Tangle - Suspension of the Rules. - Ari, Kmele and Will talk about Megyn Kelly, Will's take on James Comey, the government shut down and more.
Episode Date: October 3, 2025Ari, Kmele and Will talk about Kmele's interview with Megyn Kelly on The Fifth Column podcast, Will's piece on the Comey indictment, the government shut down and some conversation on the democrats sta...nce on Trump. And, per usual, the airing of grievances.You can subscribe to Tangle by clicking here or drop something in our tip jar by clicking here. Our Executive Editor and Founder is Isaac Saul. Our Executive Producer is Jon Lall.This podcast was hosted by Ari Weitzman and edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75 and Jon Lall. Our newsletter is edited by Managing Editor Ari Weitzman, Senior Editor Will Kaback, Lindsey Knuth, Kendall White, Bailey Saul, and Audrey Moorehead. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Too many students are packed into overcrowded classrooms in Ontario schools,
and it's hurting their ability to learn.
But instead of helping our kids,
the Ford government is playing politics,
taking over school boards and silencing local voices.
It shouldn't be this way.
Tell the Ford government to get serious about tackling overcrowded classrooms
because smaller classes would make a big difference for our kids.
Go to Building Better Schools.ca.
A message from the Elementary Teachers Federation of Ontario.
Coming up, I'm running the show without Isaac. Will joins us. We talked Megan Kelly and Camille,
Will piece on Comey, some government shutdown discussion, and the Democrats' stance on Trump.
It is a good one.
From executive producer Isaac Saul, this is Tangle.
Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening.
Welcome to the suspension of the rules podcast, the place where the takes are hot but the heads are cool.
How's that feel?
Do that feel all right?
I'm your host for today, managing editor Ari Weitzman-Wall, Tangle, executive editor, Isaac Saul is off Gallivanting in Italy.
Camille, welcome.
How are you feeling?
I'm feeling great.
I'm feeling great.
That was pretty good.
I think we should probably mention Tangle in the intro, though.
We should probably also mention the third chair for today, too.
Yes, we should.
We are joined by senior editor, Will Kayback, who is up in the big leagues today with the boys.
A little pinch hit spot for the senior editor.
I'm feeling good.
I'm excited to be back.
It's been a little while since I was on the pot.
I don't know if I've actually been on since Camille joined.
You have not.
Yeah.
So a special occasion for me.
The first time you two have.
ever spoken, as far as our listeners are concerned. Yeah, pretty much. We're playing a lot of
musical chairs here. So Camille's in New York. Will, I think you're in New York too. I'm in New
Jersey today. So I'm one of my good friends, Andrew, who is a co-host on MKBHD's Wayform
podcast, which is a pretty highly reviewed tech podcast. Friends of the show, the MKBHD people,
brilliant setup here
like they obviously a tech reviewer
because I'm in heaven
this setup is incredible
his office is amazing
and big thanks to Andrew
and the MKBHD team
for letting me sit in on their studio
or at this little office today
it's really cool in them
but we're all like Metro New York area
sort of today
well I literally just landed at SFO
about an hour and a half ago
never mind I'm back in California
yeah but I was there last night
I taped with Abby Phillips
at 10 p.m., which is crazy, and got a 6 a.m. flight out of New York this morning.
You've been busy.
It's been a crazy couple days. I interviewed Megan Kelly yesterday, who's been going through
some interesting things. And I also interviewed this brilliant young director, Nico,
who made the new Kanye West documentary, which is actually quite good. And that interview will
drop in a couple of days, actually.
you want to tell us about what happened with Megan Kelly
she's been in the news a little bit for saying
and I know that she's a friend of yours
and a friend of what the whole team at Fifth Column
so what's been up with her
well we've had a long relationship with Megan
almost since she launched her independent show
I mean we both worked at the NewsCorp building together
so I'd see her around the hall there back when I had a show on Fox business
but we really didn't get to know each other until afterwards.
And we knew that the fifth column was doing its first video launch or first video episode
drop.
And we invited her to be the guest.
And she agreed to do it three or four weeks ago.
And it so happens that this particular week, she's in the midst of a bit of controversy.
A lot of people criticizing her because of her association with various conservatives,
particularly Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens
who have been under fire
because they've been exceedingly conspiratorial
and by some accounts have said things
that have been regarded as anti-Semitic
and people were imploring Megan
to distance herself from them or condemn them
and there was even an encounter
that was friendly
but pointed
where we were on her show, the fifth column guys
and my co-host Michael Moynihan
had an exchange with her that got not so much testy but did like make the rounds and we ended up
revisiting that but it's also the five year anniversary of Megan's show me Megan show is near the
top of the charts on iTunes I think yesterday it was like six or seven the thing is like Candace's
show today I think is at round three and has been in that that kind of stratosphere with respect to
you know just podcast reach so we talked about a lot of things we talked about
independent media. We talked about the party. We talked about the Republican Party, that is.
We talked about the evolution of Megan as a political commentator who, you know, for many, many
years, I think even though she was on Fox, was regarded as someone who was kind of calling balls
and strikes. Everyone remembers that infamous encounter during the debates where Donald Trump
talked about blood coming out of various orifices of hers. And it was a really interesting
conversation. I will say we did get into the Candace stuff. We talk about it for quite some time
and folks can go check out the whole thing. I won't characterize her comments because I don't
want to misrepresent anything. But I will say that for me, coming out of the conversation,
I probably went in. I had one opinion when we talked about this a couple of weeks ago with
respect to like Tucker and Candace and having that affiliation and feeling a sort of obligation
if it were me feeling an obligation to speak to those things.
But I also have a slightly different sensibility,
and I suspect it may actually be colored by the Kanye West documentary,
if you can believe that.
Because there's a moment where Kanye and Candace are together on film in the documentary.
And it's fairly normal times anyways.
And watching them have a fairly normal interaction
and seeing where they both are now,
which is to say both of them are engaged in all sorts of conspiratorial musings
and surrounded by controversy constantly
and generally seem somewhat unglued.
And I don't want to play armchair psychologist,
but that is what it looks like to me.
I've become increasingly not so much worried,
but willing to entertain the idea that what's important
isn't so much condemning people individually as much as addressing the things that they're saying
and addressing specific ideas that one believes perhaps are dangerous or misleading or just not factual
and explaining why. And I do think that those categorical denunciations calling people's
various names, whether it be bigot or racist or anti-Semite, that has its place. But it's also true
that to the extent people have just become used to hearing
those kinds of allegations thrown around,
there's a special value in really being measured,
taking your time to understand what they're saying,
however insane it seems, and deconstructing it.
And I think we did some of that work in our conversation,
and Megan didn't shy away from doing some of that work.
But I do think that she,
just being someone who's been in the public eye as long as she has,
she's developed a particular perspective
and you're not going to tell her what to say
you're not going to tell her who to condemn
and people
people may not like that. I wonder if
there isn't also and now I'm
just kind of commentating a bit
if there isn't also a kind of no
enemies to the right perspective
there and I don't know that
that's entirely fair because there are certain
people she has criticized on the right
even during the podcast
but not particularly vociferously
But I do think that that kind of no enemies to the right disposition, which I've seen a lot with the new right that's emerged, is one that can be exceedingly dangerous because you can find yourself justifying just about anything.
And I don't think Megan is there yet.
I mean, I don't know that I have any expectation she'll get there.
She's still someone who can find things to criticize about the administration will offer those criticisms up.
And even more than that, she's still very high.
happy to publicly associate with people, people like me, with whom we have some agreements on some
things. We've got forceful disagreements on lots of other things. And I just think there's something
really special about being able to have a sober, level-headed conversation with someone when you have
a disagreement because the goal may not be to persuade each other one way or another, but to at least
expose people to the conversation and to the discussion. And it's much easier to hear when I'm not
shouting at you and calling you a moron and hanging up and storming out of the room and ripping
off mics and I suppose that's a spoiler she didn't storm out of the room and neither did we
were there mics being ripped off was that a thing well eventually I suppose what what like at the
end when people are just saying like sure that's a little bit click baity but I guess we'll
we didn't let it stand we didn't let it stand but no it was it was fun and we try to have fun
and we try to be informative.
I mean, I think when you are doing media as frequently and for as long as I have,
I've certainly been involved in some dustups and different occasions.
But there wasn't any of that in the conversation with Megan.
I will say when I did the CNN appearance later the same night,
maybe because I was just a little worn out,
there was a moment where someone was saying something,
and I kind of mocked them on air.
It was fair, though, a little bit.
I mean, that's kind of what the CNN show is meant to do a little bit.
Yeah, it's true.
I mean, this is Abby Phillips show.
I actually have come to like Abby a lot.
I appreciate what she tries to do.
She really is trying to convene a table of people with different perspectives and get into it.
And it's the best rated show on the network now.
I'm performing really, really well.
And that success is well deserved.
But at the same time, I find myself, guy.
I've soured on cable news a little bit, just personally.
And I'm not having soured on Abby.
I haven't soured on the aspiration of her show.
But I do sometimes wonder about that medium and the degree to which it can sometimes
have a kind of WrestleMania dynamic.
And I didn't like that there was a moment where I felt, you know, someone had said over and
over again, over the course of the show, you're cutting me off.
And he cut me off.
And I said in a voice that was meant to sound somewhat like his, you're cutting.
me off. I got quiet quickly and I immediately felt bad. And I thought to myself,
I don't actually want to do that. I don't really want to be that guy. If I'm going to be in
these spaces, I want to try to bring a different sort of energy. So I'm maybe oversharing here,
but I, yeah, it's interesting to do the stuff that we do for a living, commentate and also
to engage in these kind of public conversations. But I don't, I don't expect this to get
remotely acrimonious.
We'll see.
Let's see what that.
We'll start back and up.
Yeah.
I'm ready to go.
Too many students are packed into
classrooms in Ontario schools,
and it's hurting their ability to learn.
But instead of
helping our kids, the Ford government is playing politics, taking over school boards and
silencing local voices. It shouldn't be this way. Tell the Ford government to get serious
about tackling overcrowded classrooms because smaller classes would make a big difference
for our kids. Go to building better schools.ca.a. A message from the elementary
Teachers Federation of Ontario.
I want to ask Will a little bit about some stuff that he was writing about this week,
because one of the things that we've been doing in the past week is sort of a rotating author's
chair on the stuff where we are covering in Tangle.
So without Isaac here, again, traveling in Italy, we're sort of going back to the
Mo that we were in in January, February, when he was at home with his wife and his newborn,
and we were at home with our nascent presidential administration and trying to give it the love
and care it deserved.
And Will wrote something about the Comey indictment.
And one of the things that we've been doing in the last couple weeks is just trying to pick one of the things that we've covered
and go in a little bit more on some of the reader responses and engagement we've gotten.
And this is a little bit of an area where, to be frank, and we'll get more into this,
I kind of don't have a feel of the lay of the land for the way people think about James Comey,
but I think you've got a little bit more of an idea of just the general public's,
like the contours of opinions across the spectrum will.
And it's curious to see how you felt about the responses we got
and kind of what the tenor of the responses were from our readership that week or that edition.
yeah i so far have found that the responses have not voiced any significant disagreement with the
position that i took which was essentially essentially that this was a plainly political prosecution
and trump broadcast this in no uncertain terms for the weeks and months leading up to it
and in my take what i essentially was hoping to do was give that sequence of events to demonstrate
just how clear that was to me and then offer some thoughts on why
even if you have a personal dislike of Comey or think he may be guilty of other crimes,
the course of action that Trump and the Justice Department are taking here
is a lose-lose in the long run for everybody.
And I haven't seen many people disagreeing directly with that conclusion.
I think the criticism that I've gotten from conservative readers
mainly deals with that element of, well,
you know, Comey is responsible for X, Y, and Z things that were clearly out to get Trump
and in some cases people believe we're illegal,
and this is just accountability in a different form for that.
I think, you know, my response to that is pretty straightforward.
You know, that's not what he's being charged with here,
and we can only focus on the facts of this case,
and the facts of this case don't support an indictment.
From readers on the left, you know,
the response outside of, I think, agreeing with the conclusion,
which isn't surprising a lot of people on the left
will tell you that this is a political prosecution
and go further than that
is just talking more writ large
about how this is clearly an authoritarian style of government
than that we need to be more forceful
and calling it out even in this case.
So, you know, I wouldn't say there's been, you know,
a massive kind of response or polarized response.
I think that this is like something that most people can agree on,
but they kind of just want to make arguments around the case
and not so much directly about it.
I have a question, I guess, about it.
case. Maybe it's around the case and you can be the arbiter of whether or not I'm being
direct, but I have a hard time, I'll just admit, personal bias here, I have a hard time
really feeling invested in this one. I think with other cases that we've covered, take the
Abrigo Garcia case as an example, that's something where I could see a concern about precedent
very clearly. There's a bright line that I could draw from, you accuse somebody of being a gang
member or an illegal immigrant or breaking some law or other, and then that accusation is
supposed to do the work in and of itself to justify whatever the punishment is without a trial,
without a charge, without any sort of due process. That is, I think, a pretty clear precedent
that could be extended to anybody. When it comes to James Comey, the precedent I feel a little bit
harder caring about because it's, yeah, so if you are ever going to be the head of a department
that's leading an investigation into a president that then makes a report that says there's
no prosecutions that wants to raise, which justifies another report, which says no prosecutions,
and then that president loses an election and then comes back four years later and then
wants to prosecute people who are leading these investigations that we've now been over
and over and over on for 10 years,
you might be indicted.
That's like, I don't know
how many people that precedent's going to apply to
other than James Comey.
And frankly, I just want this to go away.
And, like, I know that we've talked about
this prosecute them all mentality
of if there's wrongdoing,
we should investigate it.
And anything comes up,
then there should be people held accountable.
That's something that maybe,
maybe is like a little bit at loggerheads here
with what I'm saying of like,
maybe James Comey did something
that was illegal, probably not.
I think almost certainly
we can, I don't know,
I wouldn't want to say certainly,
but based on the evidence we've seen so far
that's come out of the grand jury indictment
doesn't seem like there's going to be a whole lot there
to indict based on what they're asking for.
So it does feel sort of like theatrical.
And I just feel like a, I don't know,
I feel like a patsy when I'm like,
let me care about this theater
that doesn't matter.
That should have been put to bed years ago.
Like, I feel like we're just,
continuing this thing that should go away.
Yeah, I think I would disagree with two points there.
First about the Abrago-Garcia case.
I think that, to me, stopped short of the alarm you describe over this could happen to
anybody.
I think I would need to see something like that happened to a U.S. citizen before I
would truly be alarmed.
I think the fact that Abrago-Garcia is not a citizen and was in the country without
authorization is, it changes the focus of the case for me where I don't
become alarmed that this could be applied writ large? Sure. I think the concern is that we didn't
know that before he was sent out of the country. There's no process that proved that he was not
a citizen. So you can say this person's not a citizen, trust me, bro, and then that's enough.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's true. Initially, sure, I think, you know, the facts that we've learned
after the case, the fact that, like, it was caught and identified as an error in the Trump administration
even admitted to that. Just sitting here now, that's less concerned.
to me than just an arbitrary, or not so arbitrary, but a prosecution directed at the behest
of the president on extremely flimsy evidence. Again, Comey in itself, I did not find to be a
particularly sympathetic character or I don't agree with his actions necessarily as FBI
director or the political positions he's taken since then. It's more so that Trump has directed
these prosecutions against Adam Schiff and Letitia James and other political opponents.
and now we're actually seeing follow-through on that front.
So it is the specter of what this could become
that alarms me more, I think, than the case you described.
And John Bolton, another prominent Trump critic
who has found himself in the crosshairs of criminal investigation.
And interestingly, the prosecution,
and Ari, I can appreciate where you're coming from.
And I think certainly the case that with the immigration prosecutions,
we didn't have a lot of context for what was going to.
going on there. There was so much uncertainty about who was getting arrested and under what
circumstances, the administration was obfuscating with respect to their responsibility and even
ability to bring people back from El Salvador. So there were so many questions there that it really
did kind of heighten the level of attention that was given to that case and is still the case.
I mean, right now we are still, and we may not get to it today, but we certainly will in the future.
I mean, the ice raids that are taking place now in Chicago are making headlines.
And it's been months.
Comey, interestingly, I expected this to be a much bigger deal than it has been.
And it's just that there's so much news with this administration.
And there are always so many different things happening that this just doesn't really seem to be capturing people's attention.
It's also the case that Comey has adopted a kind of bring it on perspective.
Like he wants this.
He wants his day in court.
And quite honestly, I'm not sure I blame him.
It does seem to me that this prosecution almost certainly doesn't have legs.
I think the folks over at National Review, you know, hardly a bastion of progressive thought
are deeply skeptical of what the administration is doing right now
and have leveled very credible skepticism and concern with respect to this case and its prosecution.
And importantly, the investigations themselves...
even a frivolous prosecution, even one that ends up getting kicked
because the Trump administration has just been so haphazard
in the way that it's done so many things that they end up kind of on-golling,
it can be hugely consequential for a regular person.
And for a civilian of any sort, it could completely ruin your life.
And, you know, Komi is a guy who was not quite in public service anymore,
and that's probably expected.
You know, an Obama appointee
probably isn't going to survive
several administrations later.
But he was prominent
and among the most prominent
Trump critics, as is John Bolton.
And to see the apparatus
of our legal system
turned on them for what seemed like
at least, again, appearances do matter here,
would seem like political reasons.
And with the Comey thing in particular,
it's really hard to deny it.
The president publicly encouraging,
not even encouraging,
insisting,
I would go so far as to say commanding
his district attorney to go out there
and actually make cases against these people
because we're beginning to look silly.
And he says, you know, he's guilty as hell.
But the thing that he also says is,
they did this to me.
They came after me.
it is really hard to escape the appearance that this is just pure retribution.
And there's something about that that is particularly bad.
This is actually something that came up when I talked to Megan yesterday as well.
And her perspective was, are these prosecutions bad?
Well, to the extent real crimes have been committed,
even if they're crimes that they're kind of looking for, like the mortgage fraud stuff,
then okay, you can prosecute people for that.
But if there aren't crimes and they're manufacturing them, that is a different matter.
And it's going to be hard for me to get particularly excited.
And this is, again, Megan, talking.
But I can understand the argument she's leveling because of the things that I saw happen
to our candidate when he was running for office, multiple prosecutions that similarly
had some sort of political taint to them.
Odd leaks that were coming out of the judge.
Justice Department, the Biden Justice Department at the time, you know, does that mean Biden was
ordering things? I don't know. Was Biden commenting on the cases occasionally? But there were
plenty of other Democrats who were vociferously doing so. And those cases in many instances,
in my, from my standpoint, like didn't look particularly good either. So this does,
however, still seem like an escalation. And I think those escalations can be very dangerous. And
that sets a precedent for, you know, future administrations, even a future Democratic
administration that might actually indulge in some of the things that were openly talked about
in prior years, like getting Fox News off the air. I mean, the things that the Trump administration
has done with the FCC, like, why wouldn't they take another shot at that next go around?
And AOC administration, I mean, that's something that she's talked openly about,
maybe not Fox explicitly, but it would not be hard to imagine something.
like that happening.
But here's, I think, what my point is, listening to all of that,
is all of the reasons to be concerned about this prosecution,
or sorry, the indictment against Comey are all other things, though.
It's like, it's because it's part of this broader trend.
It's because look at what he did with McIntyrefer and the BLS.
And look at what he's doing with a person who wouldn't prosecute out of the district attorney
out of Virginia, like do what I want, go after my enemies.
or get out of the way.
And that's the trend.
And yeah, that's the trend.
And that's a thing that I'm also concerned about.
But I also like, and to Will's point,
because I want to make sure I say this briefly,
one of the things that you said in your take, Will,
was even if the prosecution,
the investigation to Trump was frivolous
and was just a total witch hunt.
Like, let's just say that it was.
And we'll know that, you know,
it wasn't totally a witch hunt.
There's reasons for the investment.
did it go too far? Yeah. Were they following false leads? Yeah, were they politically motivated? Most likely. But, if not for sure, but most likely. In some cases. I mean, I would argue there were cases like the Georgia election interference case in which we have phone call audio of him telling Rathsender to find votes.
Right. But here we're doing... That's incredible prosecution. Right. But here we're doing the thing where we're talking about other things again. It's like there.
There's like lots of cases where Trump wants to get retribution for reasonable investigations
into him.
And even if all of those investigations were BS, which was the thing that you're saying in your take,
this is still not a thing we would want the government to do is to go after frivolous
retribution.
It's all of the individual retributions that I want to be concerned about on their merits.
Like Trump does these things and it sucks.
and it's an abusive authority.
But when it comes to Comey, it is so, even though it's a trend,
it's that isolated part of it,
that he's going after one person for this huge Russia collusion thing
that is in his mind, a witch hunt.
And it's tough for me to like get up in arms about it,
knowing that it's, we're at the end of this five-year statute of limitations
for any prosecutions to be brought.
and the thing that annoys me the most is just that we're still talking about it.
I'd rather be focusing on the other things.
I'd rather be focusing on whether or not there is reason for us to trust the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
whether or not we are pursuing people outside of due process to try to deport people
who allegedly have entered the country illegally.
We want to know whether or not those things have happened.
And I mean, I think I'm agreeing.
with the John Bolton indictment.
Here's another critic.
We want to try to prosecute people who are critical.
Or just the raid.
He hasn't been indicted.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
But like, although we kind of expected any moment potentially.
Sure.
Administering the apparatus of the state to go after people who the president sees as critical of him.
Like that is, I think, the headline.
And that maybe I'm talking against myself here so I can see how like it's not a, maybe it's
tough for this to come out cogently.
but if that's the concern,
if I'm seeing
this is what the president's doing,
using the apparatus of the state to go after critics,
when I ask, okay, what are the examples?
What should my level of concern be?
And it's Bolton and Comey.
I'm like, okay,
is that all we have, though?
I'm not saying it's good.
Leticia James, Adam Schiff.
I mean, these are the ones who are imminent in my mind.
Yeah, like, you know,
Lisa Cook.
A little bit different there,
but I just think it's the fact that he has named these people for a long time,
Comey among them, and now the Comey Domino has fallen,
and they've shown that they will actually follow through.
Because I think with Trump a lot of the times,
you have to see the follow through before you start taking it super seriously.
And to me, this is the follow through now.
And I think it's totally reasonable to believe that Tish James is next
or Adam Schiff is next in some form.
And then I think you get to the place where,
you have to raise the alarm.
And so to me, it's the significance of this step
and what it symbolizes going forward.
That point about follow-through is interesting
because I think, Ari, maybe I was talking to Isaac about this,
or maybe we were all talking.
I know we weren't recording,
but at some point I'd said,
you know, Trump has mentioned all of these people.
Nothing has happened.
And this was before the Bolton raid.
Nothing has happened yet.
It would be interesting to just kind of examine
whether or not there's been any progress
towards actually moving forward
or whether it's just, it's just,
you know, Hillary, empty, lock her up rhetoric.
And no, it is something else entirely.
And importantly, well, I think you're correct.
The indictments, prosecutions, the threats are one thing.
The climate of concern that is created.
The compliance that you're able to generate
because you are willing to do this sort of thing.
And when you combine that with the other thing,
that he's done, like going after law firms, the interventions on university campuses,
which, again, ostensibly about addressing anti-Semitism, but have run afoul of various speech
issues and have looked like pretty strenuous arm twisting. All of it is the sort of thing
that creates a dynamic that feels very uncomfortable, that ought to be concerning. And when
folks show up at the White House and they give the president a gift and they're speaking
in these glowing terms about him, it's hard for that to not read as a kind of sycophantic compliance.
And that isn't really something that we want to see. There's always the kind of possibility of
that sort of thing, like a subtext. The federal government is regulating you. You're there talking
to the administration. There's a delicate dance there. There's a necessary tension, perhaps.
the tension is far greater than it has been at any point in my recent recollection
on a broader number of issues and areas of interest.
It's not just something like fracking that they happen to be talking about now.
It's pretty much anything.
And that does seem different.
But Ari, I mean, again, you mentioned yesterday when we were talking a little bit about
just getting ready for this conversation that you were,
perhaps a little less concerned about this. And I do think you're correct in a very important
respect. There are so many things going on. It is essential for us to be level-headed and thoughtful
as we're surveying the landscape and to attach some priority to things. And I've said what I just
said a moment ago about the specter of kind of corruption and intimidation and how that's not good.
But that's, you know, it's norms, it's feel, it's vibes. And that's very,
different than what's happening with active ice raids that are taking place, with conversations
about troop deployments in various places in the United States, which again, just saying all these
things altogether, it makes it sound like total madness. But we do have to try and understand this.
And we also have to try and understand it from the perspective of people who aren't super critical
of it, who do see this as something that is good and valuable and worthwhile. So, yeah,
it's complicated. Yeah, I'll take that.
I think, thank you for sort of making my point a little bit better than I was about
prior recognition of issues.
I think the domino framing is interesting here in saying we had a bunch of threats and we had
some bluster, but not any individual prosecutions against individuals until the Comey indictment
came down.
And that framing it as a domino's, I think, the interesting way to look at it.
because if there are indeed more prosecutions from the Justice Department that follow,
then we can, I think, make this larger claim about this specter of litigation.
Because as of now, I think there's a specter of government threatening you,
and using whatever force it has or methods of persuasion, I guess we can say,
especially if you're a university and the NIH has the power to choose where it's going to approve its grants.
then that's something that I think's happening.
But when it comes to litigation against individuals,
right, like, well, I think saying there could be more to come,
I think that's important for us to, as we're trying to say,
like, okay, what's the thing for me to watch if this is going to be an issue?
The things are, is Letitia James going to face an indictment?
And I think maybe also just the last thing that I'll say
before turning it back over to you there is,
sort of to Camille's point, when we're thinking about what the precedents are and the
prioritization of these things, the precedent for the, this is what I was trying to say earlier,
the precedent for the Obrego-Garcia case is this could be anybody that gets this accusation
of you're not a citizen, so we're going to put you away. But it can't just be anybody
who's accused of doing some high-profile biased thing against the president and a former
administration. That group is much smaller. And this is not,
me saying, therefore, it's not an issue.
It's just me saying when we're talking about
the issues.
Help me rank this one, because
right now I'm seeing it as like comparatively
lower than others.
Yeah, I think
in the interest of
intellectual honesty as well, I would say
that if in
three months or
some undetermined amount of time
the Comey indictment is
all that we've seen come about,
out of the people that Trump has named or targeted in the past,
then I think it's easy to view this indictment as Comey is somebody Trump harbors unique resentment against,
and this indictment was throwing him a bone to cool Trump off,
and there is no broader plan to indict more political enemies.
And Comey is a bit of a sacrificial lamb likely won't be convicted of anything here,
and this ends up kind of just being
something that's disappointing
and not what should have happened
but far from a five-alarm fire.
I think that's totally plausible.
I just do see like this as a significant step
that we haven't seen Trump take so far
and that's why it did raise some alarm bells for me.
I think, okay, I can agree with all that.
I think that all sounds reasonable.
And yeah, I think I'm with that.
And I also think one of the things
that was a sort of subtextual
criticism from you that was broader
than the current administration
was how easy it is to get a grand jury
indictment anyway. That's something that's
more systemic. And
if grand juries were a little bit more
discerning systemically,
then probably this issue just
dies in the crib. Sure. Sure.
And at the same time, I mean,
if I wrote in the take, there could be evidence
that just hasn't been publicly released yet.
That points to some
degree of guilt that, you know, we just don't know about. And the grand jury saw, and that's how
they made their decision. So I'm certainly in favor of letting this play out through the legal
system. And I don't think that Comey will face any significant consequences for this. And it may
even be somewhat of a triumph for him. Like you said, he may want this. So, yeah, to a certain
degree, as with many things with Trump, he's taken this step. But we certainly don't have the end of the
story and don't want to overreact. That's a good call to remember that we are all agreeing on
our read here that we think this is a political prosecution, but we don't have all the evidence.
And until we do, we should make sure we're staying mentally open to possible scenarios that are
different than what we're seeing.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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And with that, I think I want to turn to another issue that somebody else on the call said they didn't think was as important as the rest of us, which just the government shut down.
Camille says, no big deal. I don't care.
Well, it's, yeah, there's some nuance here. And I may make the case in a way that's a little more strident than I.
I perhaps even am certain, I believe, not for kind of the purposes of performance,
but in order to try to illustrate the point a little bit better.
But we've seen these a lot.
Government shutdowns have just become part of the way business is done in Washington, D.C.
Both parties have known that this possibility was on the horizon.
Both parties are familiar enough with it to know that it's not always clear
who's going to end up getting the blame for this.
why this might end up being bad for you
and perhaps bad for Americans more generally,
but they permit it to happen anyways.
And I think what's more concerning for me
than the actual fact of yet another shutdown
is the fact that these shutdowns have just become endemic.
And we don't actually do budgeting anymore
in a serious way.
And relative to concern about the national debt
and the deficit,
it seems to me that the shutdown itself is perhaps not the most important thing.
Here, the dynamics are a little bit different because we have an administration who,
for the first time, in the context of one of these shutdowns, is committing to,
we're going to get programs that are important to you.
We are going to use this as an opportunity to grab additional power and is once again
kind of pushing the boundaries or testing the boundaries of what is,
acceptable what is legal under these contexts. And again, other administrations have done that.
No other administration in my memory has done it on quite so many fronts at the same time
for a sustained period in the way that this administration has. I think the closest we might get to
that is the George W. Bush administration during that kind of war on terror period. But again,
it was very focused. It was specific to national security stuff.
And here we see it on virtually every issue.
And I think that dynamic is important and worth paying attention to.
I think to the extent there are costs there, they're likely going to be for pet projects of Democrats.
But it could also be things that happen at the Justice Department.
I mean, to the extent from the previous conversation, things aren't worse.
It's because of a lot of the kind of bureaucracy that is built up there, that deep state, as folks have become accustomed to calling it,
It is a check on the ability of the executive branch to do absolutely whatever it wants.
And that check could be somewhat diminished.
That informal check perhaps could be somewhat diminished by this.
So that's worth paying attention to.
But again, I sent you guys a link actually to a video.
And it's this video by Paul Ryan that some people might remember.
And it was one of several videos that were produced just charting the deficit.
and I believe it was called like a tale of two futures.
And I was actually in the room for the first of these when they were producing it
because a team that I was a part of at the time was responsible for helping to produce the video.
And I just, I was watching it again, thinking about the debt picture now, which is
tremendously worse than it was at the time, but also just thinking about how much our politics
has changed. At the time, government shutdowns and conversations about, you know,
about the debt were normal and a great deal of concern about government shutdowns was was palpable
and expected. Now we've passed legislation that says, hey, you know, if there's a shutdown,
all the federal workers, they get their money. They're going to get paid. They'll be made whole.
Some contractors, not so much. And some people will be forced to work without pay for a period of time.
Those things are concerning. But we've effectively tried to
normalize this in some ways, begun to normalize it. And most of what's happening at this point
is just kind of this messaging exercise. And a lot of the fundamental things that are actually
hugely problematic for the country and potentially consequential, like they're there,
whether or not the government is shut down. And I think that's the perspective that I would
bring to it. And that makes it, it's actually surprising to me that people are talking about the
shut down actively, and they're not really talking about the Comey prosecution. And I'm not sure
that's the right. That's the right tradeoff. It all comes back to Combe. If there's a hierarchy of
concern. No, it can't. If there's a hierarchy of concern, is that, is that really the right
hierarchy of concern? Maybe. Well, let's, let's maybe try to just like, just for my sake,
maybe try to move on from Comey. And we could talk about the point that you know what happens to
Comey. I'm kidding.
Right. That's the takeaway.
No, based on the first 95%, 98% of that response, Camille,
I think you're raising a very similar argument to the one that I was saying about Comey,
which is let's look in this problem space when we talk about government shutdowns.
It's because of Congress not being able to agree on a continuing resolution to fund the government
at its current levels until the next time they pass a budget.
That's what happens with their government shutdown.
So what you're saying is in this problem space, the thing that is less concerning to you
isn't that Congress couldn't agree in time to pass the CR.
What's concerning to you is that the thing that should purportedly be at the baseline
of these conversations has gone completely unaddressed, which is the level of spending at the
government.
So generally, right?
Yeah, I think that's correct.
And even the CRs, they're sort of new too.
We used to pass budgets at a regular interval.
and the CRs weren't so important.
Now the continuing resolution
and the shutdown are both
just features of how
business gets done in Washington.
And I should be using air quotes there
because that's not really getting business done.
It's actually not doing your job at all.
And it's so easy and correct,
I think to be critical of that process.
But I will edit, I think,
and say I do not think that actual follow-through
to extend another theme here
is a aspect of business as usual
with this style of brinkmanship,
this Congress or congressional method
of problem solving of let's wait
until the last minute
of essentially a 19-year-old
trying to do their term paper
by crushing Red Bulls at 11 p.m.
They've still turned their term papers in for the most part.
Like when we look back at the government shutdowns
in the last 20 years, not been that many.
We had three during the Trump administration,
in a relatively, like in the same year, all in 2018.
And then we had one during the Obama administration in 2013.
And then before that, it was 95 when we had the last one.
So it's not as if they happen all the time.
I think the threat of them happening all the time is just like the 19-year-old has a deadline
all the time.
And they're always waiting until the last second to turn their paper in.
But that 19-year-old missing the deadline is not a thing that's always happening.
So when it does, I think it's a.
very fair for us to say, yeah, Congress has this baseline of dysfunctional problem solving,
but something about this current dysfunction is worse than usual because they couldn't even do
that one thing. And let's look at that. Let's look at what's going on and try to talk about
who's responsible for it because we should be demanding more. Yeah. Something else in that vein
that feels unique to me is the White House's embrace of the shutdown. And they
the argument put forward by Russell Vaught
and OMB and President Trump and others
that, oh, this is great.
This can actually help us advance the work of Doge
even faster and, you know, antipathy perhaps,
but also embrace.
And that to me feels unique.
I mean, I don't have the same level of historical knowledge,
but I'm not aware of the time in which, you know,
the White House was so welcoming of a shutdown in that sense
and does feel like that robs Democrats of quite a bit of leverage.
I mean, it does feel like a sort of opo wisdom of Solomon kind of parable
where the federal government, the executive branch is saying to Congress,
to the Democrats and Republicans, we have a budget, we have this baby.
If we can't agree on it, I'll divide it into and give you each one.
And when Republicans say, yeah, that sounds fair to me, then the president,
rather than saying, I give the baby to the other person, says,
all right, you get the baby because you agree to chop it up.
So it does feel like for Democrats, it's tough to try to navigate those waters
when OMB is saying, awesome, shut down the government.
I'm going to take it.
Here's a detailed memo about everyone we're going to lay off as soon as this happens.
But, Ari, I had a question for you about something you wrote and your take took an interesting structure
in highlighting three individual actors.
and their role in this shutdown.
And you led with Chuck Schumer
and I would say dedicated the most space to him.
And I'm curious to hear your thoughts
and also, Camille, about whether you feel like
the Democrats have just been completely feckless
throughout this process and what you would make of their performance
because I think for a lot of people,
both on the left and the right,
it just feels like even when they try to resist,
they're completely useless.
Yeah, I think that's sort of,
The thing is that Democrats don't have a good strategy for what to do here.
I think when I chose to dedicate the most amount of time to discussing Chuck Schumer,
the reason is that there's just the most complication and most nuance with his position
because it's easy to understand House Republicans here.
So I talked about three people, said Chuck Schumer and Senate Democrats,
then Mike Johnson,
Speaker of the House and House Republicans
and then President Trump.
And I think that's an increasing order of simplicity.
So with Trump, it's really, really easy
to just make the claim,
of course you're not going to be able
to negotiate in good faith with the minority party
when you're saying,
look, whatever you guys do,
whatever you pass, when it gets to me,
I'm going to revise it.
I'm going to tell the director
of the Office of Management.
You know what?
Let's just cut a bunch of these jobs.
I'm going to create a whole government department
that's just in charge of canceling contracts
that Congress has already approved.
I'm going to send a rescission's package back to you
that requires fewer votes to pass
and we're just going to do it all over.
Of course, that's not going to be an environment
where there's going to be good faith negotiations.
So it just feels really obvious
that that's the point.
And I don't have a whole lot more to say about it than that.
That's kind of open and shut to me.
The issue with Mike Johnson and the House Republicans was that he was somebody who came to power in the House
because he was critical of the right thing, in my opinion, which was this whole style of not being able to pass appropriations bills on time.
He wanted to approach it where they bucketed them.
They tried to pass them in tranches so that they could ladder the budget appropriations on top of each other.
Granted, this was under the Biden administration.
was a little bit of a different context
for what Republicans wanted to do.
But it was still seemingly a good approach to me.
And it's not something we've heard at all.
I've heard no focus on getting appropriation bills
through committee on time through the House.
And it's something that purportedly Johnson said he'd cared,
that he had cared about.
And now that didn't start with him,
but it's certainly continuing with him,
even though it was something that I think he was supposed to try
to resolve. Just try to. And instead, he perpetuated it. That also feels somewhat simple to say.
With Schumer, it's a little harder. And that's why I think I wanted to talk about him the most.
Also, because the process kind of ends with him, where the president will say, I want this.
Republicans who are in control of both chambers will take their cues from the party leader.
The House pushes its or sends its CR through to the Senate, where it requires 60 votes.
and the last person to sign off is going to be Democrats.
So Senate Democrats will just say Chuck Schumer is the person
that sort of represents that caucus.
And in that case, you have those options of now just in a vacuum,
I'm either going to be voting for, yes, let's continue to fund the budget
and just keep the government open or say,
this is one of the few times I have leveraged.
I'm going to try to do something,
even though I know that back of the White House,
Russ Vaught is like rubbing his hands together,
thinking about what he's going to be able to trim off.
But that he'll trim with a hatchet
and thinking that's a risk
because there's something I want to fight for.
So I'm thinking through that lens.
Okay, you have some leverage.
You want to use it.
You want to press for it.
That's your job as minority leader.
Ultimately, you're not super responsible
for what the president's doing in the executive branch.
I assume that there's going to be core challenges
to these firings as there were before when Russ fought tried to dismiss people in mass.
Labor unions challenge that a lot of the rollbacks at Health and Human Services, for instance,
were, or sorry, a lot of the layoffs were rolled back.
So that's sort of a problem that I don't think Schumer is in charge of solving.
The thing that I'm questioning is, one, with your leverage,
why is this the thing, why is this the hill you chose to die on?
why is it ACA benefits that are set to expire at the end of the year?
Why is it not any of the other executive overreaches that people are concerned about?
Here's just the first thing that comes to my head is why not say,
you know what, we'll pass this budget,
but we're going to say we want the president to pledge,
he's not going to run for VP next year.
That's something that actually there's a lot of reasonable concerns and grumblings about.
Trump passed out Trump 2028 hats when they had their negate.
negotiations. So clearly he's trolling about that in the sort of wink, nod, but what, what if kind of way?
So that, again, that's just one thing. What about like consumer financial protection bureau and
passing, putting forward legislation to say, we want this funding to be protected. USAID saying we
want this funding to be protected. When those things were being put to the acts earlier, Schumer
sent words back to the Republican Party. And I know that if you introduce a bill on the Senate,
floor when you are in the minority, that bill is going to die. But having not done that before,
that means that in this moment when he's trying to push for something, the thing that he has to push
for isn't, look at this bill that I co-sponsored. I found like maybe a senator, maybe like Murkowski
was able to play ball with me on one of these things. We have this bill. We want this to move
forward if we're going to pass the CR. He doesn't have the ability to do that because they
didn't take any stances earlier.
And that, like, there's multiple things that he could have been doing
that were going to be more, like, recalcitrant,
where he could have just put his flag in the ground.
And instead, it was this, like, I'm going to go on MSNBC
and talk about my strongly worded letter.
And it's just, it feels like he didn't do a lot then.
And now it feels theatrical.
Like he's mentioning ACA benefits.
Republicans aren't going to approve them.
He's saying, look, just come to the table.
as if all that he wants is to make a show
so Republicans is going to come to the table,
say no, maybe sign something for NIH grants,
which sort of proves my point,
because they're saying we want ACA benefits
and NIH grants to be insured.
Which means if you'd ask for more things that were possible,
then maybe you would have gotten more things.
But instead, he's sort of taking the stance late in the game
and not pushing for a whole lot
and indicating he's willing to fold
and hasn't pushed for a whole lot before.
So you wonder how much he cares now.
It just doesn't seem like he's really doing a lot to push back
in the way that you would hope a minority leader would,
which is the reason why I think I spent the most time there.
The other things, very clear.
This, I think it takes a while to get to that point
where you can see, all right, these are the things
where I think Schumer could be doing more.
And that's why I was spent the most amount of time.
Yeah, it's super illuminating.
And I'm actually curious about something.
We talked about earlier, about kind of prior moments
and what's happening in our politics
and how it's different from previous years.
And one of the thing that stands out to me
is there's no gang of eight kind of situation.
This focus is all on resistance and opposition and obstruction.
And the power of compromise
to actually bring your adversaries a little closer
to find ways to get what you want,
to work together on places where,
even if it wasn't what you ran on,
it's clearly popular with the American people.
And by being involved,
you might actually be able to moderate
some of the kind of over-the-top grandstanding
that the administration is doing.
To the extent you're not just being obstructionist
and you're actually trying,
at least some part of your faction
are trying actively to work with the administration
on things that they're doing that are constructive,
I wonder if that might not put Democrats in a slightly better position.
They have a weird issue where in places where the troop deployments are happening,
for example, and they're happening with the consent of the governor,
and the citizenry is saying, you know what,
it does seem like crime is improving a bit,
or at least there's a possibility that it might improve.
And this has been a huge problem for us.
this isn't a bad thing.
Maybe not fighting them on everything,
finding places where you can work together
and perhaps finding ways
where you can moderate
some of the worst impulses of the administration
is a strategy that is worth Democrats
actually thinking about and trying here.
And maybe that would actually give them
more currency to negotiate
in circumstances like this.
Now, that's one thing.
The other thing I'd say is,
I do wonder what things might have looked like
if they had just been messaging about the debt limit
and knowing that we're coming up against it
in a very prominent way for months in advance.
And saying at the same time,
consistent with what I just said a moment ago,
we want to find ways to work with you on this.
How can we do this?
How can we avoid a calamity?
How can we avoid a kind of messy situation
that could be bad for the American people?
It just feels like that is an opportunity
that isn't being taken advantage
of here. And I think it's perhaps just the nature of our politics at the moment. But it's impossible
for me not to wonder about the actual political possibilities here. And when I say politics in that way,
I'm emphasizing the compromise dimension of our politics, which we just, again, aren't really
doing these days. You know, you get taken to the negotiating table here. And your arm is twisted
behind your back and they've got a bag over your head and they've roughed you up already and they're
going to extract maximum pain from you. And that may be how they want to do business, but that doesn't
necessarily mean that's how you have to approach the negotiations and how you have to approach
politics. And I wonder if anyone among Democrats is going to figure that out. And there are some people
who perhaps might be good candidates for that, but not so sure. Yeah, I mean, I just think
the leadership that the Democrats have right now doesn't understand what you're describing
Camille or isn't interested in it. I think they just need new leadership if they want any hope
of being effective. It seems like they can't decide whether to pursue a path of trying to get
some kind of a foothold or just being the resist liberals that the base is calling for them to be.
And I think the result is just kind of an incoherent strategy and situations like this where they're just being publicly mocked by Republicans and seem pretty hapless to do anything about it.
So I'm curious to see if a genuine challenge to their leadership will arise in the next six months heading into the midterms, particularly if it seems like Democrats aren't as in as strong a position as they should be, given what the polling indicates about Trump's popularity.
right now and the unpopularity of specific actions that he's taken. It does feel like the
grounds well for some kind of disruption within the party is there. But I'm not sure what it looks
like because I couldn't tell you another person who's like in the wings who I think would
necessarily do a better job of what we're talking about. You know, that's a really perfect
tee up to what I was about to ask you, Will, which was you a couple months ago went to D.C. with
John and Isaac and followed a representative from Massachusetts, Jake Ockincloss,
young Democrat around just to produce that Day in a Life video, which was awesome.
And one of the moments from that is germane here, which was he was about to go for an MSNBC
interview, I believe, and was running some prep with an aid on the way.
And they were talking about the posse comitatis law of the military camps,
be used as a police. Military can't make arrests. And I wanted to see if there's any more
maybe that you heard in that conversation or if you had any thoughts about how somebody who's
positioned in the same way or similar way that as like a moderate left member of Congress that
Aachenklaus is that showed a stance of, look, we're not saying there isn't crime here. We're not
saying there's no reason for a better enforcement mechanism. Maybe there's some room for
common ground on that, like Camille was referencing,
but just saying, hey, the National Guard has its hands full
and they aren't trained to do policing, and it's probably illegal.
So we're going to work with you to find another solution.
Did you hear anything that was sort of in that line of messaging when you're in D.C.?
I can't say that I did, honestly, at least for the conversations that we were a part of.
I think something that Ockin-Claas raised that,
felt interesting and unique to me is just referencing his own service and like being a part of
the National Guard that would have been deployed to L.A. in that situation. And his perception that
those troops have no desire to do that and were probably resistant to it internally. And I thought
that that's a place where having somebody with a service record, somebody who has been on
deployments, who's still in contact with people in the ranks and in the service,
could have been an interesting opening for Democrats to explore here.
But to the direct question you asked, no, not much more than was revealed in the video.
Interesting.
Yeah, I mean, I wonder if that's sort of what you were thinking of there, Camille.
That's a kind of middle ground approach that you would expect Democrats or suggest that some of them try.
I mean, yeah, I think, again, anything where you're not putting yourself in a position to overreact to take the bait every single time Trump is trolling you.
Every single time he talks about or suggests that some people are saying that I should run for another term.
You know, I know I can't, but maybe there's a way we could look into it.
You know, it is only so helpful to you to imagine that you can see.
simply win by fomenting sufficient outrage. It didn't work the last time around. And I suspect
that people are particularly interested, especially as the economic headwinds start to really take
shape now, people are going to be looking for actual plans. They're going to want to believe
that you can actually get things done. And I think that the Democrats have a very difficult time
from a messaging standpoint on so many issues
because they're simultaneously saying
there's not much we can do
because we're at the opposition
and we have our hands shined.
Also, we're going to fight.
We're going to fight like hell.
Which is it?
What exactly is going on here?
You actually have to be strategic
in the way that this administration
is willing to kind of pull out all the stops
and push the limits in every context.
And I think I've seen a lot
Democrats try to ape Trumpian rhetoric to become more caustic, to swear more frequently.
And quite frankly, I mean, I just don't, I don't find that particularly impressive.
And it doesn't really seem like a winning strategy.
In fact, I saw Jasmine Crockett yesterday give an interview on CNN, and she was elevated.
It was some decorum on display.
And this is someone who I've seen code switch in ways that I've found, like, kind of shocking and surprising, like, just purely theatrical.
You're not talking like someone who's been well-educated at university right now.
You're doing something else.
And I just don't know that that's a winning strategy in the long run.
I mean, but perhaps I'm wrong, you know, because to the extent there is going to be some challenge to the current leadership, as Will alluded to, like, who is that going to be?
is it AOC? Is it Jasmine Crockett? These are some of the most prominent people in the party at the moment, at least some of the most visible.
So, yeah. This is in no way a novel thought here. But as we're talking about what are helpful comments and whether or not Democrats should take debate, I think that maybe I'll run for another third term and the way that Democrats are responding is an illustrative example of this, which is outrage, I think, is a use of,
emotional emotion for
politicians to
promulgate amongst their base
but it can only be
it's motivating it gets people to
show up but it can only be used
when nothing has been
done about it whatever the issue is
so Democrats saying
like abortions may be the best example
of Democrats are in power for
a long time or at least two years
when they have split control of
Congress and the presidency
and they got
into office, in part because of their stance on abortion.
And in that time, no meaningful laws were passed at a federal level.
Not to open up a whole debate about abortion here, but just to say,
if you solve the problem that you say you want to solve, then you can't run on it in the future.
And again, that's not novel.
But with all the Trump outrage, if Democrats were to say, look, ha, ha, ha, nice hat.
we're here to talk about this continuing resolution.
We can do that, but listen,
this has got to stop.
We're not going to do this third term thing anymore.
We want to try to deal in terms that are more useful.
And at the same time, maybe that's going to risk not having that outrage button to press for your base.
But maybe that's better, right?
Maybe it's better to just say, look, we're doing something.
We get that you're mad.
We don't want you to be mad anymore.
We want you to see that we're doing something.
And one of the things is we're going to talk to the president and say, don't do this,
a third-term thing, and we're going to put something in writing and say, sign this,
and then we'll talk about CRs, at least doing that instead of going to the media and saying,
I'm disgusted, that the president would share a meme.
Just like, yeah, we get it.
It's emotional.
But to show us you doing something, don't show us you feeling something.
Yeah. And we've seen a lot of lowbrow memes from the administration, from official government social media accounts. That's how they operate. He's making jokes in all sorts of weird contexts. One can say that's not presidential, but it feels it has a little bit of that Obama tan suit vibe to it.
And that wasn't particularly effective for conservatives either. And in retrospect, made them look somewhat ridiculous. And given,
the plethora of very real challenges
that actually need to be addressed
like actually choosing your targets wisely
just makes a heck of a lot of sense.
I wonder if I can say something
and I think I'm still sufficiently new
that I can get away with saying it
and won't sound too self-congratulatory.
Because we're trying to move towards the end of the podcast.
Let's see if we open the big ant-al worms
at the end. I'll be brief. I'll be brief.
I'll just say that having conversations with you guys
and certainly Isaac as well, but well, you're filling in
I mean, just wonderfully today.
I appreciate just how level-headed the conversation is.
There are so many people who survey this stuff and who cover it for a living,
who see things that make them uncomfortable.
But I think the fact that we can have such a sober conversation
is actually hugely valuable.
Even for me, as I'm thinking through these issues,
this isn't normal refrain that has become very,
has become like very familiar, sure, okay, now what is the appropriate response in my estimation.
Actually, it kind of is our new normal. This is normal. We're not normalizing things. Donald Trump
is a president of the United States. The federal government is operating in the way that it currently is.
And the executive branch is determined to kind of press the limits as much as possible. And one has to hope that the institutions hold.
and everyone does their jobs.
And I think as journalists,
I think our responsibility really is
to have a clear-eyed view of these things
and to not devolve into a kind of hysteria
and like cheerleading.
I just think that's a really, really important role
for us to play.
And I'm just, I'm really, I'm grateful to be in an organization
where that is the attitude.
And it was the attitude before I got here.
All right.
If I could add one quick thought before we move on, I think that an important part about
maintaining that balance and on paper the ability to evaluate these issues in a clear-headed
way is also remembering that for many, many, many millions of people, the Biden administration
did not feel normal. And they were having these exact same feelings every single day.
Now, we may not agree with the things that they took such issue with, but I do think it's worth
remembering that the way that we may feel, not even anything to do with our political beliefs,
the way that we feel about the actions Trump is taking many, many, many people felt about
the Biden administration. It's not a single direction kind of experience that we're having.
I think you have to be able to hold both of those at once.
So much to say with that, yeah, taking over in the pandemic when he did after that election
and then the last couple of years that he had,
I think that there's a lot of meat on the bone there
that we're going to have to leave for another day
because it's time to complain about stuff.
John, that's your cue, bud.
The airing of grievances.
Between you and me, I think your country is placing a lot of importance
on shoe removal.
All right, grievances zone.
Will, you're the guest.
here. So I think you can bat first, as they say in the baseball world, right?
Bat first. Yes. Can I have a baseball-related grievance?
You can. But you don't have to. Maybe not. I don't know. I don't know how relatable it's
going to be. Well, I guess I would say, could we go to a second?
Could we go to me second?
Yeah.
I've got something.
I've got something.
And I mean, I think this is in the spirit of grievances.
This would be pretty, pretty, yeah.
I saw that meta is releasing their new display AI powered glasses,
and they're not just sunglasses because they have the transitional lenses in them.
And I think they look very cool.
What I'm upset about today, as an owner of an Applevision pro,
which I bought pretty early,
I didn't know that.
And I travel with everywhere
because it is the best cinematic experience you can have.
I was very disappointed to see here
that Apple is moving resources away
from developing the next generation Applevision Pro
to develop some of these spectacles
like the ones that meta just rolled out
in a pretty botched presentation.
But they do look cool.
And I have been trying
very hard to get a demo
so I could check them out for myself.
But I'm just, I'm licking my own wounds here
because I'm sad that I'll have to wait
longer to get the next
generation of the Applevision Pro headset.
And, you know, it's just, it's a bit of a bummer.
So, yeah, that's my agreement.
You're not going to wear these
high-tech glasses, though, Camille,
and have them shipped you directly at dinner
like you've done with some other things.
I mean, I'm, I'm,
looking for them, I want to try them on. I want to try them on. I am, I will, look, if you want me
to extend the grievance, I could and say, why is it so hard for me to get an appointment for one
of these demo places so I can try this device? Why doesn't someone at Meta reach out to me to maybe
get me a pair? Maybe that could happen. This is really, really interesting because here I am
sitting in this video. I know. So if, maybe I'll leave a note on a desk for you and we'll see what
happens. Yeah, yeah. Maybe you do some collab crossover event, and I will be happy to travel.
Okay. At MKBHT, you return. All right, I got a grievance for you. And it's simple. And it's
about the way that my friends and extended network are declaring their eternal love for one another.
weddings are inconvenient.
They should be checking with me first.
So I love returning to Clinton, New Jersey.
Clinton's great.
It's one of the most beautiful towns in Jersey.
And it's great to be here.
But it's another Thursday wedding.
It's the second Thursday wedding I've had this summer.
The third of the three, I guess it's fall now, but the season.
And all three have been neither Friday nor Saturday.
It's been Thursday, Sunday, Thursday.
And I get it.
Economy must be kind of bad, huh?
We're looking for those Thursday, Sunday wedding times.
But, and it's great.
Like, I'm trying not to be, like, judgmental.
I got married at the most inconvenient time,
which was in August 2020 during COVID.
So I'm really glad people came to that.
But it's just check with my schedule first, maybe,
because I've had a busy day,
and it's tough for me to commute out.
to join you in your celebration of eternal love,
which is going to be beautiful.
And I'm sure I'm moving ceremony.
I love weddings.
I'm not even mad.
It's just, you know, run it by me first, I guess.
Check with my calendar.
I like that.
I second that, actually.
Well, I'm not as big a fan of weddings in general.
I've even eloped.
I mean, kind of.
When you do a destination wedding and you make it impossible
for anyone else to attend,
I think that's pretty much an elopement.
That's how I feel about it.
Yeah, we can maybe see how Isaac feels when he comes back from the wedding he's attending in Italy.
Yeah.
That is an interesting thought, Camille.
I think that would be great fodder for a future episode.
This is the first year for me in which I feel like I've stepped into the wedding season among my peers.
I've got five weddings this year, including one this weekend.
And before that, I had won as an adult.
So it feels like now that train has left the station, and I'm acclimating.
to what you're both describing.
So it is, yeah, it's definitely a new phase of life when that starts happening.
My grievance, age-old weather-related grievance.
We were in Vermont last week when we were all together,
and it was so perfectly not humid and chilly in a great way in the mornings
and just the exact kind of weather that I love.
And I've come back to New York, and it's October, and it's still humid,
still 80s every day.
I'm very happy that it's sunny,
but I have just had it with humidity
after five to six months of it in a row now,
and I would just love the temperature to come down
and to have some crispy fall mornings.
I'm headed to North Carolina this weekend,
so I'm hoping maybe I can get a little access to that there
in Asheville, but we'll see.
Up in elevation then, right, Asheville?
Yeah, yeah.
That's, I mean,
I hear you.
I base my whole life around moving away from humidity.
It just, it sucks waking up in a damp sweat,
and there's just nothing you can do about it
because it's six in the morning,
and it's 75 degrees outside, and it's October 1st.
I'm remembering that.
I don't miss it.
Sorry, buddy.
Yeah.
All right, boys.
It's been a nice hour.
We've once again filled a lot of time,
putting some beautiful wisdom into the ears.
of our friends, but it's time to go.
So another suspension of rules in the books, Camille, Will, thanks guys, and talk to you
later.
Awesome.
Thanks.
Bye, guys.
Our executive editor and founder is me.
Isaac Saul and our executive producer is John Wall.
Today's episode was edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas.
Our editorial staff is led by managing editor Ari Weitzman with senior editor Will Kback and
associate editors Hunter Asperson, Audrey Moorhead, Bailey Sons.
Lindsay Canoeth and Kendall White.
Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75.
To learn more about Tangle and to sign them for a membership,
please visit our website at reetangle.com.
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