Real Time with Bill Maher - Episode #368 (Originally aired 10/16/15)
Episode Date: October 16, 2015Episode #368 (Originally aired 10/16/15)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series,
Real Time with Bill Maugh.
Start the clock.
Good afternoon.
At the tone, time will be real time.
Get it out of your system.
Or keep it in your system or alone in your system.
Thank you very much.
I love the love.
Every week it's love.
And I know why liberals are, of course, happy this week
because of the Democratic debate,
we finally got to hear the adults speak.
Such a contrast to the Republican debates.
First of all, most of it was nonfiction.
And we got to see all five Democratic candidates.
And you see, Bernie and Hillary have stiff competition.
And when I say stiff competition, I mean three stiffs.
What?
Oh, yes, Americans learned a lot from this debate.
Like, Lincoln Chafee is not a car.
And not a candidate either.
I mean...
Really? You know what he's raised for this campaign? So for $30,000. He's raised $30,000. This is what cheerleaders raised with a car wash.
So the word is, now, after the debate, he may drop out, which would be devastating to his supporter.
Now, on the other end of the stage was Jim Webb, who spent most of his time bitching about not getting enough time.
There's a selling point. Vote Webb, because nobody talks to me.
And then the candidates at one point were asked,
who is the enemy your most proudest of making?
And Jim Webb said,
it's the Viet Cong that threw a grenade at me,
but he's not around anymore.
You know, because I killed him.
Jim, this is the kind of thing that gets applause
at a Republican debate.
You're at a Democratic debate.
Then he said we should be actually more warlike to China
than even Trump wants.
And if he got a chance,
he'd kill that rat who stole his,
pizza. So luckily,
Hillary and Bernie were all
substance, and by that point in the evening,
so was I. No, it's true.
They were great. Hillary was on message.
Bernie was on message. I don't know what,
Jim Webb was on, but it was something.
And everyone is
saying now that, you know, this revived
Hillary's campaign.
Democrats, you know, hadn't seen her
for a while, not talking about emails.
They were like, oh, yeah, we like her.
In fact, Bill Clinton said he was this close
to accepting her as a Facebook friend.
The only person who did not do well, because of the debate, they say, was Joe Biden,
because he was thinking about getting in the race.
Still might, but, you know, people looked at that, and they were like, well, we kind of got it covered.
You know, if you want someone who says they were progressive, you have Hillary.
If you want an unabashed liberal, you have Bernie.
And if you want someone who will bite the pin off a grenade and throw it at a Chinaman, you have Jim Webb.
Oh, he was not the only one this week who was a little bit testy.
The next Republican debate is on CNBC,
and they were talking about what the format would be,
and they might get rid of the opening and closing statements.
Did not sit well with Rand Paul.
Rand Paul, polling at 2.7%, said, this is a quote,
he said, if they get rid of the opening and closing statements,
CNBC can go fuck themselves.
Rand, I'm on HBO, and I...
Do you blow your donors with that mouth?
But that CNBC was going to have this debate be three hours long
And then Donald Trump said he wouldn't show up if it was three hours long
He said that's too long, too long
Who needs three hours?
I tell you how fantastic I am
I call my opponents ugly and stupid
We go home
And
And
And
CNBC said you're right Don
That's right, they're all afraid of him
Two hours it is
And if you want to fire the candidates at the end of the debate
Go ahead and do that
Now, Donald Trump, this week, after the Democratic debate, he went on a tear.
He called my first guest a communist, which is ridiculous, went on a rant about how horrible socialism is.
But you know what?
Isn't Trump's hair socialism?
It's the richer hair covering the poorer hair for the good of the head.
All right.
We got a great show.
John Fury is here.
Katrina Venn.
President Hovell and Johann Harri,
and a little I'd be speaking with our president,
another presidential candidate, Lawrence Lessig.
But first up, now, I bet you all of you
are mostly a liberal audience here,
are either for Hillary or Bernie.
Who's for Hillary?
Hey?
Who's for Bernie?
But if Bernie doesn't get the nomination,
who will stay home and not vote for him?
I mean, not vote for Hillary.
Good, I'm glad.
See, exactly.
We have two good candidates.
it's like on the airline.
Sometimes you don't get the fish,
you have the chicken.
I'll eat the chicken if I have to.
So let me introduce a man
who, in my view, is chicken, fish,
and the kosher meal.
Bernie Sanders is over here.
The last man your age.
To cause this kind of excitement,
I gotta think, is Mick Jagger.
And also, you know, after the debate,
Google reported that you were the most
clicked-on name.
People, more people were searching
for you than Justin Bieber's penis.
So you must be
ratified about all this going on.
My question
to you, I guess, is the word socialist.
I want to get right to this, because
I want to help your campaign.
I want to see you get the nomination.
I want to see you get the nomination.
We have to not
teach Americans what this is.
We do. And I don't know
if we're doing that yet.
I don't think most Americans realize
they're already socialist.
In certain respects.
Okay.
Let's start off with what it is not what we want to change.
We want to deal with the grotesque level of income and wealth inequality in America.
Very few people think it is acceptable or moral that the top one-tenth of one percent
owns almost as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent.
That we have seen a proliferate.
But see, Bernie, you always say that.
And I think even the Republicans are not for income inequality.
They hear that, but it doesn't compute that that's going to be solved by socialism.
Socialism is the programs they already like.
They like Social Security.
That's socialism.
They like Medicare.
They like the VA.
They like the military.
That's exactly right.
It's already a socialist country.
But what we have to do, no, it's not a socialist country.
It's quasi.
Quasi.
There are some socialist programs.
But what we have got to do is remind fellow Americans that every other major country on earth
guarantees health care to all people as a right,
and they do it more cost-effectively than we do.
We have got to inform the American people
that we are the only major country on earth
that doesn't guarantee paid family and medical leave.
We have got to remind the American people
that there's something a little bit crazy
when in America we have more people in jail,
disproportionately people of color,
than any other major country on earth.
All right.
But I don't know if we're still undemeying this word socialism.
This is my big thing tonight to get you to undemionize this word.
Because, you know, they do polls on who people would vote for.
Like, would people vote for a woman, a Jew, a black?
Those are in, like, the low 90s, like 92, 91% of the people.
And, of course, the other 8% I think we know who those people are.
You won't be getting their vote.
Then, like, 75% of Americans would now vote for a gay person.
That's a big change from 10 years ago.
60% would vote for a Muslim.
58% would vote for an atheist.
Socialist, 47.
It's at the very bottom of the mouth.
They hear socialist, they think herpes, Bernie.
We have to get this.
But then what we do is we have to make the movement, if you like,
to correlate what we're talking,
about because on every one of the major issues I am talking about, the American people agree.
Do the American people agree that public colleges and universities should be tuition free
as they are in many other countries?
Right.
Do the American people believe that the largest corporations and the wealthiest people who today
are doing phenomenally well while the middle class shrinks?
Do people believe they should be asked to pay more in taxes?
The American people say yes.
Okay.
But, now this has been studied, the amount of tax revenue that we would get just from taxing the people who, I think your fans think you're talking about, the people who own a yacht, does not come close to covering what you want to pay for?
Not true.
Not true.
Come on.
You're saying by only taxing the top.
No, what I'm saying is there have been articles out there that have been really unfair and wrong.
For example, what they are suggesting if we move toward a medical.
a calf for all single-payer program, which guarantees health care at all people, it would cost
a lot of money. That's true. But what they forget to tell you is it would be much more cost-effective
than the dysfunctional system we have right now, which is the most expensive per capita on earth.
But it couldn't even work in your home state of Vermont. They were going to institute it,
and the governor said, it's going to cost too much money. We just can't do it. It would be
the entire budget. No, well. That's true.
Well, I'm not the governor of the state of Vermont.
I'm the senator from the state of Vermont.
But the point here is, then the question is, Bill, you tell me,
why is it that every other major country on it, every single one?
I will tell you why, because they control both ends of it.
If you're saying that the government is going to pick up the tab,
but not make the insurance companies, the hospitals, and the doctors not gouge people,
then we are going to break the budget.
It has to work both ways.
Exactly.
Okay.
But here's an example.
Here's an example.
So you're going to make the hospitals do that?
You're going to say...
Because that is a socialist.
The United States is the only major country on Earth
that allows private insurance companies
to make huge profits in the health care system.
Right.
The function of health care should be
to provide quality care to all people
not to make huge profits of the drug companies
and insurance companies.
So here is my point.
Here is my point.
We are spending more per capita on health care
than any other major country in Earth.
Our health care outcomes are not particularly,
good, and I believe that health care should be a right of all people.
Okay, but you want to increase Social Security.
Yes, and you know how we do that? We pay for it.
We say that somebody who's making $10 million should not end up paying the same amount
of somebody making $118,000. Lift the cap. We can extend and expand Social Security.
Okay. You also want free college.
That's right. Well, stop one. We do. Not free college. Free public college,
pre-tuition in public colleges and universities.
You know how we pay for that?
Through a tax on Wall Street speculation.
Okay.
Child care?
Yep.
Child care?
Yes.
And single payer.
Now single payer is more cost-effective than what we have right now.
In terms of child care,
in terms of rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure
and creating millions of decent paying jobs,
we do do away with these huge tax loopholes
that corporations of the wealthy enjoy.
saying we can pay for all this without raising taxes on anybody but the 1%?
You may have to go down a little bit lower than that, but not much lower.
But that's okay.
And what people have to understand is right now, people can't afford to send their kids to college,
and people are graduating school deeply in debt.
Do I think we should join Germany and many other countries
and encourage young people to get the education they need,
making our country stronger? I sure do.
Okay. I sure do.
So, look, when you first started coming here,
people thought your campaign was a fantasy.
Now it's not. Now you could be the candidate.
I made a list of states.
Now, what?
Yeah, I made a list of state.
There are like some that even a socialist could win,
somebody who's a quasi-socialist like yourself,
most of New England, California, New York, Washington, D.C.
Then there's, I made a list of 23. I call them the Cro-E.
States because it's where crows live. There's not a lot of North Dakota, South Dakota, Idaho,
Arizona. I mean, no Democrat. You, Hillary, nobody's good. Here's what we have to do. I get in my
own state of Vermont, which is a very rural state. We've got about 25% of the Republican votes.
You've got a lot of working class Republicans who are not happy with the trade policy, which
shuts down plants in America and moves to China. They're not happy with a situation in which they
cannot afford to send their kids to college.
I think if we can
bring them into the movement which says
now is the time to stand up
to the billionaire class and
create a government that works for all of us,
I think we can get a lot of those Republicans.
You can get Republicans.
Yeah, I do. Even in states
that were toss-up states
that Obama barely won,
you think, Bill, this is what we're, right now,
I don't mean to be boasting here.
Well, maybe a little bit, but...
You deserve it.
All right. We up till now have received 650,000 individual contributions. I don't have a super pack, okay? The only one with...
I know. Okay. We have received more...
Which I think is great, because I want to give you money, and now I can only give you 5,400.
I'm so off the hook this year.
So, 650,000 people have come to bernie Sanders.com. That's an advertisement. Okay.
which is more than any candidate up to this point in American history.
But my worry is that we are preaching among the converted.
I mean, I see you get these giant rallies of 30,000 people.
But can you get them in Alabama?
Can you get them in Utah?
Can you get them in Idaho?
I mean, and what about the swing states?
Well, two things.
Democrats win, and we are going to win when the voter turnout is high.
Republicans win when the voter turn out is low.
I think we are generating a lot of excitement
among working class people
and young people who often turn their backs
on the political process.
We bring them in, we create the excitement.
Yeah, I do believe we can move.
All right.
You have my support.
The best of luck.
I'll send you a check.
Bernie Sanders, everybody.
Eat the chicken if you can't get the fish.
Okay.
All right.
All right. He is the author of The New York Times
Bestseller on The Failure of the Drug War
Chasing the Scream. Yohan Harri is back
with this. Hi, Johan.
Good day. She is the editor and publisher of the Nation
magazine, now celebrating 150 years in print
Katrina Vandenhovel. Hey.
Thank you. Thank you. See you back here.
And returning to the Lions again, a columnist
for the Hill and chief blogger for the Fury Theory.com.
John Fury. John, how you doing?
Hi, all right. Remember to follow
me on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram,
Send us your questions for tonight's overtime
so we can answer them after the show on YouTube.
Obviously, I want to start talking about the Democratic debate.
15 million people, about five times what they predicted,
which is an interesting story in itself.
But what amazed me, I mentioned it in the monologue,
was I didn't realize such buffoons on the Democratic side.
Real idiots.
I mean, the two guys on the end, I was ashamed to be a Democrat.
Really, they just were awful.
But the difference is in the Democratic Party, they're on the end.
They're marginalized.
They're the crazy neighbor who pops in for a line or two.
They're not the lead like in the Republican sitcom.
So let's just take a measure of it.
They were on the ends.
They were marginalized.
Right.
Ideas weren't marginalized in this debate.
Ideas weren't marginalized.
You heard Bernie Sanders' ideas, which have been marginalized by too much of the media for too long.
This was a debate about ideas, not insults.
And it wasn't like the Star Wars.
The Republican debates remind me of the Star Wars.
Listen, we have a lot of good candidates.
No, they do. It's a grotesque.
I'm the Republican in this crowd, right?
I think the only one.
And we appreciate you coming here.
So they have 10 or 11 Republicans, and they all got the soundbites that they got to get in
because they don't have much time.
There's plenty of good candidates in the Republican field, but they get to winnow it out.
And they will winnow it out.
And it's part of the process.
Listen.
But they really aren't.
Yeah, because...
Because, you know what...
This is the strongest feel we've had.
Oh.
Even your supposedly saying candidates, like
Jed Bush and Marco Rubio,
want to repeal all the financial regulation
that's been introduced since 2008.
That will lead to one thing.
We will have another crash.
It will devastate people across the United States in the world.
That's sad.
The Republican debate was out of touch with this country,
I think, in fundamental ways.
Let's take a moment to take a measure of the Democratic debate.
Bill, you said there were buffoons.
But what you saw in that debate, we talk about winning.
Who won? I don't like that because it's not a spectator blood sport.
But it was progressive ideas winning.
And it was movements.
The crucial thing is that activism works.
If you think about the subject that we're talking about, Keystone Excel, Black Lives Matter, gay marriage,
we're always told we're powerless, nothing's ever going to change.
There's nothing we can do.
Those subjects would not be on the table if ordinary American citizens have banded together and forced them there.
You are...
The most crucial thing for everyone...
He's really overstating it.
No, I don't think so.
People are much more powerful than they know.
The movement's around this country, this is a movement moment.
This is a populist moment.
Let me say.
I wish that were true.
Let me say something.
What's your evidence for not being?
Can I just say that what Bill said in the opening with Bernie Sanders there,
47% of the American people said they'd vote for a socialist.
They're not going to vote for Bernie Sanders if he gets the nomination.
The American people will not vote...
How do you know?
They're not going to sign guys.
Don't judge.
educating them.
Thank you.
Again, I'm glad you brought that up.
Are you again Social Security?
Because that's a socialist program.
You guys hate socialism, but you are not...
If you so hate socialism,
why don't you campaign on repealing Social Security, Medicare,
the VA, and cutting back on the Pentagon,
which is the biggest socialist organization in the government.
Bill, what you did...
Let him in.
Social Security, the Red Paul has a great line of this.
Social Security is actually not socialism, it's actually a Ponzi scheme.
And the fact of the matter is, it's a very popular program.
It's the most effective anti-poverty program.
And we're going broke because of it.
The country's going broke because of that and Medicare.
No, we're not.
We have a $17 trillion debt.
Yes, but it's $17 trillion.
It's not because of Social Security, which is the most effective anti-poverty program.
And it's helping to save it.
And we're not going to get rid of it.
We're not going to get rid of it.
We're not going to get, that being said, I do think that we do need to have some private accounts to get,
people get a 1% return on it.
Wait on, private account on Wall Street?
But wait.
Well, look at the...
The most popular programs are socialist programs.
How can you square this circle?
You hate socialism, but the programs people love,
including your voters, are socialist.
But, Bill, there's a complexity...
There's a complexity to this.
It's easy to...
It's very tempting to be other Republican and fun.
But I think there's a complexity to this
that we need to look at that's a bit deeper.
Think about where the debate happens.
It happened in Las Vegas, right?
I've spent some time in Vegas.
If you go to the suburbs around Vegas,
it's the absolute ground zero
of the home full closure crisis.
70% of people with mortgages are underwater.
So many people are homeless.
There's a significant number of people
living in the drainage tunnels beneath Las Vegas.
I went down there with a guy called Matt O'Brien
who runs a charity.
Underneath the win, where they had that debate,
there are people living in those tunnels.
And it's very easy to talk about
how the Republicans are terrible and they are
and talk about why this happened.
And Reagan and Bush is...
But actually, we want to...
Sorry, but if we want to understand why those people in Vegas are in that position,
actually the legacy of the Clinton years is the single biggest factor.
It was Bill Clinton who did welfare reform,
abolished the safety net for those people in those tunnels.
Deregulation.
Trade deals.
But let me, I like what you...
It's painful to...
Are you blaming Hillary for that?
No.
And I'm just asking.
She's clearly a continuation of Bill Clinton.
No, no, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute,
but then does she get credit for the 22 million jobs he created?
Sure, it's a mixed picture.
Because I only hear her ever getting blamed for the bad.
When we talk about dynastic politics,
That's the Bush family. That's the Paul, Rand Paul family.
The Clintons are a political marriage. They're not a dynasty.
She's earned the right to be in this race.
And I think, but I think to say she's responsible for her husband's policies, it's unfair.
But may I just say what you did with Bernie, I think is so important.
Love Bernie.
But he's always going to Denmark.
I love Denmark.
But this country has a great history of socialist tradition.
I mean, as you said, Social Security, Public Utilities.
And Frank Delano, let me Frank Delano.
Let me, Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Well, you're not to lock, Katrina.
No, but Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in 1944,
delivered a speech on the floor of the Congress
called the Economic Bill of Rights,
a right to health care, a right to housing,
a right to, you know, a job.
And he would have been driven off that house,
but no longer because we have a rising populist movement.
More people out of poverty than any other force in history.
What has?
And the free market system.
Which kind of free market?
Our free market system.
That's why we're a quasi-socialist country,
like every other modern country.
because you need both.
We're not saying we're not capitalists.
We're just saying.
Well, that's what they are saying.
That's what Bernie is saying.
He wants to get rid of the capitalist system.
He's a socialist.
He's a socialist.
First of all, he's a democratic solution.
He wants to tax you by about 80%.
He takes your money.
He doesn't. Never said that.
But you know what's interesting?
Millions of people are looking beyond the label.
Millions of people are meeting Bernie Sanders for the first time.
And a younger generation didn't grow up with socialism.
And it grew up with capitalism.
And by the way, there is someone who taxed people at 80%.
Eisenhower.
Eisenhower.
And he, the interstate highway system under Eisenhower, a little bit of socialism.
But it's important to look at the structural things that are going on beneath this debate.
It's tempting to get into the shadow play between Hillary and Bernie.
But we want to understand the real difference.
Hillary Clinton's campaign, it's very tempting to go into the rah-rah.
Hillary's great.
Hillary Clinton's campaigns have been funded by Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley.
The reason you know it was, it was.
It was Bill Clinton who created the shadow banking system that caused the crash.
The reason you know Bernie's different is not because his personality is better, although I think it is.
It's that he's structurally different.
Listen, he's not paid by those.
I couldn't agree more.
If you guys can dominate Bernie, I'd be all for it.
Believe me.
I couldn't agree more, but the chances that he will win those swing states I was about to introduce them are not as good as Hillary winning those states.
That's just a fact.
I agree.
I mean, in places like Pennsylvania, which James Carville once described as Alabama with Philadelphia,
Philadelphia and Pittsburgh on the edge.
There's a lot of rednecks in America.
No matter how much we explain socialism,
but you're just not going to vote for an old.
Look at what happened in this debate.
All the net ruse guys all said that Bernie won it.
And then what happened to New Hampshire?
Hillary just is now beating Hillary.
Hillary is now beating Bernie in New Hampshire.
Because people who have rational understand
that Bernie Sanders is not someone
who's going to be a good presidential candidate.
How do you know?
Are you speaking for voters?
Voters haven't even voted yet.
And with all due respect to Bill Maher,
let's see what plays out.
You may be right.
You want to...
John, you thought a good presidential candidate
would be George W. Bush.
I'm not sure we should be taking it.
I am a Bernie supporter, but I'm just saying,
don't be babies, liberals.
If you can't get the fish, eat the chicken.
All right, let me ask about Joe Biden.
They say, I don't know, I heard on Tuesday night,
he finished him.
Now, today I hear, no, he's thinking about getting back in it.
This idea that he is going to run for president
because his dying son, it's a tragedy.
We feel bad for him, said,
Dad, I want you to do.
And then, let's be honest, it was Joe who leaked that.
I know.
That just seems very unseemly
to pimp your son's death
to gin up your presidential campaign.
Joe Biden's defense,
and I think he might get in
because I think he looked at the rest of the field
and said, well, if it's me versus Bernie and Hillary,
I might have a chance of winning.
Where is space?
I do think that he has,
listen, under his defense,
he was, Maury Dad's a friend of his.
I don't think he leaked it.
I think he had a conversation and it got out.
So I don't think it was there.
I don't think it was no...
She's a reporter.
She's not a friend of his.
I want to...
I think that we have to be careful.
Marina, are you still working for the New York Times?
It doesn't matter.
You know what?
I've got to...
You know what's even moron?
What's even more unseemly is that Joe Biden
within the Democratic Party is the major architect of the war on drugs.
There are huge numbers of prison in the people in prison in this country
because Joe Biden champion really brutal...
And Hillary's bad on it too.
Appalling, atrocious.
And Bernie was great on it all along.
He was very good on it.
And that's the issue that's important to me.
I know what's important to you, and you must have like...
And I still will eat the chicken, because I learned my lesson with Ralph Nader.
But I asked John when we sat down.
I asked John when we sat down.
Can you agree with Bernie on anything?
What interests me is we are at a critical turning point in this country.
There is a transpartisan alliance to reform a failed war on drugs.
Could be.
And a criminal justice system.
I think there's a transpartisan moment to reform this crazy out-of-control NSA surveillance system,
got a tea party and John Conyers.
Bernie Sanders said something quite radical on the debate.
He was, you know, on Snowden, he said he helped educate us,
but he said, let's abolish that NSA mass surveillance program.
That is a real, I think a step forward.
Hillary said, and I agree that if it's a Christian Republican, Hillary, she's marginally better.
But Hillary said a really false thing.
She said that Edward Snowden could have gone through the whistleblower chain.
The Whistleblower Act does not cover the security agencies.
That's not true.
Edward Snowden should be welcomed back as a hero the way Bernie said.
Okay.
I have to interrupt there.
Now, speaking of Bernie Sanders, he is.
the one that makes their heads explode when he talks.
And for proof of that, I want to show you Donald Trump, I mentioned this in the monologue,
talking about Bernie the next day.
Because this maniac that was standing on our right is giving everything away, so she's following.
That's what's happening.
This socialist slash communist, he's going to tax you people at 90%.
It's going to take everything.
I said 80%.
Okay, so this is my point, that what happens is Bernie says something,
they hear something completely different.
So what we did is we put up to the other little video package for you.
These are, you'll hear what Bernie actually said,
and then you will hear what the Republicans heard.
For example, on the use of force, Bernie said,
I supported President Clinton's effort to deal with ethnic cleansing in Kosovo.
And the Republicans heard,
I will refocus our military on gardening and interpretive dance.
We must aspire to the fighting style of the Iraqi army.
Tear off your uniforms and run.
On American exceptionalism, Bernie said.
And I think we should look to countries like Denmark, like Sweden, and Norway,
and learn from what they have accomplished.
And they heard.
I will not rest until every single American is driving a faggy little car with three tires.
You will watch soccer and you will like it.
It's still good.
This is what Bernie actually said on guns.
Let's begin, Anderson, by understanding
that Bernie Sanders has a D-minus voting redicate
from the NRA.
And this is what they heard.
Let's begin, Anderson, by understanding
that rifles are for men with small penises.
Every single gun in this country should
be confiscated and melt it down to make Tony awards.
They're not hearing it.
They're just not hearing it.
On the military, Bernie said.
When I was the young man, I strongly opposed the war in Vietnam.
And this is what the Republicans heard.
I would have loved to fight in Vietnam, but for the other side.
Not only do I hate our troops, but sometimes I lock John McCain in his office.
to a Vietnamese accent and laugh.
And finally, on the war on drugs, Bernie said,
I think we have to think through this war on drugs,
which has done an enormous amount of damage.
And the Republicans heard.
I majored in Sharia law at the University of Havana.
And I know this.
It is a moral catastrophe
that we are the only major country in the world
that doesn't sell marijuana to children.
Black lives not only matter,
They are all that matters.
Die, whitey, die.
Lawrence, he is the Harvard professor
who is now running for the Democratic nomination.
Lawrence, Lansing.
Hey, Lawrence.
How you doing, sir?
Okay.
All right.
So, Lawrence, you're running for president.
You were not on the stage,
so we thought we would give you the platform.
I'm so grateful for this.
Oh, I have...
No problem.
And you're a Harvard professor,
and you are a one-issue candidate,
which is getting the money out of politics.
I think I agree with the...
probably most of our audience does it.
My question is,
isn't, don't we already have a guy like that in the race
who's doing well, the guy who was just sitting over there?
Isn't Bernie Sanders pretty good on that issue?
Well, look, I mean, what just happened here in your interview
with Bernie Sanders, whom I've loved forever and still continue to love,
is you ask the wrong question.
Sorry.
So here's the frame.
Here's the frame.
Fuck up again.
Can we afford what Bernie is talking about?
And the answer to that question is, of course we can afford what Bernie is talking about it.
What Bernie is talking about is absolutely the things we're going to do we need to do.
But here's the problem.
I did ask that question.
No, no, no, you did ask that question.
It's the wrong question.
That was the wrong question.
It's the wrong question.
Here's the question to ask.
There's an institution.
Like I teach constitutional law, right?
There's this institution.
It's called Congress.
And the question is, is it plausible that that Congress, that corrupted, crippled institution that is bending over backwards to raise money spending 30 to 70
percent of its time, raising money to get back to Congress and get their party back into power.
Is that institution capable of ever enacting any of these changes that they're talking about?
Because my point, the whole reason I wanted to be on that debate stage was to say, you guys are
talking about what we're going to do when we get to Atlantic City.
Should we go to the beach?
Should we go to the boardwalk?
The guy who works on Wall Street.
Should we go to the casino?
That's the whole frame of your conversation.
But the car has four flat tires, and somebody stole the battery.
and until we find a way
until we find a way
to actually fix this broken democracy,
we can't get these things done.
So that's got to be the question.
So that is your one issue.
No, no, that's the fundamental issue.
Why is democracy one issue?
This is...
No, but you said that.
You said you're running on this one issue
and that when you got elected
and fixed it, you would quit.
Yeah, that's stupid.
That was totally sad.
Oh.
Yeah, so look.
Now you're the stupid one.
No, no, I was.
When I ask a stupid question,
nobody gets hurt.
It's totally stupid.
Okay, so yeah, so that was the pledge I made.
What's weird about politics?
So wait, you're starting your campaign with the slogan,
I was stupid.
No, no.
I wish I was starting.
It's midway through, right?
So here's the point.
So you're giving up on that.
What's weird about politics is that, you know,
you come in and you say,
I don't want all the power.
You know, you're a little bit humble about what you want,
and you're like, what's wrong with you?
You're a crazy man.
You know, you don't want all the power in the world.
You just want to do one thing.
they don't trust you. And I didn't quite get that. That was my stupidity. And every time I get on the show and you've got four minutes to talk about something, the whole focus would be, geez, you're going to resign, you're going to resign. And I'd be like, no, what I want to do is pass the most important democracy legislation that we've seen in 50 years. That's what I want to do. And then resign. So people are obsessed with that. So here's the thing. We can't take you seriously because you're going to resign. So here's the thing. Like my daughter would say, fine, you win. I withdraw that promise. I'm not going to resign. I'm running.
for president. I'm running for president with
the commitment that we're going to
pass the legislation that gets us
a democracy back. And then once we
pass that legislation, then there's all
the issues, the wonderful things that Bernie is talking
about, everybody on that stage,
well, three, two, maybe, on that
stage in that Democratic debate we're talking about,
we would have a chance to get that done
if we actually had a representative
democracy again, and that's what I'm fighting
for. But it must...
I mean, I think they are
too, but yeah, I mean, but
It must feel bad that the Democrats decided that you were sillier than Jim Webb and Lawrence Chafee.
Anyway, okay, so let me ask you about this.
You want to have a constitutional convention, which I think is a great idea.
Thomas Jefferson said, let us provide in our Constitution for its revision doing this every 19 or 20 years
should be provided in the Constitution so that may be handed on with periodic repairs
as opposed to what it's become, this document that was handed directly.
directly from Jesus into the hands of James Madison.
And I could think I brought off the top of my head
that we could get rid of the Electoral College.
I'd like to get rid of the Second Amendment.
I'd like to get rid of gerrymandering.
I'd like to get rid of corporate personhood.
I'd like to get rid of money in politics.
We desperately need a rewrite of the Constitution.
You agree?
No.
But let's be really careful.
People get terrified when you use the word constitutional convention.
Because technically a constitutional convention
can do whatever the hell it wants.
And that's not what we're talking about.
The Constitution gives us the ability to have a convention for one purpose,
to propose amendments.
And I agree with you.
We have a whole bunch of things we should be thinking about how to fix.
And my core fix would be to get us a democracy back.
But those changes still have to be ratified by 38 states,
which means one house in 13 states could block any reform.
So what that means is people should not be terrified
that this event would produce constitutional change
that either should scare the right or scare the left.
The only thing that could come through
would be something that has strong bipartisan support.
And the things that have strong bipartisan support,
I think are the most important,
like changing this corrupt system for funding elections.
This gerrymandered way in which we elect the House
that produces this radically polarized house
that cannot even function right now
because it is so amplified the polarization of America.
Let me ask you one question.
and let me turn it to the panel too, about your issue, about money in politics.
I was reading about Marco Rubio, his campaign has been largely funded by this conservative solutions project.
Apparently their solution is hiding their donors.
They've spent over $8 million advertising for Marco Rubio.
We have no idea who the donors are.
They could be Miami drug dealers.
They could be ISIS.
They could be Bill Cosby.
It's worse to show.
You know.
And the Democrats have brought up many times something called the Disclose Act that would make you disclose it.
Republicans keep voting this down.
Isn't this a much bigger scandal than Hillary's emails?
Yes.
I think it is.
When did disclosure become a partisan issue?
When did voting rights become a partisan issue?
When did money in politics?
158 families.
Right.
Our funding have funded half of the campaign.
so far. That is a plutocracy. That is not a democracy. So I'm all for Larry's ideas and he should
have been in the debates and should be. But there are movements in this country, Larry, who are
pushing and driving much of what you're talking about. Of course. I mean, and so I think it's a little
bit elite to say, let's get some men, maybe a few women in a constitutional convention.
I have sex change to run for president. I mean, he is a man. That's not his fault.
No, but I'm serious. People should read his excellent book, Republic Lost, which is all about it.
But I think we know one of the major backers of Marco Rubio is Sheldon Adelson.
And I think that's a really important metaphor.
Shelton Adelson is rich because of gambling.
Not yet.
No, we know that Marco Rubio's been sucking up to him massively and begging,
and there's strong suspicion that he's part of this super PAC, although we don't know for sure.
But I think that's really importantly, symbolically important, right?
Gambling produces nothing productive.
It's like so much of Wall Street.
It's just speculation.
It's just playing with money.
And those people have hijacked the entire political system.
And what Lawrence is saying has implications not just for the U.S. but for the whole world.
We can't deal with global warming if we don't deal with getting these fossil fuel companies.
You can't deal with the inequality of power.
However, you know, the idea of public financing, which can make people's eyes glaze over,
what it does is allow there's a woman who is working in a convenience store in Maine.
She's now a state senator.
It allows ordinary people to run it.
It empowers voices and others.
I can't make an observation.
And that's what's happening in New York.
John?
One leading the polls in the Republican side is Donald Trump who has not raised any money from anybody.
And he's done it all this shit.
It was in the paper.
today.
He's a liar.
He's a huge amount of public money.
That's where his wealth comes from.
He's a liar.
He says, I'm financing it myself.
He's put in 2 million people have put in four.
But he has brought attention to the corruption of hedge fund.
He's not raising as much money as there.
What did he say?
What did?
He said, he pulled back to Kurt.
He did.
He did.
And he said, I own every one of you.
And that was helpful.
This is extremely.
What's your point?
I think my point is that you can get to the top of the polls.
And the guys are the two biggest super PACs.
Scott Walker and Rick Perry dropped out because
they couldn't raise it. I mean, it's not about
super PACS. No, I think Jeb Bush.
What is the point here?
You'll brief the point.
All right. The point is I'm going on to a new topic.
Can you get it?
I want to go.
Let's please, Lawrence.
Go ahead.
Let's do things.
This is why he didn't get it.
This is why he didn't get the words.
Because it doesn't stop talking.
Like you, you weren't in the debate either.
Here's your word.
I'm not exactly right, Katrina.
Public financing.
This is the one thing we could do tomorrow that would actually radically change.
And that is the one word that would.
was not mentioned once in that Democratic debate.
No, no, no.
But he lives.
He said, he said, he said, he him 11 times.
All right.
So let's, as I always say, this show is to educate the people who don't have the time to have
the time to have followed the news every week about what happened.
There was a lot of foreign affairs this week in the quagmire that never ends.
Troops in Afghanistan will be staying.
I mean, gosh, we have almost 10,000 there now.
Obama said it was going to be down to 1,000 by the end of the year.
But apparently, Afghanistan, we'll be.
We just can't quit you.
The headlines today in the L.A. Times was Obama gives up on goal to end the wars he inherited.
It made me so sad.
And then the Republicans are using the wars as a kind of a campaign prop, which is so, so dangerous.
Here's Chris Christie on how he would handle Syria.
He says, no fly zone in Syria right away.
My first phone call would be to Vladimir.
And I'd say, listen, we're enforcing this no fly.
zone. I mean, we're enforcing it against
anyone. So don't try me. Don't
try me. Because I'll do it.
I can feel my dick getting
harder right now.
And I, you know, this is also
a kind of an important issue. To say to the
voters, you know what? Do you want
more of this or less of
this? Because we've had 50.
Do you know what strength is?
Strength is not Rambo. Strength is not
these bully boys like McCain and
Christy. Strength is about
diplomacy. It's about political solutions.
And, you know, we're on the verge.
It's a Cuban missile crisis time.
We are in a proxy war. And if you
shoot down a Russian plane because you want to do a no-fly zone,
you're not resolving the refugee crisis, you're not resolving the Syrian
crisis. It's even worse than that. It's dangerous. It's dangerous. It's even worse
than that. If you look at why there is this catastrophe
going on in Syria, they had an unprecedented drought leading up to
2011. The water dried up. If you
don't have water, people will do terrible things
to each other to get it, right? This is
The same thing happened in Darfur.
Global warming is precipitating terrible
conflicts. If we really want to deal with
these problems, we've got to start getting serious about global warming,
and that will require exactly the campaign financial form we're talking about.
And that was something so interesting
about watching the Democratic debate
versus the Republican debate
is like, in the Democratic
debate, guns and climate change are issues.
In the Republican debate, we can't even agree
on what the appropriate question is.
We can't even agree on what
what are the issues?
In their world, it's immigration.
But there's a fluke as well.
I think the Republicans would have been happy to have a lot of good debates and a lot of good questions, but the moderators.
Oh, the moderators?
No, no.
They got that question about climate change, and they all said, what are you talking about?
Well, they have a disagreement on it.
Let me say on keeping campaign promises.
The president kept his campaign promise by pulling the troops out of Iraq, and now we have ISIS.
Oh, please.
And this is a huge problem.
George W. Bush pulled him out because status of forces agreement, the president of rock.
You respect the country's democracy.
When we pull the troops out, it was part of his campaign.
Bill, could I just say one thing?
At the nation.com this morning, we posted a short piece about how there are 17 intelligence agencies and 15,000 contractors who failed to understand, tell us that we were confronting this catastrophe in Afghanistan, the Taliban.
I mean, what are we doing?
What are we doing? This endless war is not serving this country. Well, you know, we talk all the time about the conflict in Syria. Rightly, it's terrible. I came here from Mexico. Almost as many people have died in Mexico. There's frankly nothing we can do about what's happening in Syria, very little. The war in Mexico is caused by us. The war in Mexico is caused. We imposed. We impose. There are no Mexicans trying to get a newfoundland of Long Beach.
Sure, I agree with you.
How can you say there's nothing to be done in Syria?
No, no, there's something to be done,
but we could do a lot more in Mexico to stop that violence than we could in Syria.
When you end prohibition, you end that violence.
Here's what's going on this week.
Russia, Iran, and Syria are now fighting ISIS.
This is bad?
No.
What do we need as a cue?
This is a problem that solves itself.
ISIS is our big enemy.
All these other people are going to be.
going to fight ISIS. Don't we want that? Don't we win when we get the other guys into a quagmire?
Afghanistan. Russia was in the quagmire and then they lost and we got in it and we lost.
Here's this next week, wait a second. Next week, October 23rd, 32nd anniversary of the suicide
bombing in Beirut that killed 241 Marines.
George Bush, the first, who was Reagan's vice president at the time, went over there and he said,
the U.S. will not be cowed by terrorists.
And then what did Reagan do?
He cut out.
He cut out.
Thank you, Reagan and Bush, you cut and run cowards.
That's why the terrorists followed us home.
No, I'm joking.
That was the right thing to do.
Reagan did the right thing.
He cut and ran.
And we could do the same thing.
We really could.
This is the perfect time to do it.
All the vipers are fighting each other.
I don't think we cut and run.
I think we forge a coalition.
All the parties.
Let me just finish.
Let me go with Katrina for a second.
Oh, do you know what I'm heading?
I think I...
We cannot, I think so.
Okay.
We cannot allow just pure chaos to break out in that region, which is already broken out.
And if we don't take a leadership role in this, and we don't have to put our troops in,
and I'm not sure about the no-fly zone, because I'm not sure if that's the right thing.
But we can't just turn it back, and we can't lead from behind, because I think that's a mistake.
The leading from behind?
No, no, wait a minute.
We need to intensify negotiations without any precarious negotiations without any precarious.
conditions between Russia, Iran, the regional, the United States.
The closest ally of the United States and Britain in that region is Saudi Arabia.
They have beheaded more people than ISIS.
They're about to behead a 17-year-old boy for the crime of peacefully protesting.
But Johan, if we don't deal with Syria, the refugee crisis is going to get worse.
But Katrina, who's we?
Who's the worst refugee crisis?
It is a coalition of forces that could resolve the Syrian.
But you're assuming that the solution can come from the government is just killed a million people.
Huge liars, by the way.
Saudi say that they allowed in 2.5 million Syrians.
No one has seen any of them.
That's a lot of Syrians to hide.
I have to stop.
Thank you very much, panel.
I appreciate a panel of good talkers.
Time for new rules, everybody.
New rules.
Guys need to get it through their head
that the only thing sadder than you going on about football
is you going on about fantasy football.
And by the way, if you delight in a moment,
imagining having a bunch of young, fit athletes,
and what it would be like if they played for your team,
it's pretty clear what your real fantasy is.
New Rule, cut some slack to the Alabama Walmart
that was selling gun oil,
which is a personal lubricant used by gay men,
selling it in their actual gun department.
It's Alabama.
You'll find their cheese nips in the Asian food section.
New Rule, someone has to tell Walmart
who just announced they're going to try to
to appeal to middle-class shoppers
that there is no more middle-class.
And even if there was the single
biggest advantage to make it to get into
the middle class, is never
ever having to set foot in
Walmart. New Rule,
Playboy has to fess up about the real
reason they decided to stop showing
pubic hair in the magazine.
It's 2015. Nobody has any.
New Rule, someone at Costco has to
tell me how I'm supposed to sample this toilet paper.
It's creepy enough when you serve me the key lime pie
in that little plastic cup that makes it look like Shrek left a sperm sample.
And finally, new rule, Americans have to make a list
of all the reasons we've heard over the years
why young men with guns use them in mass shootings.
Things like violent video games, poor mental health care, bad parents,
Marilyn Manson, lack of prayer in school, Prozac, bullying,
And that time the president got blown and didn't go to jail.
And then we have to get real about what it really is.
They can't get laid.
Yes, they may have been on Prozac because they were feeling blue,
but do you know what else was feeling blue?
They're balls.
Now, as the details emerge about our latest American massacre
this month at an Oregon college,
the least surprising thing was that the shooter wrote a manifesto
and said he was going to die,
girl friendless and a virgin.
On a dating site called
Spiritual Singles he was on,
he described himself as a conservative
Republican who lives with his parents.
And swipe left.
The shooter at the UC Santa Barbara
tragedy last year left us with these
words. I've been forced to endure
an existence of unfulfilled desires,
all because girls have never
been attracted to be, I've never even
kissed a girl, and I will punish you all
for it, which is either a cry for her
or the worst e-harmony profile I've ever heard.
The Virginia Tech Shooter was accused of following and harassing female students.
Timothy McVeigh famously never had a date and almost certainly died a virgin.
The Sandy Hook Killer left a document on his computer explaining, quote,
why females are inherently selfish.
Yes, plainly because they won't give it up to a real catch like that.
This is a pattern no one is talking about.
Mass killers are almost always male
and almost always women repellent.
And what must make it even worse for them is America.
Yeah, because if you live in America,
it just looks like everyone is getting laid all the time.
Every corner of social media is full of bragging studs and sexy selfies.
Every other line in every sitcom is sexual innuendo.
Every billboard pop-up movie.
Carl's Jr. ads are pretty.
Practically softcore porn.
A model deep-throating a hamburger?
Right, like models eat.
How can you not be thinking of sex all the time
when advertising looks like this in America?
Burger King ran this ad with a woman
who looks just like an inflatable doll
opening her mouth to accommodate a new menu item
called the Super 7-incher.
With the big letters, it'll blow your mind away.
I don't know for a fact that no man in history has ever said,
sex, sex, sex, that's all I ever do.
Where's my gun? I'm mad at the world.
I just know it's true.
Unrealized adolescent sexuality can be very dangerous.
Just ask my hand.
We need to wake up and smell.
the testosterone. The reason behind so many of these tragedies has been right in our face, throbbing
angrily. And if you think young men in America are throbbing angrily, what would you estimate
the sexual frustration level to be for a young man who grows up only ever seeing women who
look like this? Or this. How do you even masturbate to that? I know masturbation requires imagination,
but that's ridiculous.
All right, that's our show.
We're off next week.
We'll be back on the 30th.
I'll be at the Virginia and Champaign, Illinois, November 8th
on my annual New Year's Eve trip to Hawaii this year.
I'll have a special guest, David Spade,
and Jeff Ross at the Blaisdale and Honolulu, New Year's Eve,
at Maui Arts Center New Year's Night.
I want to thank my guest, Johann Harri, Katrina Van Denhovel,
John Ferry, Lawrence, Lissig, and Bernie Sanders.
Join us now on overtime on YouTube.
Thank you, folks.
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.
