Real Time with Bill Maher - Episode #354 (Originally aired 5/15/15)

Episode Date: May 18, 2015

Episode #354 (Originally aired 5/15/15)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series Real Time with Bill Maugh. Starts a clock. Good afternoon. At the show, time will be real time. Thank you very much. I'm excited.
Starting point is 00:00:46 Hey, I usually say I know why you're excited. This week, I'm going to tell you why I'm excited. Mitt Romney tonight is fighting Evander Hollifield. I'm not making this up. You've heard this, right? Yes, that Mitt Romney is fighting a boxing match. Well, it's a charity boxing match with Evander Haleigh Field. It's a friendly exhibition to raise money.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Just like the Mayweather fight last week. Friendly. Wow, Mitt Romney, I'm telling you. They asked him, why is he doing this? He said, I don't know. I guess I'd just like getting beaten by black guys. Very strange. But, no, everybody this week is talking about one of the worst.
Starting point is 00:01:35 train wrecks ever. But enough about the Jeb Bush campaign. Oh, tough. We learned something this week. There's actually no such thing as a smart bush. They kept saying he was this smart. No, no. Oh, I think only a Bush
Starting point is 00:01:55 could answer a yes or no question two different ways and be wrong both times. I mean, it wasn't that hard. He was asked, knowing what we no now, would you have invaded Iraq? And he had a different answer every day. First, it was damn right, I would.
Starting point is 00:02:14 Absolutely. Fucking great idea. And the next day it was, sorry, what? I'm sorry, I misheard or I misinterpreted. And then the next day it was, well, that's hypothetical. I can't answer it. When did a politician ever answer a hypothetical question? And then finally, it was, okay, my brother's a giant fuck up.
Starting point is 00:02:32 You happy? every day a different answer which is how he got his nickname the undecider and all this was on Fox News where the anchors are ordered to pre-like you I tell you
Starting point is 00:02:55 I think the Bush family has actually been in decline since the Patriot Prescott Bush he was Jeb and Georgia's grandfather the first President Bush's father he was a good guy he was a senator from Connecticut a moderate one of the first big advocates for planned parenthood if only
Starting point is 00:03:13 He had practiced what he preached. And Jeb Bush took his foot in his mouth again today. He said, get this, that it would be okay if we repealed Obamacare because soon people will be able to manage their health using the new Apple I watch. And I have one. Let's see if it works. Surrey, I think there's something wrong with my heart. I've found three theaters playing Paul Blart. No, no. Not Paul Blart.
Starting point is 00:03:56 Okay. Now, as for the Amtrak derailment, we still don't know what caused the train crash, or why Mitch McConnell always looks like he's just seen one. But how's this for sensitivity? Hours, hours after the crash, House Republicans voted to cut Amtrak's budget. Why do Republicans hate trains? This is my... Seriously. They love everything.
Starting point is 00:04:26 everything else from the good old days, swing music and Route 66 and segregation. But somehow... Somehow if you get to work in anything other than a Buick, you're not a real American. I don't get that.
Starting point is 00:04:44 I love trains. It's the only way to travel anymore where it doesn't involve a TSA agent slowly tracing the curve of my inner thigh. Why do Republicans hate trains? Well, of course we know, because they're subsidized by taxes. as opposed to the interstate highway system,
Starting point is 00:05:06 which is a naturally occurring geological formation. Now, I hope they get to the bottom of why this train crashed, but I don't know if that's going to happen, because the engineer involved says he has absolutely no recollection of what happened. So I don't think he's going to be driving trains in the future. But he has a very bright future as Tom Brady's ball handler. Charles Murray, Heather McGee, and a little letter to be speaking with the rapper rapper Killer Mike is back
Starting point is 00:05:43 stage. But first up, she is a beacon for freedom of expression. His latest book is Heretic, Why Islam Needs a Reformation Now, my friend, and one of my heroes. I and Herssey Ali. There you are. How are you?
Starting point is 00:06:02 Thank you. Thank you. I always say to guest when they're here. I'm glad to see you. But especially with you. I'm glad to see you. Because I know a lot of don't want you to live. Thank you. Thank you, and I'm glad to see you.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Yes, absolutely. So, you know, for people who are not familiar with your story, you were born in Somalia, right? Tell us a little bit about your upbringing and what it's like for a woman to grow up in Somalia. Well, let me tell you the Disney version, which is I was born. I didn't know there was one.
Starting point is 00:06:39 Yeah. I was born in Somalia to a Muslim household, and at the age of five years, I was subjected to genital mutilation like about 130 million women are. And fast forward, my father arranges a marriage or forces me to marry, and then fast forward, I'm able to escape that by taking a train from Germany to the Netherlands and asking for asylum. And fast forward, I learn the language and I assimilate,
Starting point is 00:07:13 and I run for office and I become a Dutch member of parliament and at some point three years into my tenure Thank you thank you Now why can't everyone do this? I told you this was the Disney version but three years into my tenure
Starting point is 00:07:39 one of my colleagues decides that I had not told the truth which is absolutely true but everybody knew about it in 2002 and she takes away my citizenship. I'm also at that point under so much security, and I decide to come to the United States of America, and I live happily ever after. Wow, that's the Disney part. Right. And you're a critic of Islam,
Starting point is 00:08:04 and for that, so many... Well, your book's called Heretic, so, you know, I don't think I'm talking out of school here. And the other one's called infidel. So, you know, I think... you're doing it to yourself. And we're glad you are. But why is it that so many liberals,
Starting point is 00:08:21 I mean liberals who absolutely hate blaming the victim, as they should, as we all should, when it comes to rape cases and so forth, how dare you blame the victim? So many blame you. They turn the finger on you. You're the bad guy.
Starting point is 00:08:36 How is that happening? I think some of them are scared. I think some of them are protective of the people who present to them as I am the victim. You know, so many of the so-called spokespeople for Muslims emphasize the victimhood of all Muslims, people they don't really speak for, and they say, look at her. She's the awful one.
Starting point is 00:08:56 She's the one who's asking questions. She's the heretic. She's the infidel. And I don't know why it works with liberals. Yeah. I mean, when I see a woman in the head-to-to-tow burqa, what I call it, the beekeeper suit, I see someone who is oppressed because I don't think any. really wants to live that way, especially in the hot sun.
Starting point is 00:09:18 But I've heard many liberals say, well, that's their custom. That's their culture. They want it like that. They like it. They like it. That's what pimps say. That's what pimps say. It is.
Starting point is 00:09:33 They like it. They blow guys in an alley and give me the money. They like it. All right, too far. No. I don't know how to work. far that is because even in every industry, in the industry of
Starting point is 00:09:50 Islamic extremism, there are women who like to cover themselves from head to tour and who like to court to this ideology of extremism. But isn't that brainwashing? Would they really... Well, if they like it, they like it. My point is there are millions who
Starting point is 00:10:06 don't like it. Please don't impose it on them. Those are the women I'm talking about. Right. Okay. And now in your book, of course, you say what I think lots of people have said Islam needs a reformation. But you propose a specific plan for this reformation. Can you give us the thumbnail version?
Starting point is 00:10:30 Okay, number one, I think it's extremely important for Muslims to change their attitude toward the Quran and Muhammad. Toward the book, it's not a driver's manual, please. To what the man, give me a break, he can't be the most perfect moral guide for all humanity. at all times. Give that or part of that up. Number two, stop investing in life after death
Starting point is 00:10:58 instead of life before death. Right. Thank you. Number three, give up Sharia. Do you know what Sharia law is? Give it up. No, no, tell us, we hear that word a lot, and there are people in this country, especially now in Texas, who think they're invited.
Starting point is 00:11:23 In a danger of Sharia law taking over. Alan West in Florida tweeted the other day, he was in a Walmart, and he was trying to buy liquor, and they wouldn't let him, because it turned out the sales guy was underage, so we couldn't sell it to him. And he said, Sharia law has come to Walmart. They're crazy. But what is involved in Sharia law?
Starting point is 00:11:44 Well, Sharia law is the system of law that Saudi Arabia has, that Iran has, that the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria is trying to implement. Sharia law basically decides absolutely everything about yourself. Decides how women and men should interact with one another. Adulteras are flogged or stoned. People who drink are subjected to various harsh punishments, death. I am somebody who left the religion of Islam. The punishment under Sharia law for me would be to be killed.
Starting point is 00:12:17 If you're gay, you are to be taken to the tallest building in town and thrown down. and if you're still alive, there's a mob waiting there to lynch you. We're seeing all of this carried out in many places, formally and informally. When I say formally, I mean by a government, informally by people doing it themselves. And that takes me to the fourth point, which is the commanding right and forbidding wrong, where individual citizens feel that they can tell you what is right, and if you don't, you're not behaving the right way they can punish you.
Starting point is 00:12:45 And then finally, of course, jihad, holy war should be replaced with holy peace. So I've had And we know Sharia law is popular in many more countries than you even named. I mean, when I have liberals on this show,
Starting point is 00:13:05 one of the big arguments is, well, you're painting with a broad brush. Of course, Saudi Arabia is backward, but what about Indonesia and Turkey and Jordan? Well, I looked up Indonesia and Turkey and Jordan. And, well, here are some of the statistics here. In Sharia law,
Starting point is 00:13:21 72% of Indonesians, favorite. Jordan, 71%, stoning of adulterers, Indonesia 48% popular, Jordan 67%, death for leaving Islam, Jordan 82%. These are their bastions of freedom and democracy. How do we get liberals, and some of them are people I really used to respect, how do we get them to understand that we're the liberals in this debate?
Starting point is 00:13:50 The people who are facing shining a light on a oppression and demanding that it will end, how can that not be the liberal cause? What do you say to liberals? I say to them that the cancer of Islamic extremism is an assault on liberalism, on liberalism, on liberal ideas, on the idea of the human being as, you know, protect the life of the human being, the freedom of the human, the equality of human beings. That's what it is an assault on. Islamic extremists divide the world into.
Starting point is 00:14:23 us and them and the ones they they deem to be them, even if they're pious Muslims, they kill them, they subjugate them, they sell them into slavery, they rape the women, and they destroy
Starting point is 00:14:35 arts and civilization. And we see it on a daily basis. If you're a liberal and you really truly believe in the principles of liberalism, you've got to stand up to the challenge of the day, and that is Islamic extremism. Thank you, Ayan Horsi.
Starting point is 00:14:51 You're my hero. You know that. All right, stay safe. I and Herssey Ali. Let's meet our panel. Okay. All right. He is the iconic indie filmmaker of hairspray and cereal mom, whose latest book, Carcic, is now in paperback.
Starting point is 00:15:15 John Waters is over here. Well, always underdressed, understated John Waters. She is the president of the progressive public policy organization, D. Mose. Heather McGee. Hey, Heather, great to have you here. And he's a conservative. of an intellectual's latest book is by the
Starting point is 00:15:33 people, our friend Charles Murray back with us. Hey Charles, for you to see you. Okay. Remember to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, send us your questions for tonight's overtime so we can answer them after the show on YouTube. All right, I want to talk about Jeb Bush first.
Starting point is 00:15:49 It's interesting the way the Republicans seem to be imploding week by week. I had a little fun with him there in the monologue. But I want to go after some of the things that he said earlier in the week that I think were not challenged by the media, because the first thing he said was, I would have invaded Iraq, given the intelligence we had, as he said, by the way, so would Hillary Clinton.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Can I just point out that I don't think Hillary Clinton or any other Democrat or even any other Republican might not have invaded Iraq because Bush was the only one who even thought to link 9-11 to Iraq? Richard Clark in his book talks about the day after 9-11, Bush going around saying, Is there a link any reason we can invade in Iraq? And they're like, no, no. And he's like, well, we'll look harder.
Starting point is 00:16:39 There you go. That's my point. I had to get that off my check. I hate it. I hate it when he makes a mistake because I want him to be the nominee, because I think we can win. And the real reason I want to win is so Bill can be first lady. You know, I want Bill to be an old-fashioned first lady. Eisenhower, you know, like, yeah, like baking pies and arranging flowers with an apron. I think it'll be great.
Starting point is 00:17:11 You know, it is a little bit like Jeb Bush never really thought of what he actually would say when this question came to him. Right. And, you know, this is George W. Bush we're talking about. We're talking about someone who did a lot to this country that his brother's going to have to answer for, whether it's the $2 trillion war or the $2 trillion tax cuts or the $14 trillion you know, housing bubble wealth loss, that's a big credit card bill that this
Starting point is 00:17:36 guy's going to have to answer for. Yeah, I think it might be a moment that defines the Bush campaign. I think Ted Kennedy, we're both old enough to remember when Ted Kennedy was asked back in 1979, why do you want to be president? And he couldn't answer the question. And not being able
Starting point is 00:17:52 to answer this question, this is the first one he was going to be asked. I mean, he had to have that down pat. Well, I mean, that's something you hear in every campaign, that the campaign is a great indication of how the guy would be as president. I've heard this going back as far as I can remember politics. They either say, I can't remember what Republicans said.
Starting point is 00:18:10 Maybe it was, you know, Romney or McCain before him said, well, you know, if he's as good as he was in the campaign, we're going to be okay. And I've heard others say, well, if he can't run his campaign, how can he run the White House? So that is a good question. But I noticed also that the Republicans this week all jumped on Bush. They smelled blood. the wounded animal.
Starting point is 00:18:32 So they all jumped in their haste to say, actually the Iraq war was a mistake. And I'd never heard them say that before. Unanimity. Unanimity. Yeah, they wanted to attack Bush. Because before that, the answer was always, no, world was better without Saddam and it was President Black Neville Chamberlain
Starting point is 00:18:53 who fucked things up. Well, I don't follow day-to-day politics close enough to be. Really? No, I hate day-to-day politics. But generally speaking, I think... By the week, that's this show. Every couple of years, I have to follow the day's politics before I come in the show.
Starting point is 00:19:11 How flattering. But in fact, on the Republican side, there's been an awful lot of agonizing and rethinking about Iraq for a long time. Really? Yeah. I've not heard that. Marco Rubio, I heard him just the other day, say, no, the world is better off without Saddam, which is a talking point from 2000. or plainly the world would be better if Saddam was still in power.
Starting point is 00:19:36 Not for the soccer team. Right, but that doesn't mean... But the world would be better off. Yeah, and that doesn't mean it should have cost 4,000 American lives and hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians to get there. Right. Yeah, I think... All right, so let's talk about the train wreck.
Starting point is 00:19:54 First of all, it wouldn't be that big a story. It is a big story. But if this happened in Chattanooga, believe me, It just happened on the Eastern Court. It's like when there's a snowstorm, anywhere between New York and Washington, the biggest thing in the world. Okay, let's talk about it. I'm on that train always, right?
Starting point is 00:20:11 Because I go back and forth from Baltimore. I'm on a train a lot. And you know the thing that I fear? I never thought you had to worry about them speeding. You know, that's the last thing. I worry about pilots committed suicide buses going, but not like, you know. But there is one point on the Acela train
Starting point is 00:20:27 that the suicide community knows about and they can't stop, occur. and they jump out. And I've been on the train where it's happened a couple times. They know this. They can't stop. And so, and it's a pain. You know, they have the coroner has to come. It takes hours. But it's a, it's, it's a common problem on mass trash. I'm shocked. I'm shocked you haven't written a movie about it. You know. There we go. This is, this is, I've been in the assail a whole lot. He has guys jumping off the train. It's never happening. You live in front of it. It's not a call for help. Why are the Patriots the ones who don't want to spend money on trains?
Starting point is 00:21:06 It drives me insane. I know. This is just no way to run a country. We are literally squabbling about whether or not we should repair our crumbling roads and bridges from 100 years ago or put in these safeguards that we know that we had that were available, whether we can afford them. And it's like, meanwhile, across the pond, our competitors are just handing us a lunch. Right? They're creating broadband that is incredible.
Starting point is 00:21:30 fast and wind farms. And they're doing actually exactly what we taught them to do in the post-war period, which was a mixed economy, which is it's going to take some government. It is actually going to take some government because there are some things that we can't do ourselves and that
Starting point is 00:21:46 no individual company can afford to do. Heather, I'm actually with you. I think government should build roads. I think that's a good thing. Here's a problem. There's a bridge in Bayonne that is being rehabbed. They wanted to start rehabbing about 70. years ago. It's not even a new bridge. It's an existing bridge they're going to fix. So far, they've gone through 47 permits from 19 environmental agencies. It still isn't approved. The average
Starting point is 00:22:14 amount of time it takes to approve a new road project. I mean, roads are simple. It's eight years. I mean, we have a sclerotic system at this point whereby we can't do anything. There are no shovel-ready jobs. But I've heard Obama talk about getting rid of regulations like that. Not all regulations, but just a common sense approach. I can't but feel that the reason why this train crashed is because
Starting point is 00:22:39 while Obama is president, any victory for him is a... Yeah, we can't have a victory for America because Obama is the president. Bill, Bill. No, come on. Bill, I'm saying something.
Starting point is 00:22:56 This is a statement of fact. If we appropriated a trillion dollars tomorrow for infrastructure reform, nothing would happen for a matter of years. And when I say nothing, I mean, basically nothing. That's not true, because we had the stimulus
Starting point is 00:23:12 package and we never driving around the projects here in L.A. These people were out working, and they did something. Absolutely. They did a lot. They made roads and bridges and also brought our country back from the rainfall.
Starting point is 00:23:30 not our country back from the brink. I think, you know, I know that your new book is about regulations and all of that, and I think that there's something to be said for that, but you cannot say that the real reason that Republicans are doing these reckless cuts is because they're afraid that if they actually did something and be held up by regulations, that just doesn't make any sense. Okay. I actually heard in Baltimore somebody say they were against the wind farms, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:02 because they were Satanist. So every time I see one of them, have you ever been in the middle of a wind farm? They're very spooky. Do you ever get out of the car and stand in a wind farm? Yeah. Spooky. Why would you do that?
Starting point is 00:24:15 It's fun. Put your finger in it. You can also watch the birds getting killed. Right. Yeah, I don't like that. Okay, so Bill de Blasio put out a contract for America. Remember Newt Gingrich's contract? Well, this is the Liberals version of it.
Starting point is 00:24:30 And I'm sure someone like you, when you hear about some of the things are in it, raising the minimum wage to 15 bucks, pathway to citizenship, but then national paid sick leave, national paid family leave, universal pre-K, student loan debt relief. These are all things that cost a lot of money. And I'm sure that conservatives say we don't have that kind of money. And then I look at things like the F-22. cost $67 billion. We barely ever used it. It did not factor in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Starting point is 00:25:07 It's now scrapped. Then we went to the F-35. The F-35 costs, it was going to cost $237 billion. It's now up to $1.5 trillion. Also doesn't seem to work. Cannot take a lightning hit. So they have to stay 25 miles away from lightning. So we can get into a war unless it rains.
Starting point is 00:25:34 Right. That's $1.5 trillion. Oh. From the people who want to cut the M-Track funding by how many millions. Exactly. It would be funny if it weren't so sad. So I actually were...
Starting point is 00:25:52 I was there to sign the contract that the progressive agenda Bill de Blasio called me a couple of months ago and said I'm going to organize some progressive leaders to try to make income inequality the defining issue of the 2016 presidential campaign. And I said, absolutely, I think that has to happen. But if you look at that agenda,
Starting point is 00:26:12 it's not actually such a left agenda. We're at sort of like this jumpball moment for what is progressive, where the center is on economic issues. And if you run basically down all of those, they get majority support from Republican voters, obviously not from Republican members of Congress, but you've got this strange thing
Starting point is 00:26:31 where it's not really a left and right issue but more of like a donor class and everybody else issue. We're actually... And we know the political science research shows that because the donor class is this sort of gatekeeper right now for who gets to run, whose phone calls are answered, that comes out in public policy decisions that skewed towards the wealthy.
Starting point is 00:26:55 Well, I'll tell you. All I can say is, Heather, the Republicans I know think that having a candidate who has pledged to the Doblasia program is a wet dream. I mean, it is such an attractive... It's as if the Democrats could run against Mike Hockabee's social agenda. They'd wipe them up. Really?
Starting point is 00:27:17 National paid family leave? We got a whole bunch of independents and moderate Democrats who usually vote Democratic because they really don't like the Republican social agenda at all, and that just completely turns them off from it. On the other hand, these are the people who go to the polls in high numbers. That means whites vote in greater numbers in most minorities. The more money you have, the more like you are to vote. So the electorate, the elects people, is much different from the profile of the country as a whole.
Starting point is 00:27:47 Can I give you the numbers on this stuff? Because they have polling, and I know what you're going to say, and you may be right. Yes, when you give people goodies, when the government does that, it's popular. But the minimum wage, 63% support going up to $15. Now, pathway to citizenship, 62% supported. Paid six leave, 88%, family leave, 86, pre-K, 70%, student loan debt relief, 73%. They keep saying Hillary's gone left.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Hillary's where she always has been in the center. She's for gay marriage, 58% approve of that, overturning citizens United, 61% approving that. Body cameras on cops, 91% approve of that. sentencing reform for nonviolent drug offenders, 63%. So this idea that this is far-left stuff, this sounds like... Bill, okay, well, we can have the show a couple of years from now. I'm saying if the Democratic candidate embraces universal pre-K and paid family leave and the sick leave and all of that,
Starting point is 00:28:53 all of which are expensive programs, leave the fighter planes out of it, you have a whole lot of vote. Why are we leaving the fighter plane? That's the whole point, is that we shouldn't leave the fighter. I'm talking about who's voting and why they're going to vote. Wait, so, Charles, you're saying that the only way to get to your program is to distort our democracy to keep most of Americans out of the ballot box. That's exactly what you're saying. You're saying that the people who vote, the people who vote want X, the people who donate want X.
Starting point is 00:29:22 I'm trying to forecast what the American people actually want. If the Democrats adopt this agenda, they will get wiped. out next year. If you, and if the right gets to define the electorate, that is absolutely right. I'm talking about who actually vote. You're right. Who actually votes.
Starting point is 00:29:39 And that's, and that is on the liberals, because they act, as these prove, we have the numbers, we just don't turn up. You're right. We let old white people run the country. All right. I got to move on. There's another issue that. So what's your point?
Starting point is 00:29:55 Dear to my heart, I'm conceding. Take yes for an answer. is religion was in the news this week. Pew poll does a big survey every seven years. So what? The pew pole? You've heard of the pew pole. It sounds like farting in church.
Starting point is 00:30:12 The pew pole. You never heard of Pew? P-E-W? Okay. We got a whole panel tonight who never reads the news. I didn't hear of the pew. Anyway, they do a big survey of religion every seven years, and the results are in, and they're pretty amazing. The number of
Starting point is 00:30:36 Christians has gone down from 2007 to 14, from 78% to 70%. The number of nuns, well, that's people who, none of the above. These are atheists, agnostics, people who just want to sleep in on Sunday. We're now second. It's evangelicals, 25% nuns, 23%. And mostly this is because of your show. Because of me, absolutely. You're welcome.
Starting point is 00:31:09 I do what I can. But the millennials are most, 35% of the millennials are nuns, and they are leaving in droves. So they're trying to get them back. They're the key to stopping this bleeding. So they have put out this Bible to try to get the millennials back.
Starting point is 00:31:27 It's the King James Franco. very similar. It's slightly different. Would you like to hear? It's very similar. Like, here's from the Old Testament. Adam and Eve saw that they were naked and they were ashamed because they were not
Starting point is 00:31:42 toned. So they sewed fig leaves together to cover their problem areas. That's slightly different. The Lord's anger burned against Israel and he made them wander in the wilderness 40 years where they had no signal. You can see how this upset the millennials.
Starting point is 00:32:03 And the commandments are slightly different. Honor they father and their mother so that you may live long in their basement. Thou shalt not steal, except thine music online. All right, now let's go to the New Testament. There are also some different versions. Again, slightly different. Oh, Jesus says, take this and eat of it, for it is gluten-free. This is...
Starting point is 00:32:34 Blessed be thy fruit of thy womb. It is locally grown. Jesus, oh, I remember this one, said to Peter, this very night before the cock crows, you will deny me three times, because the haters are going to hate, hate, hate,
Starting point is 00:32:50 so verily just shake it off. And we know not on what hour thy lord will return, but thy Uber will be there in four minutes. All right. Let's bring out Mike. He is an activist and hip-hop artist. His latest album is Run the Jewels 2. Michael Render, aka Killer Mike.
Starting point is 00:33:14 We're over here. Killer Mike. Wait you see you. This is our battle. How are you doing? How are you doing? All right. Charles, there's not enough people against you.
Starting point is 00:33:26 We wanted to bring out one more. I want to thank him. A book you wrote back in 94 made a lot of my teachers kick our ass. So you ain't going to prove this white man right. So we were on. Oh, yes. Yeah, when he was like genetically black people weren't as smart. And I was like, if the motherfucker's running this country that brilliant, it's over for us for real.
Starting point is 00:33:47 Those Bush genetics got us far. All right. So, Mike, I wanted to have you here because it's certainly been a lot of news lately about things that are of interest to you because I know that your father was a cop. And, you know, I've wanted to ask somebody about this who would know the issue of black policemen, because they must be. caught in a terrible vice. Well, they are, and a lot of them on the wrong side right now. I just want to I want to acknowledge that
Starting point is 00:34:18 policing is difficult, and it's hard. It's a brave few that'll do it. And if you didn't have them, it would be tough. It would. I do not believe in humanity. I really don't. They may be bad, but you take away that. It's the purge.
Starting point is 00:34:36 Yeah. It's the purge every night. Well, I'm pro-second amendment, so I wouldn't be against that even, but my wife actually taught me that if you get too drunk, you can call the police and they'll have to take you home. So that was a new one I didn't even know. She's a lot sexier than I am, so I'll imagine the cops wouldn't arrest her. But I think I live in Atlanta, Georgia. Atlanta's a black city top to bottom has been for the last 40, 50 years or so. For the last 100 years, black population. But for the first 70, 80 years, there was no black police force. Black policing came along in the 50s after a long, hard fight for him. Black cops weren't even allowed to change clothes
Starting point is 00:35:09 with the regular cops, they had to do it at a Y. But the community fought for these black cops to be here because they wanted to be police fair and they wanted to be police by people who looked like them, who understood the community, who were from the community. And the fact that we have black cops today, that are black cops like the people they're policing,
Starting point is 00:35:23 but they don't live near the community. They don't live in the community. They aren't active in the community. That's the cancer in policing. There's a policeman North Little Rock named Tommy Norman, white guy. Talks kind of black, though. But he polices the black community. And I started following him secretly,
Starting point is 00:35:38 because every day he was posting him in kids and poor white kids, black kids, he was actually out of his squad car. And I believe that that's where proper policing happens. When you're out of a car, when it's you and another cop engaging the community. So for kids who are out there
Starting point is 00:35:54 who may be in military, who may be coming out, who may be graduating high school or college, we need black policeman. We need you policing. But we need you policing and living in the community you police in and knowing the people you're policing.
Starting point is 00:36:05 And, I mean, we hear a lot People say, you know, most cops are good cops, and I would agree with that. I don't know if I always agree with that. You know what, Mike, I don't know. See, to be a good cop doesn't mean you're scared. Exactly. But here's my question. No, I've said a lot of bad shit about cops, and I think they know it.
Starting point is 00:36:26 They'll shoot me faster to steal, though. Okay. But here's my thing about good cops. We know what a bad cop is. Yeah. A good cop is one who isn't racist. Yeah. Who doesn't, you know, abused people.
Starting point is 00:36:38 people kill people for no reason, just get his jollies, you know, doing that kind of shit. But it seems like we do not have any cops who rat on the ones who do that. Now, that's, and to me, can you be a good cop if you see a bad cop doing bad shit and you still back him up? Because, you know, remember that movie Serpico? It was like one guy, one cop said, you know what, I'm not even going to fuck with you guys. I just don't want to take the money, and they tried to kill him. Exactly. Can you be a good cop?
Starting point is 00:37:11 Exactly. I don't. I think that the nature of good... Like, when we say good cop, we just mean he hasn't killed anyone this week. But I think... I think that good cop means... Low bar, Mike. I think that good cop means I have to uphold the letter of the law,
Starting point is 00:37:25 beyond the fraternity of brotherhood of policing. I have to hold up to uphold the law for the community. And that may involve telling on bad cops. And it needs to be something that we as a public seller. break. I'm glad that a lot of police are getting body cameras, but I think was really needed. God bless the dead. My mentor was appointed. Her name was Alice Johnson. She died a few months ago. Great woman from Chicago taught me how to organize. George Turner, who's our police chief in Atlanta, appointed her to be the community between the community and between the police force. Now, she actually was an
Starting point is 00:37:56 organizer. So what does she do? She organized the community to speak to the police force directly, and it dramatically for a year or so changed the way Atlanta policing happened. Now we have body cameras, So I don't know if that office is going to stay, but I pray it does because I saw the difference. And I thank our mayor, Cassim Reed for it. I thank George Turner for it. And I pray that we find another Alice Johnson to be the community liaison in Atlanta,
Starting point is 00:38:19 so we won't have another murder of like a 92-year-old grandmother who was killed by an elite drug squad. Right. So we're having it in cameras now, all the black kids are wearing their own cameras on their hat. That's a new fashion. I think it's great. It's great.
Starting point is 00:38:37 You knew that, but not. the pew study. No, I never heard the Pew Study. Would you wear that jacket? I look for it in my size. They would have attached to them. I'm such an admirer of you, too. Thank you, girl. Thank you, also.
Starting point is 00:38:53 Because this kind of matches that. Yeah, I got to get you one. This is my band, run the Jews. Can I get you to do that? You've never heard the Pew Study? I've never seen that color, and now I've seen it twice. So we got to do this, you got to throw it up. That's my band.
Starting point is 00:39:04 Oh, I can't do the black handshakes, Mike. But there's a white guy. in my group. I'm with you intellectually, but don't make me do the headshank. So, so, um, Bill O'Reilly, um, what?
Starting point is 00:39:21 You don't like Bill O'Reilly? Man, I like, I like Bill O'Reilly. Always going on. I hate old white people take him so seriously. Right. He's the character. He's so bad. But he is always going after rap as the reason for every ill.
Starting point is 00:39:35 He's more full of shit than an outhouse. Right. Right. You don't like that. I'm going to go in a black club and see Bill O'Reilly with a stripper in his lap. I guarantee you that. He's as those books he writes.
Starting point is 00:39:47 That's what Padden would have done. And we know it's an act. We know it's an act. And I think the best... No, you're wrong. I know, Bill. That is not an act. Bill is full of shit.
Starting point is 00:39:55 He may be full of shit, but his sincere shit. Really? Of course. People really think that way? No, he's not him. He can't. He can't. He can't.
Starting point is 00:40:05 Mike. Now you're the one living... That means I'm going to fight him one day, No, you know. But he, this thing I was just talking about, the religion, like the Christians losing Christians, he blames that on rap music. And I, yeah, right, because, like, the least, the people who are least likely to leave Christianity are black folks.
Starting point is 00:40:31 Oh, no, yeah, well, particularly black women, they're not leaving. My mama and sisters and grandma. No, I know. It's Jesus to the end. Jesus was like the original rap. He was arguably a black guy, or at least dark, hung with a posse of homies, one of them was strapped with a knife, went to war with the government, lost, what a lot of black guys do, and everybody loved him more after he died like Tupac.
Starting point is 00:40:58 And he may not have existed at all. I agree. Oh, you agree. Oh, yeah. I deny me three times. All right. So Michelle Obama, let me ask the parents. This question was speaking this week, and she did invoke racism.
Starting point is 00:41:17 She said, among other things, that she was followed in stores. I imagine you remember that, right? You've had that experience. She said, we all know the experience of going to a party, and people assume you're the help. Okay. This got the usual suspects, very angry. Rush Limbo said she was playing the race card.
Starting point is 00:41:39 Laura Ingram said a litany of victimization. They act like her very existence is kind of a deliberate provocation. I think they wanted her to go down to this, to Sikiki, right? To this, where these working class Alabama and kids, and actually just like give him the okey-doke, right? To say, okay, because Barack and I are in the White House, like ding-dong racism's dead. That's what they wanted her to say.
Starting point is 00:42:06 And the fact is, we don't do that with each other. We don't tell that lie. Right? We actually tell the true American story of black people in this country, which is one of resilience. And resilience has two parts. It has struggle and it has overcoming. And so often the right wing just doesn't want, wants to deny either one of those parts, right? Either black people never struggle or they never overcome. But you have to see, sometimes, I'm so naive because on racism, because it used to be, I grew up with, like, George Wallace, a dumb racist that was easy to make fun of, right? But now they're like sensors, you know, like stupid sensors are easy to work with. But real racists today, they don't say it out loud. They're the scariest ones, you know?
Starting point is 00:42:51 And they're like liberal censors. They're the scariest ones. Were you in Baltimore when the riot house? Oh, yeah, but I feel, you know, the night Baltimore was burning, I was filming a cameo in the new Alvin the Chipmunk movie in Atlanta. So I may not be qualified to talk about it. But I... But he's your fan there.
Starting point is 00:43:13 Look, I was arrested in Baltimore in my life, and I was in a paddy wagon. They didn't break my back. So I guess, you know, but at the same time, there's a cop bar I hang out in, and they're very nice to me. So it just depends. But I know, Hill's how you solve it. Two ways you want to solve it, what I think in Baltimore. Is one, like jury duty, once a year, every family has to move to the exact economic opposite neighborhood and live there. They have to get their hair done.
Starting point is 00:43:38 They have to send their kids to school there. They've got to go to the store there. And then you move back, right? The other one is, don't make it a race thing, make it a class thing. There's just as many poor white people in Baltimore. Poor white people don't riot. Rich white people do. So, yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:55 Rich white people riot. Yeah. I mean, who would, if there were any rioters in Baltimore that were white, they were upscale, right? When rich white kids riot, they call it celebrating. Okay, yeah, well, did Che Guevara take it? toilet paper. You know, I mean, really, I'm for that toilet paper is expensive. It's a fortune when you go in and buy those paper towel. Why did they burn down the CVS?
Starting point is 00:44:17 Well, that's, why? I just think, go burn down a country club. People always say that, well, well, they burned down, they burned down the CVS. They stole stuff they needed. You know, you need medicine, you need socks, you might need a blood pressure regulator. Like, so, but when people say, why do you burn down a CVS, why are you burning down your own community? Well, because of black people being denied loans, because of black people being snookered out of their homes and gentrifiers coming in or not coming in. Because that's happened, you live in a community you don't own. You're a winner. You're just occupying a space.
Starting point is 00:44:48 The police are there. They're occupying you. So when you say burn down my community, what did I burn? Most CBSes do not hire people who work within 10 miles of there because they're afraid of theft of them letting their friends take something. So what did I destroy besides an economic eyesore that won't hire me anyway? overcharges me for drugs, and I got to wait until the next morning for my pain care. Wait, wait.
Starting point is 00:45:09 Are we saying no small store owners got burned out than Baltimore? That's not what I'm saying. What I'm saying is there were a litany of black men who had t-shirts on standing in front of stores, protecting stores. And that's not what the media showed you. The media went out and found children. And found children that said, hey, let's show these kids wild and out
Starting point is 00:45:29 and make the representation of Baltimore, and that was a lie. But they need to get the poor white people to hook up with them, too. Because they're Sandtown. Have you ever been to Pig Town? Yes, sir. You know, they team up together. And they did that in Ferguson. Yeah, they did that in Ferguson. I have just a couple of minutes to ask the lightning round question,
Starting point is 00:45:44 which is it came up with a wire today, the news that Joe Carr Sarnayev is going to get the death penalty. I was actually surprised, you know, because I wasn't. No. No. Well, you root for the death penalty. No, I am against the death penalty very much, and I campaigned in Maryland against it. And it is extreme. I get why the people in that jury who said they were not.
Starting point is 00:46:04 against the death penalty. We give it to him. I understand that. He's the poster boy for it as the Wall Street Journal crime. But we have to put up, I'm against it for him because like freedom of speech, we have to pick up with the worth. We have to put up with gang bang porn. We have to put about Nazis marching. We have to put up with the extremes of it to have the basic freedom of it for everybody. So you don't kill people and tell them that's how you do it. And he was 21. I get why they gave it to him. And also, didn't they sentence the people to have to live through this for years and years because the appeals are going to take? Well, they got rid of the D.C. bomber pretty quickly. You know, if you're interested in punishment, it's... But that was a little different.
Starting point is 00:46:45 Well, I mean, he was equally hideous, you know. I mean, uh... The sniper? Yeah, they got rid of him in a month, it seemed like. But they're also giving him what he wants. He wants to be a martyr. It would have been a worse fate. But I think people can do things that forfeit their right to live. I think that there are acts of I agree. On the other hand, if you're asking about punishment, solitary confinement 23 hours a day and some of the supermaxes, that is cruel unusual. But you know what I'm fascinated by is Judy Clark, the lawyer.
Starting point is 00:47:17 She's the only person I want to meet in the whole country, actually. Why? Well, because she did Susan Smith, the Unabomber, she does all. She's never talked to the press. She has never let her clients talk to the press. And this is the first time she's lost. And if she wins, she gets them life without parole. death penalty. She's Clarence Darrow, isn't she?
Starting point is 00:47:34 Right. All right. Thank you, panel. It's time to go to Nuro. Neuro, don't fall asleep in front of Kim Jong-un. He had his defense chief executed for the crime of nodding off at some event, possibly a performance of the children's
Starting point is 00:47:55 orchestra. Yeah, so if you're in Kim's inner circle, just to be on the safe side, you might want to pick up a pair of these. Neuro, when Courtney Love is accused of not paying bills, you can't report it as news. Courtney's psychiatrist says she owes him
Starting point is 00:48:22 $48,000, and that's just for steam cleaning the couch. New Roll, someone has to explain to this Kentucky man who accidentally shot his own mother during a church wedding. That when the minister says, forever hold your peace, He doesn't mean your gun. Oh, America. New Rule, if someone catches you having sex with the tailpipe of a car,
Starting point is 00:49:01 stop it. Sir, when they said you needed an emissions check, they meant the car. Man, I thought I was getting screwed at the pump. Anyway. I can't unsee that. I can't. New Rule, don't be like Luis Lang, the South Carolina Republican,
Starting point is 00:49:29 who refused to buy Obamacare until he started going blind, and now he wants Obamacare. Don't worry, Mr. Lang. President Obama's aware of your situation, and he has something for you. And finally, new rule, someone has to tell me why.
Starting point is 00:49:53 Oh, that, we sure jump that. Someone has to tell me why. Americans won't take anything seriously unless it's delivered with a British accent. Why in movies, even ones where the actors are Americans, playing people who are not British, they still put on a British accent. Here's Brad Pitt as Achilles.
Starting point is 00:50:16 My armadence. My brothers of the sword. He's from the Midwest. And we know the ancient Greeks were not. But neither were they from Notting Hill. So why does it? he have to say sword. Why is sword more serious than sword?
Starting point is 00:50:38 Here's Morland Brando as Superman's dad. All that I have, all that I've learned, everything I feel. Brando, the greatest actor ever. You mean even he can't talk American? Did biblical people have British accents? Like Jennifer Connolly here in Noah? I can't bear to think of some dying one. Her 600-year-old husband is putting 3 million animals on a houseboat,
Starting point is 00:51:09 but she's using a British accent because she doesn't want to sound silly. In World War II movies, even the Nazis have British accents. Game of Thrones takes place in a world completely made up by a dude from Bayonne, New Jersey, and they all have British accents. Last season ended with the king dying on the toilet. done with an English accent, classy. When Elvis did it, just gross. Obi-1 Canobi lived in another millennium
Starting point is 00:51:47 in a galaxy far, far away. So naturally, he had a British accent. As did the bad guy in the movie, and even the fucking robot. And I bet if you cracked open the other robot that only made beeping noises, there'd be a guy in there with a British accent. All right.
Starting point is 00:52:13 I'll stop, but before I do, did you know that among the many items that are sold as part of the merchandising for 50 Shades of Grey? There is a butt plug advertised online. The 50 Shades of Grey, something forbidden,
Starting point is 00:52:35 silicon butt plug. Using something forbidden is deliciously taboo. Is this for real? That's right. If you have an English accent, you can literally tell us to stick it up Yes, that's for real. Or that our dick doesn't work. You've seen the Viagra ads.
Starting point is 00:52:55 You know what? Plenty of guys have this issue, not just getting an erection, but keeping it. She's like a sexy Mary Poppins. Just a spoon full of sugar makes the dingling pop-up. You were a flaccid loser. Now you're the dick of Windsor. So what is going on here?
Starting point is 00:53:25 Oh, I think we know what's going on. Americans, we talk a big game about where the greatest country in the world, an American exceptionalism in the indispensable nation. Yeah, yeah. You know, whenever I hear someone bragging on themselves like that, I always think they're covering up a massive insecurity. And our reliance on the British accent to convey gravitas is kind of our way of admitting that we know we're not really a serious people.
Starting point is 00:53:53 I mean, come on. We drink wine out of a box. We invented Mormonism. Our best-selling author is Bill O'Reilly. Most Americans don't know that the Big Bang theory is also a theory. I mean, look at all the childish stuff that defines America, superhero movies, climate change, denial. Palins
Starting point is 00:54:28 Farrell's hat pajama jeans for people who want to wear pants but don't want to feel overdressed at Walmart come on we know us
Starting point is 00:54:43 we know we're the folks who gave the world Kim Kardashian's giant ass and when I say Kim Kardashian's giant ass of course I mean Kanye West and therein lies our special relationship with England.
Starting point is 00:55:05 They have the gravitas, we have the swag. It's how we act. It's what we do. It's who we are. We have the aircraft carriers, but they have the guy who knows a sentence needs a subject and an object.
Starting point is 00:55:27 Oh yeah, that war sounded a whole lot better coming out of Tony Blair's mouth, which is why the British accent is dangerous, and it should always come a warning that this movie isn't really that profound. This reality show Judge isn't
Starting point is 00:55:42 really that smart. This war isn't really that good an idea. And this product still goes in your butt. All right. Coincidentally, I will be playing the Hammer Smith in London on May 23rd. We're taking the next two weeks off so I can do my
Starting point is 00:55:58 European tour. We'll be back June 5th. I want to thank John Waters, Heather McGee, Charles Murray, Killer Mike, and I at Herssey Ali. Join us now on overtime on YouTube. Thank you, folks. All new episodes of Real Time with Bill Marr, every Friday night at 11,
Starting point is 00:56:16 or watch them anytime on HBO On Demand. For more info, log on to HBO.com.

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