Real Time with Bill Maher - Overtime – Episode #598: Fran Lebowitz, Ali Velshi, Doug Jones (D-AL)
Episode Date: April 30, 2022Bill Maher and his guests answer viewer questions after the show. (Originally aired 4/29/22) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices....com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series, Real Time with Bill Maugh.
Just be good. All right.
Here are the overtime questions.
For Ali, as a business and economics reporter, do you think it's wise for corporations to take stances on divisive issues that can possibly cause financial blowback?
Oh, well, that's certainly much in the news these days.
Yeah, look, I think there's a couple issues here.
We have a, you were talking about immigration earlier.
Immigration is an imperative because we have a worker problem in this country.
We are short of workers.
We were short of workers before the pandemic.
So what you find with companies, despite the Gen Z students with whom, the young people with whom you have some concerns,
they don't have loyalty to their companies.
So companies find that they have to do things that satisfy these employees in order to keep them
and not keep churning through them.
And one of the things, one of the biggest things that polling and surveys by companies show
that workers want right now
is there companies to take positions
on matters that are
important to them. So the bottom line is
there's an imperative by employers,
by consumers
for companies to take positions.
The other part of it is that, as we've talked about,
Congress isn't getting a lot of this right.
They're not figuring out, nor our state government's
figuring out where these lines are
on complicated sociopolitical
and socioeconomic issues.
So I actually think companies are a good
place right now to see some of this
leadership. It's going to be complicated. They're going to make mistakes. They're going to get
in trouble by the public, and they're going to get in trouble by Ron DeSantis and a bunch of
governors. But the bottom line is, I think it's a good development that companies are waiting
their way into politics. They were always there anyway with their paychecks, with their donation
checks. Now they're getting there and actually talking directly to what the problems are.
Holy moly. Do you know anyone who actually runs a company?
because I don't know anyone who runs a company
who doesn't fucking hate the
Gen Zian millennials in their office.
Whether you like them or not,
you have to employ them.
No, I'm just saying, I'm just saying,
not this one.
We have the fantastic kids here.
No, really.
We do.
But that's because we don't hire assholes, you know.
And we don't need, we don't need many,
you know, it's only a few people.
But I'm telling you, it is a subject
that is often comes up at dinner in this town.
You know, a private.
You know, people would not say it out loud.
But they think it's just a nightmare.
They're too sensitive.
You know, they don't want to come to work anymore because of COVID.
The people who are least likely to die from it are still the most afraid of it.
I don't know.
I don't think it's just the Gen Z, though.
It's just the employees.
I mean, look, corporate America should be leaders.
They really should be leaders.
And if that means taking a difficult stand, then don't go on it.
They want their congressmen.
their senator, they want their government to take courageous
They need to step up and do the same
thing. I'm just saying, they hate
working with people who don't have a sense of humor.
Everything is a subject for, you know, I can't
believe you said that, I'm offended, HR,
how dare you, a tremendous sense of
entitlement about where they should be in the company.
It's like, you just started Tuesday, yes.
Sometimes you just have to get the coffee for a while.
I'm just saying, again,
This is not my life, but I hear it all the time.
I'm just a reporter.
Just a humble reporter.
Okay.
According to the Pentagon report, the U.S. left behind $7 billion in military equipment in Afghanistan.
That's low for us when we leave after a loss.
I don't know what the numbers are for Iraq and Vietnam.
I think this is an improvement.
I'm not sure. I do. Seven billion? That seems
pretty good for us. Who or what do you blame
for this? Well, okay. Who or what do you blame
for this? Who or what do you blame for this? I mean... I guess the
one obvious ends would be the Pentagon.
You know, look, we fought that war for 20 years. Yeah.
And equipment is going and going every year, and they continue to throw money at it.
and no one would cut it off.
So I think there's a, I think there's blame to go across numbers of administrations.
Congress, the same way.
I mean, this is not one person.
This is not Joe Biden's fault.
This is a combination of things that have gone on for more than 20 years.
And pursuant to the thing I was just doing about the money that went out the door for COVID
and the hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars, this is $7 billion.
I mean, we lose that in the case.
couch.
Yeah, I'd love that.
The Pentagon, are you kidding?
I mean, the biggest
gondog of all. The biggest problem
here is where it goes,
right? As the senator said,
we've been accumulating... Well, that's the problem,
right? We know who got it. Bagram Air Base
was full of everything you can
imagine, trucks and every kind
of vehicle you need. And the
Taliban's quite grateful for it at the moment. I'm sure
they are. Absolutely.
And by the way, there's a flip side
to your monologue of
about the fraud in the COVID packages.
There is a flip side, because I did a lot of that.
The fraud is good?
No, no, no.
But there is a flip side.
What you didn't talk about when the thief was going around,
how much was still left on the shelves in that Walmart?
No, no, look.
Wow, that is a different way to look at it.
No, no.
Well, here's another one.
I'm not sure that that is a winning strategy for a Democrat Senate.
How much is still that wasn't up on the shelves.
You're missing the point.
I guess I am.
All right, so here's the thing.
Now, here's the thing.
First of all, I totally agree with you that Democrats and Republicans all to be screaming about the fraud that's occurred and demanding that the Attorney General, demanding that the Inspector General really go after that quick.
There's no question about that.
But this came up like that, and Congress was trying to figure out ways to put.
pass things that would save
this economy.
And they did. You cannot
get around it. I mean, during World War II,
that came up pretty fast, too.
No, no, no, no, it didn't. We had been
watching World War II develop.
There was, even though it was
Pearl Harbor, we'd been watching.
But we didn't believe it. When World War II started,
we were incredibly unprepared.
That's why Pearl Harbor happened, because
they were sleeping. Because they didn't think it was
possible. They had to start a new
army. They closed. The
car factories just so they could turn them.
They didn't make any cars, except for
cars for generals to ride around it, for like three
years. So, you know, when people do want to sacrifice,
and they had a commission that prosecuted
war profiteering, people didn't get away with
any of the shit back then. It's about will. It's not about
that it came up fast. And you're assuming that there's not going to be any
prosecutions, and I just disagree with that.
of this amount of money
of hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars?
I don't know where it will be, but there will be a
number of... But why did it happen in the first place?
It's like, you know, nobody can do
anything in this country. Because people, to some extent,
are just no damn good. You're going to get
criminals in America. I know, but where
are the people watching it?
Isn't there someone in a government
office who says, oh, look, I see
we're sending out a farm check to a
state that has no farms?
That kind of thing. Oh, I see.
These people are dead. We may
shouldn't sense? You know, it's not
impossible to do that, I assume.
The problem that I had
with the PPP program was
the way it went through banks.
The banks were, and SBA were supposed
to be looking at that. The banks, all of those
loans did not come directly
from Secretary Manusian. They
came through a bank.
They came through a bank. And that
they were using their underwriting.
They did those things. The same problem we had in 2008.
That's still our system. Exactly.
And in certain other countries, including
in Northern Europe where they have systems where they can get money directly from the government
to either employers or employees, they used a system. The airlines did it instead of the PPP.
They used a program where if you continue to pay your employees, we'll give you the same amount of money.
So there was no opportunity for fraud in some industries.
Tax credit or payroll? Correct. There are better ways to do this.
Exactly. There are better ways to do this. And the government looks after banks now a lot.
Yeah, we just have to get out of the mindset that everything we do has to go through banks.
Exactly.
Yes.
All right.
We'll end it there.
Thank you, gentlemen.
Thank you.
Thank you.
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