Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #698: Whitney Cummings, Stephanie Ruhle, Jonah Goldberg

Episode Date: June 7, 2025

Bill’s guests are Whitney Cummings, Stephanie Ruhle, Jonah Goldberg (Originally aired 6/6/25) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series Real Time with Bill Maugh. Thank you, people. I appreciate it. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the show. Oh, thank you. I appreciate it. I thank you.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Please, there's so much going on. Thank you so much. Thank you very much. Thank you for putting on a brave face because I know you're all probably upset. You know what happened with Elon and Donald Trump. It's all over.
Starting point is 00:01:18 And even worse, it's Pride Month. It's just, well, are you having a good Pride Month? Are you out there priding it up? Oh, wow. That's fantastic. Well, you know, I've got to say it's a little less prided this year
Starting point is 00:01:41 because, you know, ever since Trump and the administration has been on the warpath against anything DEI, now corporate America is a little skittish about going, oh, all Trump, all fried stuff. So, you know, a lot of these companies, the Gap, Nordstroms, Macy's, they've all kind of pulled back,
Starting point is 00:01:58 no more ostentatious displays. At Home Depot, they won't even let you get wood. But I'm not going to pretend I can really think about anything other than the Trump, Elon. Well, I mean, When you think about it, the richest man in the world, and the most powerful man in the world,
Starting point is 00:02:23 it's like Godzilla versus King Kong. If Godzilla was on ketamine and King Kong had a comb over. These, really, I mean, these guys were so close. It was like Brandelina or Benefort. No, you know that. Elon and Trump, they had their own couple name, Elump. And, you know, What happened this week?
Starting point is 00:03:00 This has been brewing for a while, okay, people? The first sign was last week at Elon's little going away party. Remember that in the Oval Office? And Elon shut up with a black guy. No, it's not that. No, he said it was because he was roughhousing with this kid, and the kid clocked him. And yeah, I believe that.
Starting point is 00:03:21 And so Trump said, I offered him a little makeup. This is what happened. And he's serious people. He said, I opened him a little makeup, and he turned it down. And then Trump said, which was interesting. Yeah, weird Elon. What sort of man turns down makeup? But then it just, see, what really put it over the edge is that, you know, Elon came in there to reduce the government bloat and all that stuff.
Starting point is 00:03:58 And then they have this big, beautiful bill that's nothing but government bloat, which Elon, tweeted out, he said it was a disgusting abomination. And then Trump said, well, he has Trump derangement syndrome. And then Elon said, well, your tariffs are going to cause an erection. A recession, is what I make to say. I don't know
Starting point is 00:04:29 where I am. And then Trump said, he's just mad him. Elon's mad at me because I took away the mandate for his electric vehicles, which nobody really wants anyway. And then Elon said, you know, without me, he wouldn't even won the election, and then the shit got real.
Starting point is 00:04:50 And Trump said, well, you know what? Mars is a shithole planet. And Elon said, oh, my God, you are not the same man I used to hile. Now, for those keeping a score at home and who watched the show for the news, I made the last two up, but it's very hard to tell which are the ones that I've made up. Just the last two, the other ones are real, and now it's gotten even nastier. They asked Trump yesterday about the fight, and he said, I don't think about him. And then Elon put out, well, you know what, think about this. Trump is in the Epstein files, and that's why they haven't released it.
Starting point is 00:05:41 And now this is just a war that is going back and forth and back and forth, and the stakes are so high because the winner faces Blake lively. So that's where we are with this. The latest update is tomorrow, apparently, Elon is going to be coming by to the White House to pick up his CDs. And the mix takes. they made together. And he said,
Starting point is 00:06:12 for the both of us, Trump, maybe it's better if you're just not there. But it looks like it may go from a war of words to, you know, other stuff,
Starting point is 00:06:23 because Trump is now saying he might cancel Elon's subsidies and Elon's contracts. So I guess in the end, Elon did save the taxpayer money. And just into this quota to the whole situation,
Starting point is 00:06:40 Elon now says he might start his own political party. Wow. that could be interesting. I don't know if we're ready for a party from a guy who's on ecstasy, mushrooms, and ketamine. Although the convention
Starting point is 00:06:53 does sound like a blast. We have a great show. We have Stephanie Ruhl and Jonah Goldberg. Well, first up, she is one of my favorite people, one of my favorite comedians, writer-producer, host of the Good for You podcast. She's currently touring nationwide with her latest stand-up show.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Big Baby Whitney Cummings is here. I love you. Yes. Yes, wild news day. Yes, there's so much to be upset about. I'm good. If you grow up in an alcoholic home, this is your comfort zone. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:37 I know, but listen, I wanted to send out the bat signal for you because, I mean, yes, we're going to talk about debt and that's really horrible and the environment's horrible and this is horrible. But I am obsessed with robots. Okay. Lately. They're taking over. I have a sex. robot, you, I'll give it to you for a steal.
Starting point is 00:07:56 I will negotiate with you. $10 final offer. I'm saying I want you here because the last special, maybe not your last member, one of the recent ones, it was a lot about robots. And you did a lot of deep diving into this subject. And I thought, oh, I got to get her here to talk about this because it's the only thing I can think about.
Starting point is 00:08:17 Because it's happening, it is changing so rapidly. and I don't think people are like onto it. So where are you with what's going on with robots? Now, you're special. You had your own robot. You have Robot Whitney. I do. I do.
Starting point is 00:08:31 There's Robot Whitney. So can you tell which is which? Look, I had a robot made in my likeness for a stand-up special when I was talking a lot about robots and sex robots and the implications. A special call, Can I Touch it? It is on Netflix now. And I did learn a lot. I thought that it would end up looking like a crappy, like scarecrow.
Starting point is 00:08:56 Like, I thought it was going to be like a joke, and I went down there, and the technology was so good that I ended up just putting her in the special. What year is this? This was maybe five years ago. Okay, so a lot's changed. I would say a lot's changed. That's before chat GPT. This is before all of it, right?
Starting point is 00:09:10 But here's the deal. I do still have the robot, and this is what nobody warns you about. If you do get a robot in your likeness, what happens is that you age and they don't. So you end up having, you just have this bitch in your podcast studio that's just your former face before the life was drained out of it. And so I don't really know what to do with her now.
Starting point is 00:09:36 Do I age her up? Or do I, I'm not getting Botox. I quit getting Botox, by the way. I just, I, you know, I find it odd that we're all like, I want to look as young as possible. Like, why are we trying to bait pedophiles with our face? You know, I don't want... No one's going to think that I'm 20, you know.
Starting point is 00:09:55 So I also want... Thank you. I also want people to know when I'm mad at them. And I think it's helpful. But I wonder, with the robots, I guess I'm not as scared because I feel like humans are already turning into robots in a way.
Starting point is 00:10:11 Like, I think we're behaving in such a robotic way. We're, you know, saying things we're sort of programmed to say without thinking. Like, humans right now look like glitching robots. robots to me. And I wonder sometimes, like, half the time I take that quiz on a website that asks me if I'm a robot or not, half the time I get the quiz wrong. I'm like, I'm like, does a shadow of a bike count as a bike? Like, I don't even know. Why am I looking at a grainy photo of a crack house? Like, am I a robot? Like, we might all right, you know, and all the people,
Starting point is 00:10:41 you know, that complain about being online and trolls, half of online activity, I guess, now, is trolls. So we're engaging with them and talking to them, you know, acting as if they're human, so it's sort of hard to tell. We all know someone, me, who just strolls like a robot and you're sort of like, are we already there with our own flesh
Starting point is 00:11:00 bodies at this point? It's hard to tell. All right, I see you're not taking this seriously. I am! Okay, so I'll tell you what I'm really worried about. It's okay. I'll tell you what I'm really worried about with the robots is that we will anthermorphize them and start to have compassion. I'm not so worried that the People have boyfriends and girlfriends.
Starting point is 00:11:19 They have AI boyfriend. Oh, totally, yes. And it's fascinating because, you know, I'm one of those people when you see a room bug get, like, stuck under the couch. You're like, oh, buddy. You know, like... And I have this robot, and everyone's like, where is she? I'm like, I would love to throw her away, but I can't...
Starting point is 00:11:37 You see a face, and even when I leave the room, I'll like... Do you want me to leave the TV on? Like, I feel bad. It's like... So I think we project. So I, of course, worry about the robots are going to do, but I also worry about what humans are going to do to each other trying to protect robots that they've projected onto.
Starting point is 00:11:54 I'm afraid to insult it. I mean, I used to, you know, swear at my car. I'm not proud of it, but I would talk to my... Well, a car is a she, fair. That's why guys yell at their car so much. Well, the voice is it, woman. Why has it have to be a woman? I didn't make the car.
Starting point is 00:12:12 No, I don't... But, I mean, and I would talk to it in a way I don't, because I've thought inanimate object, a way I don't in real life. Totally. Because it would say, you left your phone in the car. And I'm like, no, you dumb bitch. I did not.
Starting point is 00:12:28 And now I'm literally afraid to do that. I treat my car very politely. That's sick. I get out of that car. And it's like, I treat the car like, I'm on a date and the father has money. It is wild, though, because
Starting point is 00:12:44 you know, looking at this whole thing with Elon, taking these drugs, like, I kind of am like, maybe this is good because the robot are going to be as compassionate as the people making the robots, right? So I'm like, take all the mushrooms you need to take, you know, whatever you need to do. We need to make sure that the, basically, the people building robots aren't robots. Okay, so you had a baby. How does the baby fit? Why are you looking down here? What were you looking at?
Starting point is 00:13:07 You look great. You didn't, you don't look like you had a baby. Thank you. You look thinner than ever, actually. Okay, thank you. So how does the baby fit in with the robot? Does it debate? My robot breastfed the baby, which was a big part of why. There's already microplastics in our breast milk.
Starting point is 00:13:23 I figured it's probably safer. You know, it has been a very sort of enlightening experience. I'm really glad that I did it. I didn't have a child till way later in life. I never thought it was going to happen for me. And, you know, I just had a kid with a stranger out of nowhere at 40 white trash till I die. And we'll never take the West Virginia out of this one.
Starting point is 00:13:47 And, you know... So you're raising it alone. I'm co-parenting. the complete stranger. Well, then they're not a stranger. If they're co-parenting, you must have to make arrangements. Yeah, someone, yeah. It's where the robot comes in.
Starting point is 00:14:06 I don't want to pry. No, please. And also, it's been fascinating because I've been on this sort of journey through motherhood where, you know, I've always been a very liberal person, maybe even a libtard. But once you have a kid, you start, like, having thoughts that have been characterized as conservative. As soon as I had a kid, I was like, I need a gun now.
Starting point is 00:14:26 Not for myself, because I've got coyotes in my yard. I've got coyotes everywhere. And before I had a kid, I was like, they coexist with us. Coyotes were here first. Like, I'm in the coyote's home. Now I'm like, let's make hats out of them. Let's make hats. Let's make coyote boots, coyote earrings out of their eyeballs.
Starting point is 00:14:44 Like, it's just... Do you take the kid on the road? I take him on the road sometimes. Really? It depends. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It depends on where I'm going. How old, new?
Starting point is 00:14:52 He's a year and a half. A year and a half. Thank you. I don't know why I get a place. It's literally the least impressive thing I've ever done. All I did was long there. Usually an audience applauds when you're very old. Like, I'm 92.
Starting point is 00:15:06 Oh, that's fantastic. Like a year and a half? Oh, he made it to a year and a half. I think it's because maybe I'm older. They are shocked I survived childbirth or something, but I don't know. I had a kid naturally 40 years old. I'm convinced it was a vaccine injury. So you were in a hotel?
Starting point is 00:15:21 How does that work? How couldn't you have a kid on the road? Who watches it when you're on? Well, his biological mother, my nanny, takes very good care of him. This is why I stopped deporting people. So, yeah, so I have someone that helps, but it's just been kind of like a wild, you know,
Starting point is 00:15:40 way to sort of like see things, you know, from a different perspective. Like once you have a kid, you're just, you know, you start looking at everything differently. Like, I used to be obsessed with scientific studies. You know, I think that's one way that people like us feel like we have some control in the world or are getting some facts,
Starting point is 00:15:52 but I look at things so differently now. Like, you know the study, like, girls mature faster than boys? Yeah. Like, I've always kind of been like, okay. You need to study to know that. I don't know. I have a girlfriend who's 43 years old.
Starting point is 00:16:03 She's still at Coachella. It ended two months ago. So are they... She's looking for her charger, and she says it's because Mercury is in retrograde. I don't know, maybe girls mature faster than boys, but I now look at it, now that I have a kid, I'm like, who's putting boys and girls in a cage
Starting point is 00:16:18 to study them? Like, who's maturing fast? Like, what are you... Like, I don't know if we need this... Like, you just start seeing things, like, slightly differently. Well, I know you have said, I'm too left for the right and two right for the left. I think so.
Starting point is 00:16:30 Which is such a great saying, because I feel like I'm in the same place. And, like, when people disagree with people like us, they say we're conspiracy theorists. You get that a lot. You know, you've changed. I hope I changed. By the way, I hope so, yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:46 Yeah, right. I really hope I don't have the same thoughts I had when I was 20 years old, you know, But that's fascinating to me that people come at you and say conspiracy theorists. Like I had this journalist from the New York magazine, and she just wanted to hate me so bad. Like she just, after I did this thing on CNN New Year's Eve, where, you know, it was live, and I basically just, like, rattled off a bunch of things that I just thought the establishment media would never cover. It was just, you know, more for comedy.
Starting point is 00:17:09 And I said, you know, how come two chefs drowned, you know, presidential chefs? How come two presidential chefs drowned? And she came over and she was like, you know, because you said that conspiracy theory about the chefs. And I was like, oh, I'm so sorry. is that a conspiracy theory? Because I had researched it pretty hardcore. I called Joe Rogan and asked. And so I was like, do you want some time to look it up?
Starting point is 00:17:31 And she was like, oh, I didn't know about that. Because there was the guy, Walter Schlieb is his name, I believe. He was, you know, Bush and Clinton's chef who drowned in Taos. And then there was the Obama chef recently that drowned. And she was like, oh, I didn't know about that. And it's like, just because I knew it before you doesn't make me a conspiracy theorist, right? And so there's this new thing where I guess if we're in different algorithms, you know, we're going to think different things.
Starting point is 00:17:51 I called a girlfriend of mine that is one of my oldest best friends and Aver Levine has a new song out and I called her and I was like Aver Levine has a new song out going to her show is like one of our things and she goes Whitney Aver Levine's been dead for 10 years. It's like I feel like our algorithms are tearing us apart you know, so it's fascinating
Starting point is 00:18:12 but after I did that on CNN conspiracy theorists do think I'm like their leader. And this is still the way you talk on the phone? You know, I guess it's actually a banana. Because we're comics, we will do this. Well, what should it? What else? What is the... I know. You have to.
Starting point is 00:18:27 What do we do this? I know. But the robots will have taken over. It'll be the 29... And we'll still be doing this. It's fascinating, but I don't know. I just... You know, people come up to me now and, you know, they'll be in airports. And they'll just be like, hey, wouldn't you love to go on CNN? You know, pandas are fake. Like... It's a little far for me. You know, pigeons or drones. Like, I...
Starting point is 00:18:46 That one is true. Have you ever seen a baby pigeon? Fuck. All right, you. Thank you for coming by Whitney. Thank you so much. Whitney Cummings, everybody. New mom, robot owner.
Starting point is 00:19:04 All right, I'll see you soon. All right, let's meet our panel. Hey, everybody. All right, he is the co-founder of the dispatch and host of the Remnant podcast. Jonah Goldberg, back with us too long away. And she's a senior business analyst and host of MSNBC's the 11th hour or Stephanie Ruhl. Stephanie Ruhl, of course.
Starting point is 00:19:33 Okay. Well, welcome. Like I said, there's just so many problems to think about. The robots are taking over. I'm going to dwell on it until you realize it, which will be about four weeks when it happens. And we are going into debt. And, of course, mommy and daddy are fighting.
Starting point is 00:19:49 And this is terrible. I just want to say, and you can comment, as you will, I feel like the upshot of the whole Doge thing and the Elon era, is going to be when all the dust clears and all the silly fighting is over, that we did get some closure about government. We sent in a guy who was as mean as he could be about it to look for all the bloat.
Starting point is 00:20:13 And I see in the paper today they're rehiring people. You're unfired. They're sending out there. You're unfired. The money is where it's always been. Not with the post office, not with the people who are just doing their regular jobs. it's the Social Security, it's the Medicare, it's the service on the debt, and it's the Pentagon.
Starting point is 00:20:36 It's where it's always been. It hasn't changed, and now the Trump has his big, beautiful bill. We're seeing no one ever has the guts to attack where the money really is. Am I wrong? So that's why Doge was a colossal wasted opportunity, because the American people would say the government doesn't work for me. We do waste a tremendous amount of money. So there was a chance to go inside the government with actual experts.
Starting point is 00:20:59 Right? People to look, agency, agency, we know we have too much regulation and actually work on it. But instead, Elon Musk rolls in roughshot. He has tremendous business experience and absolutely no government experience. He said he was going to cut $2 trillion. Then it was $1 trillion. Then we were down to $150 billion, and he didn't even show the receipts. And you made the point, now they're rushing to hire people back. And firing scores of people that work for the Weather Service or scientists that study black lung in West Virginia was pennies. It was a colossal waste of time. And if you actually wanted to take a swing, it is at the big giant things, like Medicaid, like Medicare, like Social Security.
Starting point is 00:21:37 And the truth is, Elon Musk, and I'm not saying I want to cut those things, Elon Musk would have been happy to cut those things. He's the guy who considers Social Security to be a Ponzi scheme. The problem was Republicans can't, we can debate that, but Republicans can't get elected
Starting point is 00:21:53 if you want to cut those things. And that's where the rubber is the road and he had to go. No one can get elected. if you cut them. Correct. That's a big part of the problem. And I basically agree with you.
Starting point is 00:22:02 I think part of the problem was that, look, I actually think there's a lot of, there is cost savings to be done in reforming and streamlining and modernizing. But like, take the buyout thing. Al Gore tried that in 1990s, too. The problem is, if you're the kind of person who can get a better job on the free market,
Starting point is 00:22:23 you take the buyout because your skills are competitive. If you're the kind of dead weight that knows the only thing you're useful for is this job, you don't take it. And so you end up firing talented people or losing talented people and keeping a lot of dead weight people. The basic problem, which I think you're right about, is that Musk didn't know anything about government. And the real lesson here is people have been saying since the 19th century, we need someone to, we need to run the government like a business. The problem is government isn't a business. And when you come in, like a Silicon Valley guy where you say, we're going to break everything, and then rebuild it and all that kind of stuff.
Starting point is 00:22:58 That doesn't work for large government bureaucracies. And you're absolutely right that the money, the real money is in these big entitlement programs that they do need to be reformed. We have, you know... But they're not going to. I mean, that's the thing. The debt is now $29 trillion.
Starting point is 00:23:14 I think the service on the debt is either the most expensive thing in the budget or very soon will be. Like the second most. With a bullet. Just servicing it. Just servicing the debt, right. which gets you nothing except paying banks off.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Okay. And Social Security going to go and solve it in 11 years? Is that right? Early 30s. Okay. And Medicare also. Yeah. And if you think about Social Security, think about the divide.
Starting point is 00:23:42 Senior citizens are saying, I worked my ass off all these years. I paid into the system. You're damn well going to pay me those benefits. And young people are saying, and those senior citizens are all showing up to vote. And young people are saying, this system doesn't work for me. I'm never going to get paid out. I want to break the system. And now you've got politicians in the middle.
Starting point is 00:23:59 They cannot get elected unless they address this system. And if we don't address the system, we're going to have a huge problem. And the people who vote are older. That's right. So they're never going to vote for that. Right. And what is it like when Social Security started, how many workers paid in like 42? Yeah, it's over 40.
Starting point is 00:24:20 And now it's 2.7? Something like that. Okay. So we went from 42 paying in to 2.2? 2.7, and we live longer. People used to live to 6. And when Nikki Haley even raised the idea of raising the age, and I'm not saying she's right or wrong,
Starting point is 00:24:36 but people, even Republicans, you know, went ballistic on her. So how do we address our problems? The issue is we don't want to. And it's why so many people said, I'm going to vote for Trump. He's an original G. Let's break the system. And now all the things that he's broken aren't solving the Medicare
Starting point is 00:24:51 or Medicaid or Social Security issues. Look at tariffs. Yeah, so look, look, my big problem with Doge is, first of all, it proved that this run government like a business thing was always horseshit. But more importantly, look, the idea that you were going to bend that cost curve, that debt curve, by getting rid of woke basket weaving at the NEH was always sort of ridiculous. I'm for getting rid of the woke basket weaving or, you know, that kind of stuff. But that's fractions of a penny on a dollar. And at the end of the day, the way you've got to fix this is by doing something that, you know, that Paul, you know, that Paul. Ryan was demonized for, they showed ads of him pushing old ladies off a cliffs where he said,
Starting point is 00:25:28 anybody over the age of 50 will get the benefits that they get. And by the way, the benefits you get on Social Security are far more than you pay into it. That's one of the reasons why it's going broke. But he said, anybody below 50, we're going to change the structure of this so that we can extend the life of this thing and it was demonized. The problem now is that the Democratic Party, which is completely bought into this mythology that these entitlement programs can go on forever and that there's no problem with them, that's now a bipartisan thing. Donald Trump does not give a rat's ass
Starting point is 00:25:58 about trimming entitlement. They never did. That's not just Donald Trump. They never did. At least they lied about it. At least they lied about it, right? At least they lied about it. You're right. And I'll say this. Look, Paul Ryan's a friend of mine.
Starting point is 00:26:12 Paul Ryan really believed it. He just couldn't close the deal. And now neither party is actually interested in fixing it. And that's the real dilemma. And we're going to look back on Doge. that was supposed to be there to cut. And the only thing it did was hurt. It didn't cut anything significant.
Starting point is 00:26:30 I mean, remember, we were all going to get $5,000 checks? Give me a break. It was Bill Gates who took a look at it and honestly said, the richest man in the world is killing the poorest children in the world. And what does that get anyone? It only hurts humanity. Well, I have more bad news. So it will also be no one left with a job.
Starting point is 00:26:52 to pay taxes, to have anything left in the budget. Are you taking us to the robots? I am taking to the robots, yes. The CEO of Anthropic, that's one of the world's most powerful creators of artificial intelligence, he said the government needs to stop sugarcoating the possible mass elimination of jobs, which is completely understandable to me. I mean, we see it already. He says, hey, I could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs.
Starting point is 00:27:20 And then we know it's been going on with blue collar jobs. In fact, I saw last week some trucking company, I think they were called Aurora. They have a truck already that drove 1,200 miles. It didn't. Waymo did. Yeah. And this is, you know, there's like three and a half million truckers, and this is also going to be Uber drivers. And they're all going to be Waymo, and it's going to be Waymo misery.
Starting point is 00:27:41 Yeah, about one in ten. Because no one's going to have a job. Well, what? I agree. I actually agree with something with. that Whitney alluded to earlier is like, the thing that scares me most about the AI stuff, isn't that AI is going to run our lives, it's that the people who think AI should run our lives
Starting point is 00:27:58 will make the case that AI should run our lives, right? The people who want to turn it into a cult thing and hand us over to robots are going to get too much power. That said, I don't trust anybody who runs an AI company who says that it's going to have this radical effect, because that's them talking up how great their own company is to a certain extent. It doesn't mean they're entirely wrong, but there's a lot of hype that comes from people in the AI business
Starting point is 00:28:23 about how transformative it is that we haven't seen yet. That said... No, it can do a lot of jobs. It can do a lot of jobs. It's definitely going to be disruptive, but the history of technology has always been disruptive. This country... Not like this.
Starting point is 00:28:36 I think it's different. And by the way, there were going to be guardrails. I mean, Biden had a program called the AI safety institution. Howard Lutnik, he's the Commerce Secretary. He says, quote, we're not going to regulate it. he's changed the title. Now it's the Center for AI Innovation. You see, they're just going to whistle
Starting point is 00:28:55 past the graveyard. I think we're doing it. The same thing, the environment, the debt, fucking robots, yes. We're all doing the same thing. And the argument, of course, is always, well, we can't let China win. Is that really the argument? I mean, does that, if, I get the
Starting point is 00:29:10 rationale for this. It's an arms race of sorts. Right. But what if not letting China, a win makes us all lose? What is that a victory? Having no guardrails serves no one, but these AI innovators that want
Starting point is 00:29:27 no rules. This is like my sons saying, we want no rules and we want an unlimited allowance. Great, they're going to want that for two weeks, and then in two weeks all the furniture is going to be in the pool and there's no food in the house, but boy, did those boys have a great experience like these AI innovators.
Starting point is 00:29:43 Right? And these AI investigators, and Elon Musk and others, We'll get on their rockets and go. What we don't, what we need is smart regulation. There's this idea that it's regulation stands in the way of progress. We need no regular. We need smart, good regulation.
Starting point is 00:30:04 I'm fine with, for some regulation of AI. I'm not a huge AI booster. I think most of the, I think you said before about it being too far left for the right and too far right for the left. I am much more skeptical when I listen to people who are huge AI boosters, and I'm much more skeptical when people are totally disqual. dismiss AI. The quote you read, I think, is right. Entry-level jobs, a lot of, like, Scut jobs, if you're a paralegal, if you do that kind of, like document review kind of thing,
Starting point is 00:30:31 AI is coming for your job. That doesn't mean that that increased productivity doesn't translate into new jobs and new things being creative. It is going to be really disruptive for a while. This country, someone to point out in the Wall Street Journal the other day. Like what? Give me an example. I hear that, give me an example of that. AI goes through this company. It takes all the programming jobs, the entry-level jobs, consultant. That bullshit job is definitely going away. I mean, I see people do it already. Just chat GPT on their phone. Okay. But these companies are adopting AI to produce something, right? That is meaning... Money. That's money. Fireworkers make more money. That's what they're producing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:13 And then that money gets spent on things for services. The jobs that require people... That no one has any money to buy anything with me. You're not going to be replaced by AI. We're not going to have a robot that's going to interview another robot, right? This is not a typical job. Poor. Okay, let's not put me into the mix here. You're right.
Starting point is 00:31:33 I hope I will not be replaced by AI. I mean, but it can or write, it already can write jokes. They're just not fucking good. I agree with that. That's one of the reasons why I'm underwhelmed by what AI is most of them. Let me give me this quote. This is a guy's, uh, cyber security. platform huntress.
Starting point is 00:31:51 The CEO said, you know, when it comes to decisions of how we have to implement it or secure against it, six-week basis. In other words, we can't plan anything more than six weeks because that's how fast it's changing. Yeah. That's the problem. But what we need is the smartest people working on it. And I want to go back to Howard Lutnik, who's saying we're not going to regulate it.
Starting point is 00:32:14 In 2022, half of the graduates in the United States that were successful. received doctorate degrees in an AI field. Do you know what they were? Immigrants. We are now saying we don't want international students here. We're defunding universities, research at universities. If we want to have the smartest and the best, let's have those people here working on it.
Starting point is 00:32:35 Because half the people who start AI companies are immigrants. I totally agree with that. I'm going to get to that issue in a minute. But let's get all the bad news out of the way now. I have one more bit of terrible news. Uh-oh. In Touch Magazine, this is the last... This is the last issue.
Starting point is 00:32:53 I mean, I saw this. It's going out of business. We all grew up on it. Just go with the premise. But yeah, I mean, the age of magazine is really dying. And, you know, we're in the TikTok age and social media. So, too bad. I love In Touch magazine.
Starting point is 00:33:11 But there's a new magazine coming out called Out of Touch. I don't have you heard about it. Which is really leaning into the fact that it is not the age of magazines anymore, and they're leaning into it. Would you like to see some of the articles that are in the cover? 25 must-own DVDs. That's pretty bad right there.
Starting point is 00:33:32 Ellen Page, fun, flirty short hairstyles for summer. Okay, well, that's very out of touch. Planning your plantation wedding. Oh, this is... These people are out of touch. Three easy egg recipes for under $5. That's... Win an internship with P. Diddy?
Starting point is 00:33:56 Oh, what else? Does Jared from Subway still want kids? Out of touch. Sexiest man alive, Bruce Jenner. Wow, that's... Oh, something political. Can anything stop Beta O'Rourke? Well, that's...
Starting point is 00:34:26 New York, New York, perfect destination for health care CEOs. Wow. Out of touch. And Gene Hackman, Where is he now? Okay. Okay. Too soon. Everything I do is too soon.
Starting point is 00:34:48 It's the brand here. There you go. But let's go back to what you were saying about immigration. Because I couldn't agree more. We're having a brain drain in this country. It could wind up being one of the worst things with all the things that we don't like that are going on in this administration. That we are having a brain drain.
Starting point is 00:35:01 We used to... Our secret sauce was always... We steal the best brains from all around the world. And now a lot of the best brains are bugging out. And, you know, for the Democrats, the immigration, they really did not do their brand of favor by having open borders, because I'm sure you saw this week a guy named Muhammad Solomon yelling free Palestine and kill Zionists, turned a garden hose into a flamethrower and attacked elderly Jewish people. Boy, when these people do heinous, they really do heinous. because the global intifada is coming here. You know, you say this often enough, as they have on campus,
Starting point is 00:35:43 bring the global intifada here. Let's have it all over the world. People are going to do this kind of thing. So that's the reason why idiots then look at something like that and say, let's get everybody foreign out of the country, and this is where we are. Yeah, so the only place I agree with you entirely, when people say globalize into the fata, that's what they mean.
Starting point is 00:36:02 I agree with that entirely. What I disagree with is the metaphor of brain drain because a brain drain is like something that you try to fight. States have brain drains of young people and all kinds of stuff. This is a brain flush, right? This is a deliberate attempt to push out foreign students, professors, all that kind of stuff. I mean, look, I'm very much in favor of fighting anti-Semitism at Harvard.
Starting point is 00:36:29 I don't get the flex of canceling cancer research to fight anti-Semitism? No, right? And this is sort of a Stephen Miller thing, which is they basically have, they're trying to claim that we are in the middle of a civilizational crisis and that anybody who is an immigrant here is a threat to the society, and I think it's gross.
Starting point is 00:36:50 Not any, of course, that's what they're saying, but some people are. For sure, but it's like we can make distinctions, right? Right. But is there a case to be made for asking someone before they come into this country, what are your values? Are they so far afield from where America is?
Starting point is 00:37:06 I mean, this guy said something about how he didn't think, oh, jihad, he said was more important to him than his wife, his mother, and his children. That should have been a red flag. Clearly, that should have been a red flag. So you're saying we can say you can't come into our country, if you believe it. You know what reminds me of is the 9-11 guy
Starting point is 00:37:27 who went and talked to the person at the aviation school and said he didn't want to know how, you didn't want to learn how to land. Right. He just, you know, like that should have been a red flag too. So I think you can draw these distinctions. But this idea that the gardener down the street or the French cancer researcher
Starting point is 00:37:45 should get lumped into all this stuff, and that's, I mean, if we're going to have big, large government bureaucracies doing things, it's to make distinctions for those kinds of things. And the system is just broken on that. But now we have become, sorry. But now we have become so divided and so angry We're meeting hate with hate
Starting point is 00:38:08 And one could reasonably argue A guy like Stephen Miller shouldn't be the one deciding what decency is And we should be able to come together and say Rather than just fight more hate How do we get to being pro-decency, pro-compassion And actually love? Because when you talk about patriotism, Patriotism is about love of country
Starting point is 00:38:32 And when I hear this administration talk about the things that they, it's all about grievance and anger. And if you get us back to a place of common decency and loving thy neighbor, it's not about anti-immigrant. Okay, but I hear people, I can just imagine people out there hearing this and saying, well, the guy with the flame flower, he wasn't exactly full of love. No. He wasn't full of love, but that's somebody who's rolling their eyes and dismissing the idea of love. and the actual idea of love, there's nothing more powerful. It's what starts wars. It's what ends.
Starting point is 00:39:09 Well, flame throwers are very powerful. Flame throwers are very powerful. But we're not going to set government policy based on one horrible individual and a terrible act. What we should be thinking about is those victims and what do we need to do to protect that. Well, it's not just one. I agree with the thrust of what you're saying,
Starting point is 00:39:26 but at the same time, you have lots of college campuses, including these elite schools, that do not teach patriotism and love of country. It's this narrative of colonial oppressors. You have schools bending over backwards to say to police speech where if you say men can't get pregnant, you get kicked out or thrown into re-education. But if you say gas the Jews,
Starting point is 00:39:49 you got to, well, you've got to hear both sides, free speech, and all that kind of stuff. That stuff matters too. Right after the attack, right after Flamethrower Man did what he did, the Boulder, this is Boulder, Colorado. a very far left city. I've been there, loved it. I did.
Starting point is 00:40:07 It's a great place to play. The police chief said, we are not calling it a terror attack at this point. It's way too early to speculate motive. Speculate motive. He was screaming, kill Zionist. What the fuck do you need to tell... You know...
Starting point is 00:40:26 He also wrote down and recorded videos confessing what he wanted to do. Yes. Like Emerson has this great line. He says, some circumstances evidence is very persuasive. Like when you find a trout in the milk, right? When you have a dude... When you have a dude shooting flamethrowers at Jews,
Starting point is 00:40:44 saying he wants to burn all the Zionists, you don't need to have a debating society about whether you're not, you call him a terrorist. But you know what we should do, stop defunding. We're no longer funding or staffing the groups in our government that study domestic terrorism. We just gutted the Office of Civil Rights that actually studies and goes after anti-Semitism.
Starting point is 00:41:05 So the actual groups that work on this, let's continue to work on it. Yeah, okay. Well, maybe now that Elon's on the way. As long as we're back to that subject, got one more thing to say about the whole budget thing is that I thought, when I saw the drone strike from Ukraine last week, if you missed this, the Ukrainians did something that was just way cooler than the Mission Impossible movie that's out now,
Starting point is 00:41:28 which is pretty cool I hear. But remember the beeper attack with Hezbollah? that was pretty cool about a year ago when they killed all the terrorists with beepers. Well, this really up the game. They hid all these drones inside a truck. Had a guy who did not know it was in his truck,
Starting point is 00:41:46 drove it into Russia, and then they came out the roof all on their own and destroyed the planes that Russia was using to bomb Ukraine. Not all of them, but plenty of them. And I thought this really this
Starting point is 00:42:01 puts the lie to the other big part of the budget, the Pentagon, which I've been saying forever here, and Elon said he was going to go after it. With Doge, they never did. Trump said, oh, we could fly billion. They never did anything. That never gets touched.
Starting point is 00:42:16 And it just puts the lie that we need all that defense contracting. Obviously, this is where the game is. Drones. They cost like $2,000 apiece. And we're spending a trillion dollars on tanks and submarines and other things which we'll never use because they're already obsolete.
Starting point is 00:42:31 But the game is also about being an ally and being a trusted ally. The fact that Ukraine didn't trust the United States enough to tell us about that, what does that say about our position in the world? I don't think any ally would. That's just not the thing you tell other people. The more people know...
Starting point is 00:42:50 I mean, they don't trust us and they shouldn't trust us, but I don't think they would do it under any circumstances. Why would you? Why would you have more people knowing about it who were not involved? Why would you just take that risk? But my question here about this is, Does this change the game? Because, you know, up until this moment,
Starting point is 00:43:07 I think a lot of people were coming over to the idea, the Trump doctrine, which is, you know, look, this his thing was, I don't like war, and this thing is going to end up with Russia getting its peace anyway. Why are all these people dying for something that's going to be inevitable? Russia's going to get its little bite of Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:43:26 Now, I don't know. Yeah, no, I think that's right. I think the, you know, the so-called foreign policy realists, they're basically ideologues who lose an argument, and they say, oh, those people are crazy, I'm the realist here. The so-called realists, the J.D. Vance crowd, have been saying that Ukraine cannot win and that it's not in our interest and that we shouldn't put boots on the ground when not a soul was ever saying American troops should be on the ground in Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:43:53 The idea, Russia just hit the mark of a million casualties. The idea that it is not in our cult, I think it's in our interest for idealists, reasons. I'm for the underdog, wanting to be an independent democracy and all that kind of stuff. But as a matter of cold realism, having Ukrainians degrade and destroy the Russian military for a decade, that is the real, realist argument. They're willing to fight for their own country, and all they're asking from us is a little help to do it. It is saving us pennies on the dollar. And the only reason why I think these guys are against it is because, you know, like Trump has always had this man crush on Putin.
Starting point is 00:44:34 He loves his must. That's putting it on. And I think that, like, they just got it in their head. That Ukraine was on the wrong side of the first impeachment, and therefore Zelenskyy didn't play ball, and Russia, Russia, Russia, and Putin's my guy. And they just have let Trump's weird, you know,
Starting point is 00:44:53 personality drive foreign policy. And why do you think they got it in their head? Because Vladimir Putin said, Donald Trump, this is what I'd like. And Donald Trump said, Yes, sir. Thank you. But last week, unlike this week, which was all about Trump's feud with Elon Musk, last week it was all about Putin. He was feuding with Putin.
Starting point is 00:45:18 Was he, though? He's crazy. I don't know what. I thought I knew the guy. He was saying, I thought I knew him and, you know, you think you know a guy, and then he turns out to be a vicious dictator. And tell me, one sanction Donald Trump has put in place. He's tariffed the whole entire world, except guess where? Russia. So I'd love to say, yes. He said, I think Putin's being crazy, but show me one thing he's actually done
Starting point is 00:45:40 to hurt Vladimir Putin, and I'll throw apart. I agree. I think the reason why Trump... I think Trump was legitimately angry and pissed off at Putin. I do. I think the reason for it was Trump lives in this world and he's surrounded by these sycophants and yes men, these sort of head past the sphincter ass-kissers
Starting point is 00:46:04 who tell him he's the greatest, smartest guy in the world, and he has this transactional relationship, with him. You know, it's like that old dictator phrase, you know, for my friends, anything, for my enemies, the law, right? And he's being really retributionist and that kind of thing with the law, going after his enemies. And they came into office and made concession after concession after concession to Putin without asking for anything in return. And then what happened was Trump discovered that Putin is not actually Trump's bitch. No. And that he was the guy who's He was pissed off about it.
Starting point is 00:46:40 He stole a Super Bowl ring off a guy's finger. Yeah. And he was like, I thought he was my guy. I thought like, we were all in this working together and we're going to hang at Marilago. And Putin's like, no, I want to reconstitute the Russian Empire. And it pissed Trump off. And so now he's like, I don't want anything to do with this
Starting point is 00:46:56 because I'm not getting my Noville Peace Prize. But the problem is he's only got a pair of deuses in his hand and he has no other tricks to play. Putin is sitting there going, great, what do you want? I'm negotiating with Steve Whitkoff, who has zero experience. in foreign policy or government, but gosh darn it, he's a great real estate developer. All right, I gotta stop it there.
Starting point is 00:47:14 Thank you, guys. Time for new rules. All right, new rules. Stop trying to help me understand how Kim Kardashian both is and isn't a lawyer. It's like how light is a particle underwave or how Jesus is his own dad. You win. I give up. Last month, Kim had a one-student graduation ceremony for her homeschool law degree, but she still hasn't passed the bar, so she's not.
Starting point is 00:47:46 passed the bar, so she still can't practice law or what's left of it under Trump, and yet somehow she's now the head of the Justice Department. No, well, not everything needs an Instagram. I don't know what's more depressing. The fact that there's an Instagram page dedicated to reviewing sticks, or the fact that it has 3.2 million followers who make comments like, nice dick, bro. and that's a good stick and the best stick I've seen in the last month.
Starting point is 00:48:39 Congratulations, official stick reviews. Somehow you made social media even bigger waste of time. New rule of the makers of skinny, confidential bamboo toilet paper who boast that it's chlorine and formaldehyde-free BPA, PFA, and plastic-free, non-toxic, 100% sustainable with no inks or dyes, Can't stop there. I need to know if it's carbon neutral, non-GMO, low-salt, free range,
Starting point is 00:49:10 cruelty-free, not manufactured in a plant that also processes peanuts, and kosher. I can't take any chances. This is the paper I'm going to use to pick up a dead June bug. A new rule, someone has to tell Lord, who just told Rolling Stone
Starting point is 00:49:39 that she received psychedelic drug therapy as an eating disorder and is gender flu, We get it. You have a new album coming out. It's okay. Spilling tea is how people promote new projects. So good luck. But you're never going to be, I'm a Nazi and I suck my cousin's dick. New rule, celebrities have to stop writing children's books.
Starting point is 00:50:10 Look, we get it. You need to feel like a good parent because you're never around and your kid has started calling... Your kid has started calling the nanny mama. But look on the bright side. if your nanny is deported, then your kid might finally get the love of the person who's forced to take over the parenting. Your assistant, Enrique. And finally, new rule, it's never too early to strategize.
Starting point is 00:50:40 Democrats have been having a lot of donor retreats lately where a liberal strategist hold ideathons, where they try to figure out why they keep losing elections. You know, apart from using words like ideathon. And now one idea that's getting a lot of attention is, is the Dems need to find their Joe Rogan, a liberal Joe Rogan, because that's why Kamlo lost. Republicans have a podcast. Okay, maybe. Or you could consider this.
Starting point is 00:51:13 Instead of conjuring up a new Joe Rogan, ask yourself why you lost the old one? Because he used to be on your side. He smokes pot on the air. I don't think he's that much of a far-right ideologue. I don't think his mind is completely inflexible. His neck, yes. But not his mind.
Starting point is 00:51:42 And he's expressed unease with some things Trump is doing, as has a certain disgruntled former employee named Elon Musk, who, like Joe, is another guy who five years ago was thought of as a liberal, but got driven into the other camp by bad attitudes and bad ideas, a reversal I completely understand, although I would never emulate. I also see the woke mind virus. I just don't jump from frying pans into fires. But I watched the evolution of both these guys.
Starting point is 00:52:22 This didn't happen overnight. In 2022, before he owned Twitter, Elon tweeted this chart, depicting how he felt about the liberal side, having shifted so much that it left a basically liberal centrist like him now labeled a conservative. I related. I related to the kind of mean girl shit you get from the cool kids in Wokeville when you're perceived that way. They tried real hard to cancel Rogan a few years ago.
Starting point is 00:52:51 And when Elon hosted Saturday Night Live in 2021, well before he was a trumper, some of the cast members gave him the cold shoulder for the sin of being rich. You think people don't remember when you do this shit to them, but it's not going to have blowback? Now, me, again, you don't have to win me back because I know. never left. But all the guys in America, like Joe and Elon, yeah, you do have to win them back. The good news is you can. Elon has gone from saying, I love Donald Trump as much as a straight man can love another man, to a week ago saying, I'm a little stuck in a bind here. I don't want to speak against the administration, but I also don't want to take responsibility for everything
Starting point is 00:53:44 they're doing. And now, I have proof he's in the Epstein files. Okay, I think we call that a getable voter. Someone who's mulling a change. Maybe this will put quietest to the nonsense that Elon and Rogan 2 went to the dark side. I hear that all the... They went to the dark... Yeah, like they got that blast of us fungal infection and became zombies. No, they just got driven away, because that's how politics works these days.
Starting point is 00:54:24 One side gets elected precisely because the other side was just in power and pushed their agenda way too far and drove people in the opposite direction. The pendulum swings back and forth with people not voting for anything, but just to get rid of the latest extremist assholes who tried to remake America in their image instead of just governing. Well, right now, it's the Republicans who are the very definition of drunk with power. and also sometimes just drunk. But the drunk with power part,
Starting point is 00:55:07 that's what Democrats should pay attention to, because you know who's easy to beat in a fight? A drunk. Really? I've done it. Now, I was also drunk, so it was a drug. But the point is, Trump owns the lowest 100-day job approval rating of any president. Only 39% approve of his handling of the economy,
Starting point is 00:55:31 which was always his forte. You know, it's not like anyone was asking for tariffs. Do you think the bros and the bras? You think they want to pay $150 more for a PlayStation? You think they want the government to ban abortion and ban pornography and do lots of other far-right stuff that's in the Project 2025 blueprint? Please, their project for 2025 is trying to get laid.
Starting point is 00:56:03 Yeah, it's... It's not just Democrats who aren't really digging Trump, too. Adding trillions more dead is not sitting well. And even the likes of Tucker Carlson and Ben Shapiro have called out the corruption. Even the deporting of the illegals, which America generally supports, is pissing people off now. I read a story last week about this town of Kennet, Missouri, where just about everyone voted for Trump. But now is pissed because ICE removed their favorite waitress, a beloved. local mother of three named Carol Hue,
Starting point is 00:56:39 currently facing deportation back to Hong Kong. One local woman said, no one voted to deport moms. We were all under the impression. We were just getting rid of the gangs. This is Carol. Yeah. Well, yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:53 When you elect a bull to run to the China shop, sometimes the China that gets broken is you. The Republicans have taken full advantage of how snobby and out of touch Democrats have become to claim the title of party of the working class, but Trump's big, beautiful budget cuts Medicaid by $723 billion. Steve Bannon says a lot of MAGA is on Medicaid. Yeah, it is.
Starting point is 00:57:31 42% of MAGA voters say Medicaid is important to them. Let's see if they miss it. All right, that's our show. I want to thank Jonah Goldberg, Stephanie Ruhl, and Whitney Cummings. But random drops every Sunday on YouTube or listen whenever you get your podcast. Now go watch overtime on YouTube. Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen.
Starting point is 00:57:50 You are terrific. Thank you guys. 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. Lasagne sur-gillet, Pucance-moil for 10 minutes.
Starting point is 00:58:09 We're saying that's their dojo. Pre-to-joo? Live the pleasure with Leo Jo. The casino in line that proposes the the most recent machine-as-a-sue and the game of casino
Starting point is 00:58:17 in direct. Profite of 50 tours free on Big Bas Bonanza, without the exigance of mis, and with the payment instantane. Hey, I've gained.
Starting point is 00:58:24 Woo-hoo! Sentire the pleasure. Play-O-Jo! 18-10 and plus, 1,1,000, expugent in Ontario. 50 tours on the machine-a-sou
Starting point is 00:58:31 Bik-Bas Bonanza. Depos minimum of 10 dollars. Veillie to pay to fashion responsible. The conditions can't apply.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.