there's no way you think I'm going to turn and say, you know what, Brett, you're right. She has no idea. No, I... No, I... The question that Americans have, okay, the question, look, I'm an undecided voter. I'm never going to vote for Trump, but I'm not sure I want to vote for Kamala. And my fear is that
Starting point is 00:37:33 she doesn't really have a very good command of what she wants to do as president. It would be great for her to sit down with you or George Stephanopoulos or you, Stephanie, and get a succession of... As if she'd sit down with me. Why not? Ask her. Ask her. You know, look, George W. Bush, 25 years ago, was asked if he could name the president of Pakistan and other people.
Starting point is 00:38:02 He had no idea. And people said this guy has no command of... of foreign policy, and it turned out to be oppression set of questions. It's not too much to ask Kamala, say, are you for a Palestinian state if Hamas is going to run that state? Yes or no? And let's say you don't like her answer. Are you going to vote for Donald Trump?
Starting point is 00:38:21 No, I'm not. I just said I'm not going to vote for her. She's running for perfect. She's running against Trump. We have two choices. And so there are some things you might not know her answer to. And in 2024, unlike 2016 for a lot of the American people, we know exactly what Trump will do, who he is,
Starting point is 00:38:41 and the kind of threat he is to democracy. I don't know her. So it's unclear to me how there can be an inform. The problem that a lot of people have with Kamwa is we don't know her answer to anything, okay? But you know his answer to everything. And that's why I would never vote for him and people shouldn't vote for him. But people also are expected to have something. some idea of what the program is of the person you're supposed to vote for.
Starting point is 00:39:07 You're just not supposed to say, well, you have to vote for why because X is this, that, and the other. Let's find out a little bit more. And I don't think it's a lot to ask her to sit down for a real interview as opposed to a puff piece in which she describes, like, her feelings of growing up in Oakland with nice laws. Then I would just say to that, when you move to Nirvana, give me your real estate broker's number, and I'll be your next door neighbor. We don't live there. I got to I feel like you're
Starting point is 00:39:39 I feel like you're the dog we're trying to get in the car to go to the bed you know you we're going to put that calm on your head for the rest of the day I say that as one of your biggest fans you know I mean I gobble up everything you're right
Starting point is 00:39:59 I just don't understand how you get to this place but okay let's not badger but do you know For the last two weeks, I've been going on and on. Like, I can't figure out where undecided voter, where informed undecided voters are. I'm like, who's the person who has a list
Starting point is 00:40:15 on their refrigerator of like, well, she said this, and he's, I'm like, who is this person? And then I opened the New York Times three days ago, and it's you. I appreciate it, but it's actually millions of Americans who Kamala has to persuade if she wants to win, including votes like mine. You might not like the fact that I'm not in the car, but if you want to get me,
Starting point is 00:40:43 If you want to get me in the car, okay? Give me, Stephanie, a little treat. I have some treats here that I think it. Give it to me. Pass it over. And the little treat is a substantive answer on real questions facing the American people on inflation, immigration, foreign policy.
Starting point is 00:41:08 Basic things that we used to expect presidential candidates could answer. Okay, then I would just say that. Did you ever play the game? Would you rather? Because that is what voting to the president is. All right, all right. Let me move on to one other, get off this,
Starting point is 00:41:24 and poor Brett Stevens, we'd love him. So this is kind of interesting. Again, I don't think a lot of people know this. I didn't before a couple of days ago when it was brought to my attention. Crypto. First of all, Trump is getting into the crypto business. I mean, right there. Can you imagine Kamala saying,
Starting point is 00:41:42 I'm getting into the crypto business? I mean, it's just unimaginable what he gets away with. Okay, so he's getting into the business with some guy who used to be in the colon cleanse business. It's called shit coin. No. Thank you. Thank you. But almost half of the corporate political contributions this cycle are from crypto.
Starting point is 00:42:11 I did not know this. And now, here's the thing. The Federal Reserve wants to make their own central bank, digital currency, CBDC. I don't know what that stands for, but of course this is exactly why the people who have crypto don't want. They don't want regulation
Starting point is 00:42:30 of any kind, which is why it's used completely by criminals. And so it's perfect for Trump. He's a criminal. But I also kind of understand why people are afraid of big governments these days. I mean, when Canada had that trucker strike, I mean, Canada like froze a lot of
Starting point is 00:42:52 those people's assets. That's a scary thing. Is it not when governments can freeze your athletes? You have money and everything's online now, and they just hit a button and you don't have any money anymore because your politics were different? I mean, Justin Trudeau can try to bend this any way he wants. That's what Canada did, and that's Canada. Look, I don't know about you,
Starting point is 00:43:13 but I've never understood crypto as anything other than a Ponzi scheme. It is. If Trump wants to put all his money into it, so much the better because eventually he'll lose it. Okay. Yes. And here's the thing. Just like his publicly traded media company, ticker DJT, he's not putting any of his money in.
Starting point is 00:43:33 He won't lose any of his money, but he'll stand to make an enormous amount. And you're hitting on the most important part of this crypto exchange that Trump is now involved with. Yes, the old-school Trump original bros are going to invest in this and they're going to lose their shirts. The same guys who put $1,000 in DJT stock, the day it went public. now it's worth $200. And truth social. Correct. And truth social.
Starting point is 00:43:57 You know, these original Trump fans, and they're going to lose their shirt. That's not why you should be concerned. You should be concerned with what you said a moment ago. Half of Trump's corporate contributions come from the biggest people in the crypto space. And they realize that he is a completely transactional guy. And so they said, great. He can't spell crypto. He did it.
Starting point is 00:44:19 And he doesn't know what it is. He doesn't know what it is. He thinks it's like a commemorative coin. He says, no, we should have it in America. We should, it's... But they don't want any regulation, and Trump's like, we'll get rid of the SEC chair, so they're like, great, he doesn't know, he doesn't care, we're going to buy him and get whatever regulation we want, which is none.
Starting point is 00:44:38 And this idea from the American people that, like, Trump's great for the economy because he's going to cut taxes and we'll have no regulation. Remember, it's not that no regulation is what we want. We want smart regulation. You want no regulation? Go drink the water in Flint, Michigan. That's what no regulation looks like. Here's the other thing.
Starting point is 00:45:00 There's the other big secret about crypto that nobody talks about. This bugs me so much. We just had Bjorn talking about the environment. All the progress that we're making with green energy is being sucked away by crypto. Crypto uses 8% of total electricity. They're data centers. They're mining. There's nonsense of finding a number.
Starting point is 00:45:21 I can't even go through the whole thing. It's so ridiculous what crypto really is. That's why it's, of course, this is like Trump's final business just before the election. Of course he'd end up in crypto. It's a grifter's paradise. It's comparable to putting 15.7 million additional gas-powered cars on the road. So as we take them off to go to electric, crypto eats it all up and goes the other way. Okay.
Starting point is 00:45:48 I have one minute to ask about Mark Robinson. Oh. How is it the Republicans keep nominating people like? like that. I mean, I could go through a long list of people like that who are just crazy, who, I mean, Herschel Walker, was that, where was that Georgia? I mean, before that, the, you know, remember the guy with unintentional rapes or whatever that? No, I think they were intentional. Or what he would said. When I read about Robinson yesterday and I was like, yeah, he's black Nazi, and they saw on a porn site, I'm like, you have to be kidding. But you can't expect the Republican Party to ask him
Starting point is 00:46:26 or anyone else to step aside when the head of your party is Donald Trump. But don't they vet these people a little before? Who's going to vet them? I don't know, but before you went to the nominating process, he is the nominee for governor, why don't you look at the porn site vet?
Starting point is 00:46:44 Because Trump picked him, and there's the expression that karma is a bitch, but for the Republicans, it might turn out that karma is a porn site chat room. And that... That'll be a historical turn in American, you know, in our history of our republic. There are Republicans that could even help Donald Trump win, like a Nikki Haley, is suitable to so many Brett Stevens voters.
Starting point is 00:47:09 But Donald Trump doesn't want that. She is. And she meant that as a compliment. All right, I got to leave it there. Thank you, guys. That was fun. Time for New Rule. Okay.
Starting point is 00:47:28 New Rule, the people participating in the new trend of FridgeScaping. where you decorate the inside of your refrigerator by placing flowers and picture frames next to the hot dogs and mayonnaise. Must be congratulated for their unique sense of tasteful expression. I'm kidding, you people are nuts. If you're going to put things in appliances that don't belong, might I suggest your head and the oven?
Starting point is 00:48:05 Well, someone has to tell Jane's addiction, you don't get to cancel your tour just because you got into a fight on stage. The guys in the band. hate each other? And? Name a band where they don't. The Rolling Stones, Van Halen,
Starting point is 00:48:28 Guns and Roses, Metallica, Fleetwood Mac, the Eagles, the Ramones, Pink Floyd, the Beach Boys, the Black Crows, Arrowsmith, Giss, Simon and Garfuckle. Hoping to catch a fight on stage is the only reason anyone's going to see these guys. True, someone needs to explain to want-to-be assassin Ryan Ruth
Starting point is 00:48:53 that when you're being arrested, it's not the time for a thirst trap. They've got a spit take out of stuff in a rule. Thank you. No, well, now that the U.S. attorney handling the case against the guy who wanted to shoot Trump is a Haitian immigrant, everyone has to admit
Starting point is 00:49:25 this season of the election is awesome. I mean, it had everything. Plot twists, assassination attempts. We even killed off the main character. And the animals, we've had dogs, cats, geese, bears. And tune in next week when Trump reveals his dad isn't an orangutan.
Starting point is 00:50:00 After all, it's... It's Tonka from Tim Crazy. New rule, Scott Labato, the MAGA artist who created this painting of Kamala Harris, maniacally eating a dead, bald eagle with a nuclear mushroom cloud in the background, has to put down the brush and back away from the easel.
Starting point is 00:50:23 It's... It's time to find some other form of artistic expression. Might I suggest fridgecaping? And finally, new rules. Someone has to tell me how Americans can keep becoming more alike, but also hate each other more than ever. I was made to think of this recently when it came to my attention that vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance fucks his couch.
Starting point is 00:50:54 Oh, I'm sure you heard it too. It was everywhere. One guy wrote it on Twitter, and immediately half the country was all in. Our hate for each other is so intense. We all just immediately believe anything bad about the other side. I mean, don't get me started on, They're eating the dogs. They're eating the dogs. They're coming for the pets.
Starting point is 00:51:16 They're eating the dogs. Now, look, I think J.D. Vance is kind of a giant asshole. Still would love to get you on the show, J.D. But he doesn't fuck the couch. It's not in his book. As the rumor suggested, what goes on between a man and upholstery, is none of my business, but in this case, it just didn't happen. But what is in that book is a much more interesting passage
Starting point is 00:51:59 where Vance recalls how at age eight he thought he might be gay. This really resonated with me because when I was eight, puberty was still a few years off, so I hated girls at eight. They had cooties, and I only wanted to be with boys. Well, that does sound gay. So the eight-year-old Vance goes to his grandmother, who he calls Ma Ma'a, and who has 19 fucking guns stashed around the house in case German's army comes back, I guess. And he asks her if she, a woman born in Kentucky in 1933, thinks he's gay.
Starting point is 00:52:43 And she says, J.D., do you want to suck d? And he says, no, Mama. And she says, then you're not gay. and even if you did want to suck dicks, that would be okay, God would still love you. But stay away from my makeup. I made that last one up. Get rid of that one.
Starting point is 00:53:16 But other than that, I feel like this is a teachable moment. Maybe the hicks are not as hicky as they used to be. I know it's a cliche that the coastal folks just fly over the flyover states, but they mostly do. So they're stuck in a time warm where, I don't know, farmers looked like this. But farmers use iPads now. They believe in climate change.
Starting point is 00:53:41 They went to college and majored in ag. It's a science to grow food. Could you do it? Are there still prejudiced people in small towns in the former Confederacy? Of course. Some of those places are as bad as Boston. Have you ever been?
Starting point is 00:54:03 But Kansas last year voted strongly for abortion rights, and they have a woman governor, whereas California is a state that has never had a woman governor, America's complicated. We talk about red and blue states, but every state is purple. 47% of Texans voted Democrat in 2020. Yeah, because Texas is a giant state, full of people with different ethnicities, philosophies, cultures,
Starting point is 00:54:28 and forms of shit-kicking. Many rural traditions have even crossed over to become quite mainstream. Look on Pornhub. Now everybody's banging their sister. I've played all the cities of the Deep South, and they're not that different. They have Starbucks, just like up north. They've even got that thing where you can tap your card and tip 22% for no reason. Sure, it sounds funny when you hear,
Starting point is 00:55:06 order ready for American Patriot. American Patriot, your decath mochaucal latte is ready. But that's the thing. America is a funny, mixed-up place now. Belfush, South Dakota, has a biker bar that's LGBT-friendly. and nearby Rapid City has a rooftop sky bar that sells $18 cocktails, just like the assholes in L.A. do. Eureka Springs, Arkansas is home to a 70-foot-tall statue of Jesus
Starting point is 00:55:42 and is also the place the advocate called the gayest small town in America. The third largest statue in the whole country is in Sugarland, Texas, and it's of a Hindu monkey god. Yeah. Well, 100 years ago, there was a trial about monkeys in the south, really triggered people back then. But things change. Nobody in Sugarland, Texas
Starting point is 00:56:06 cares now about Hindus or monkey gods, and they don't seem to be scared by Indian Americans either. There are too many people's doctors. Now, the food never really caught on, that's true. But an Indian American is going to be president. And another one might
Starting point is 00:56:33 be for the other side someday. And J.D. Vance, for all his insanity, is married to an Indian American. And despite what Laura Lumer said about curry, Mrs. Vance was welcomed warmly at the Republican convention. And no one but the truly deranged is thinking about curry, although that may be why the food never caught on. I'm just saying it's not all bullets and mullets out there anymore.
Starting point is 00:57:04 Just look at the music. Maybe that's the best analogy for where we are culturally. I used to hate country music for a very good reason. It sucked. But it changed, because the people making it changed. It's not some picking and a grinning bumpkin in a rhinestone leisure suit vaguely longing for the return of segregation anymore. Mostly.
Starting point is 00:57:31 A lot of it's good now. It sounds like the Eagles in 1972. The number one song on the country chart this week is by Shibuzi. Does he look like an Oak Ridge Boy to you? Post Malone is a country star now, and you need a bookmark just to make a... through his face. Snoop Dog and Willie Nelson both have the same hobby.
Starting point is 00:58:15 At this year's Grammy Awards, Luke Combs performed a duet with Tracy Chapman, a queer black woman, and no one ran screaming from the building. In fact, they all loved it. The big hat people and the big hair people, they don't hate each other.
Starting point is 00:58:31 They like and respect each other. They want to work together. We can't duplicate this on a grander scale in America. What? Why don't we just resist our worst impulses? And next time we're tempted to be hateful and just want the other side to die. Stop, stop, and think about J.D. Vance's cocksucker-loving grandma.
Starting point is 00:59:01 If she's told with it, maybe we're not so different after all. All right, thank you very much. That's our show. I'll be at the Orpheme in Memphis, September 28th. The David Capafield Theater at the NGM Grand in Vegas, November 1st and 2nd. random by podcast on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcast. I want to thank Brett Stephen, Stephanie Ruhlin, Bjorn Longberg. Now go watch Overtime on YouTube. Thank you, folks.
Starting point is 00:59:31 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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