The Bulwark Podcast - Bill Kristol: Kleptocrats and Plutocrats
Episode Date: March 3, 2025Trump is trying to chuck the post-WWII order and firmly pivot American foreign policy away from Europe and toward Putin—the poor guy who got dragged into totally-not-a-hoax Russia Russia Russia. And... Lil' Marco and Lindsey rushed to defend Trump and JD against Zelensky, who dared to question in the Oval Office whether Putin could be trusted in any ceasefire deal. At the same time, DOGE is putting the lives of malnourished children and pregnant women at risk in the name of cost-cutting while Trump is planning to use taxpayer money to prop up crypto, so he and his cronies can personally profit off it even more. Bill Kristol joins Tim Miller. Bill Kristol joins Tim Miller for the weekend pod. show notes Sam joins Bill for the most recent "Bulwark on Sunday" More on the USAID memo laying out Rubio's failure to provide life-saving foreign aid
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Hello and welcome to the Bulldog podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
Congrats to Enora.
A great film on a win last night, lots of wins at the Oscars and happy Lundygraw.
Much has happened since we last taped.
Had it not been my husband's 40th birthday and Mardi Gras weekend, I might have come
back on to do an emergency pod.
But, you know, sometimes you guys just got to wait for the good stuff.
And so I got Bill Crystal back here and it's Monday.
How are you doing, Bill?
I'm doing fine.
Sam and I did a pod yesterday.
You'll be glad to know, which covers some of this, but we can get into much more depth
here.
Sam, you know, you kind of skate across the surface.
But Tim Miller, you're talking about the deep dives, you know?
That is great to know.
No, I was nursing a hangover yesterday, so I did not tune in for you and Sam, but people
can get our little Sunday bonus conversations on Substack.
So go to the Bullwork, sign up for Bullwork Plus.
You don't have to wait for me until Monday afternoon that way.
All right.
Where should we start?
I think we got to start with the sneer heard around the world from JD Vance.
I'm going to play a series of clips from the White House summit, so to speak, between Vladimir
Zelensky, Putin, or, that was unintentional, between Vladimir Zelensky, Trump, and Vance.
Things were going okay.
I mean, you know, okay for Trump on the Trump scale until JD
decided to interject into a question from the press about whether Trump had been too
nice to Putin.
Let's listen.
One more question.
I will respond to this.
So look, for four years in the United States of America, we had a president who stood up
at press conferences and talked tough about Vladimir Putin.
And then Putin invaded Ukraine and destroyed a significant
chunk of the country. The path to peace and the path to prosperity is maybe engaging in
diplomacy. We tried the pathway of Joe Biden of thumping our chest and pretending that
the President of the United States' words mattered more than the President of the United
States' actions. I signed with him, Macron, and Merkel, we signed ceasefire.
Ceasefire, all of them told me that he will never go.
We signed him with gas contract.
Gas contract.
Yes, but after that, he broken the ceasefire.
He killed our people and he didn't exchange prisoners. We signed the exchange of prisoners, but he didn't do it.
What kind of diplomacy, JD, you are speaking about? What do you mean?
I'm talking about the kind of diplomacy that's going to end the destruction of your country.
Yes, but if you are not strong...
Mr. President, Mr. President, with respect, I think it's disrespectful for you to come into the Oval Office and try to litigate this in front of the American media.
Right now you guys are going around and forcing conscripts to the front lines because you have manpower problems.
You should be thanking the President for trying to bring it into this conflict.
Have you ever been to Ukraine that you say what problems we have?
I have been to...
Come once.
I've actually watched and seen the stories and I know what happens is you bring people,
you bring them on a propaganda tour Mr. President.
Do you disagree that you've had problems bringing people into your military?
And do you think that it's respectful to come to the Oval Office of the United States of
America and attack the administration that is trying to prevent the destruction of your
country?
A lot of questions.
Let's start from the beginning.
Sure.
First of all, during the war, everybody has problems, even you.
All right.
We're going to get to then President Trump intervening there, but I wanted to start with
JD since he kicked off the kerfuffle.
Kind of a mixed message there.
He begins by condescendingly lecturing Zelensky about diplomacy and how we need diplomacy now.
And then he proceeds to berate and chastise Zelensky, which isn't maybe the best form
of diplomacy I've ever seen.
But I'm curious what you thought about that, Bill.
I mean, it was a setup, obviously, by Trump and JD.
I don't know if it was a semi-bad really bad cop or what or maybe that JD knew what
he was doing.
He had his little talking points prepared.
They wanted to do what Trump later says in the tweet, portray Zelensky as an enemy of
peace to damage support for Zelensky here at home, especially among those Republicans,
half of them on the Hill, right?
Who a year ago voted for aid to Ukraine to carry out Trump's pro-Putin policy.
He needs to move the entire Republican party in his direction, or at least it would be helpful
for him to do so, not just the half of it that's with him already.
That's what the purpose of this meeting was.
Zelensky came here to sign a deal.
He made big concessions because he wanted to honor Trump's somewhat ridiculous, I believe,
request and somewhat extortionate request for the deal on minerals.
But he came here for that reason. somewhat ridiculous, I believe, request and somewhat extortionate request for the deal on minerals.
But he came here for that reason.
And then they changed the deal and sandbagged Zelensky.
And JD was kind of the heavier of the two sandbaggers, but Trump went pretty far too.
And I guess it was definitely set up, but this all happens like 38 minutes in about
to the press conference.
And you're into the Q&A and at some level Trump you know I think wants the show you know kind of
like oh I'm gonna make him come here and we're gonna sign his way as minerals to
us and say we got a great deal and so like do you think Trump and JD thought
that there was potentially a clean version of this or that it was a certain
that JD was gonna to go at him?
Cause I'm not sure.
Well, I think the way JD went at him left Zelensky no choice AB.
If you think about the alleged deal they wanted a week ago, it included
Zelensky holding elections in Ukraine.
That's become a huge talking point on the pro-Trump right, which he said
he can't do and won't do and the constitution doesn't permit him to do in Ukraine.
This deal is going nowhere anyway.
So they weren't going to get a deal with Zelensky.
They're not going to get a deal with Putin, I suspect, unless it's a total and utter
discapitulation to let him keep fighting and devastating Ukraine.
And so I think this was for Trump's domestic politics here more than anything else.
All right.
So after JD intervenes, why aren't you thanking us?
Why aren't you thanking us after he's thanked us 100 million times?
He literally had thanked Trump and repeatedly went out of his way having been treated pretty
badly by Trump, I've got to say, has tried to be respectful and thank him.
But anyway, yeah.
Yeah.
Here's then Trump changing his tune.
But you have nice ocean and don't feel now, but you will feel it in the future. You don't know that. and Trump changing his tune. Remember that. You're in no position to dictate what we're going to feel.
We're going to feel very good.
We're going to feel very good and very strong.
You're right now not in a very good position.
You've allowed yourself to be in a very bad position and he's happened to be right about it.
You're not in a good position.
You don't have the cards right now.
The Trump thing kind of reminds me of like a couple that is fighting and that when they
have had a couple too many to drink, Trump's just like, don't tell me how to feel.
Like they're not, the fight isn't about anything, right?
Like Trump just lashes out at him and, you know, again, starts berating him, then gets
into this metaphor about the cards and like, I don't think he even understands what Zelensky's trying to say.
Like, Zelensky's point is that like, I didn't have the cards for day one.
Everybody thought we were going to lose this war in three days.
And like we fought and we fought.
And I guess Trump just doesn't think about it from anybody's perspective,
besides his own feelings, I guess.
Right.
And they're the feelings of a bully.
So when Zelensky refuses to grovel, that sets Trump off.
And there he was lecturing Zelensky.
I mean, almost really unimaginable, I would say, that this was happening in the Oval Office.
And I was struck.
I'm sure you were.
I didn't see it.
I was at a conference.
I saw it shortly after.
But the number of texts and emails I had from people, including people who aren't that political,
people I haven't been in touch with that much, people who were slightly more Trump adjacent than I, I guess that's a very
low bar, but who are somewhat Trump adjacent, you know, and acquiescent.
People were just sickened, as one person said to me by the spectacle of an American president
and vice president lecturing Zelensky, who we have all supported and correctly supported
for two and a half, three years, exactly three years.
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So a couple more clips and then I'm going to get into what the ramifications are now.
But here is the next little bit where JD gets back in and things really, really derail.
You have to be thankful.
You don't have the cards.
I'm thankful. You're buried there. You're people are dying. I can tell you. You have to be thankful. You don't have the cards.
You're buried there.
Your people are dying.
You're running low on soldiers.
Listen, you're running low on soldiers.
It would be a damn good thing.
Then you tell us, I don't want to cease fire.
I don't want to cease fire.
I want to go, and I want to this.
Look, if you could get a cease fire right now,
I'd tell you, you take it so
the bullets stop flying and your men stop getting killed.
Of course we want to stop the war.
But you're saying you don't want a ceasefire.
But I said to you, we're in tears.
I want a ceasefire.
For just the audio listeners, for people who have not suffered through watching the videotape of
this, when Trump is doing the, he like does his Alinsky imitation there, where he's going,
I don't want a ceasefire, I don't want to cease fire. And he's like, he's making a moron face. And it is
about the most childish scene that you could possibly imagine inside the Oval Office in
that little bit.
Horrible.
Okay. I got one more, Bill. I'm sorry.
You're really putting me through, making me suffer here.
I am making you suffer. I'm making the listeners.
We have, it must be listened to.
Like it is outrageous.
I rewatched the whole 48 minutes this morning
because in the clips, it is appalling and shocking.
But just like watching the contour of the conversation
just completely derail.
And like, let's be honest,
just JD and Trump losing their cool.
This is why I just, I guess I object a little bit to like the fact that it was
a setup because I think that clearly they had prepared, you know, how JD was
going to go at him, but like the degree to which these two just like lost their
cool and start shouting like about their feelings and, and about, you know, needing to be thanked.
And then it closes here with something that it, that could have been, and it
would almost be too rude to Newsmax to explain what is next here as being a
segment on Newsmax and it is on the, it is a rant from the furthest, most
idiotic realms of the fever swamps.
And it's the president of the United States.
Let's listen to the last bit.
She's asking what if Russia brings the ceasefire?
What if they, what if anything?
What if a bomb drops on your head right now?
Okay.
What if they broke it?
I don't know.
They broke it with Biden because Biden, they didn't respect him.
They didn't respect Obama.
They respect me.
Let me tell you, Putin went through a hell of a lot with me.
He went through a phony witch hunt where they used him and Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia.
You ever hear of that deal?
That was a phony, that was a phony Hunter Biden, Joe Biden scam.
Hillary Clinton, Shifty Adam Schiff, it was a Democrat scam.
And he had to go through that.
And he did go through it.
We didn't end up in a war.
And he went through it.
He was accused of all that stuff.
He had nothing to do with it.
It came out of Hunter Biden's bathroom.
It came out of Hunter Biden's bedroom.
It was disgusting.
What is he even talking about? Like what came out of
Hunter Biden's bedroom?
I guess the laptop, he's conflating the Biden laptop, I
suppose, with the with the alleged Russia hoax. But I
think it's very revealing. I think he does lose it there. I
don't think that's part of the intention of it. I suspect very
revealing that he thinks Putin went through it with him. He and
Putin are buddies. They are allies. They were unfairly besmirched.
They are together in this fight.
I mean, he just explicitly says that there's no more of the pretense of, I'm a hardheaded
guy negotiating with Putin and there are some problems with what Russia's been doing at
some point in the world or maybe at some point in the 2016 election, after all.
Nope.
Once again, in 2016, he asked Russia to intervene.
I mean, this is the full flowering, I'd say, of not just the abandonment of Zelensky,
but the embrace of Putin.
Yes, that is the correct insight.
It is a tantrum by somebody that feels emotionally connected at some level to Putin, I guess
maybe in his imagination, right?
Like this notion that Putin somehow went through the Russia hoax, Putin was laughing through
the whole thing. Putin's gotten everything that he wanted the whole time. He got a kick out of the
Russia hoax. It achieved its ends. I'm saying Russia hoax in scare quotes here, but his
interference in the election, it achieved his ends of dividing the country. It created a quasi
legitimacy in Trump or the challenging of his legitimacy.
He got the person in there that he preferred, who, you know, allowed him free
reign to, you know, continue to expand his power.
Like Putin has got everything that he wanted out of all of this up to and
until when Ukraine started fighting back after he
invaded Kiev.
Trump has constructed this imaginary other world where Putin was, like him, besieged
by shifty Adam Schiff and the media and a shadowy cabal.
You don't think Putin was really wounded, suffered, psychologically had a tough time when Adam Schiff criticized him.
Yeah, it is funny, Trump is a thin-skinned bully and he sort of wants to believe Putin
is too.
He must know at some level that Putin is infinitely tougher than he is and couldn't care less
what Adam Schiff says and cares about results, not about feelings.
But you know, that is interesting, the psychology of that, right?
Trump wants to put himself on the same level as Putin
He knows that he's not it also just kind of ties into the whole manliness masculinity conversation that they're all having right that it's like
There is some notion that that kind of performative temper tantrum the bullying the talking down the condescending to Zelensky
is going to reveal
themselves to be the tough ones rather than the ones like
beset by their emotional distress and trying to intimidate somebody who's actually shown real courage.
But I guess it seems to be like landing with at least their own voters.
I think that's such an important point that, I mean, Trump and JD Vance would not have
stayed in Keef on February 25th, 2022.
They would have been on the first plane out and they and their families and
whatever, you know, buddies they have in various schemes and grifts and so forth.
They would have been leaving from wherever there was danger.
At some level, there's a deep resentment of Zelensky for actually being courageous
and manly and in his slightly understated way, you might say.
I think the not wearing the suit is a comical, MAGA complaint too, which normally they like
informality, authenticity, right?
In this case, Trump's the guy who wears the suit and Vance in this case, so they have
to turn it against Zelensky like Churchill.
When he came to the White House in 1941, 42, 43, wore his battle, you might say, battle
fatigues in effect.
Mad Fientist The fallout from this, the Minerals deal is
not signed.
What happens is after the temper tantrum that is thrown by the president and vice president,
they retreat to their separate quarters.
Trump and his team stays in the Oval Office, Zelensky and his goes to, I forget what other
room they went to hold in.
And then rather than go talk to Zelensky himself, Trump sends Walsh and Rubio in.
We saw the continued shrinking of little Marco Rubio who had to go and tell Zelensky to leave.
Later that day, high level administration sources said that military aid is now in question
and the quote is,
they're fortunate it is not off already.
So that's kind of where things stand on the deal.
And then yesterday on Sunday,
European leaders met without us, was in London,
was France, Germany, Canada, UK.
They met their signal that they're doubling down
on supporting Ukraine and maybe boosting
military aid, but obviously there's a lot of frustration and hard feelings at the White
House.
So let's say you about the current state of mind.
No, it's a big moment.
It's the continuation of what we saw already two weeks ago, obviously, with the Trump-Putin
phone call, the Hegseth and JD Vance speeches, the Rubio visit to Riyadh.
This is kind of the culmination of it, I would say, the betrayal of Ukraine.
There was no fresh military aid coming from Trump anyway.
The idea that he's cutting it off because Zelensky was disrespectful is in a way, I
think, ridiculous.
Maybe he'll stop some of the aid that's already in the pipeline, I suppose.
The degree to which the Europeans saw right away what was happening is striking.
A friend sent me some headlines from German newspapers on Saturday and they saw this was not just about Ukraine, it was about fundamental
pivot of American foreign policy. Forget about NATO, forget about Europe, forget about defending
democracy. He's with Putin. He'll be cutting deals with Putin in accord with what he sees
to be their interests. German foreign minister had a terrific speech where she said how terrifying and terrible it was
that America joined the side of the perpetrators,
not the victims of aggression and of crimes.
And so Europe understood right away, Russia understood.
There's a good article on the Washington Post this morning
quoting various Putin spokespeople and allies
about how happy they are.
It was a gift, the whole thing is why everything's wonderful.
These are basically, we don't even have to.
Yeah, we've got this here.
This is Peskov.
Yeah, Peskov says the new administration is rapidly
changing all foreign policy configurations.
This largely aligns with our vision.
Right.
The Russians spoke to it.
And that's the truth.
And they're happy.
You know, it's interesting.
They want to rub it in, right?
They don't want to give Trump a lot of dignity.
They don't mind humiliating him a little bit.
Maybe they think that makes it even more susceptible to being pushed around further. They don't want to give Trump a lot of dignity. They don't mind humiliating him a little bit.
Maybe they think that makes it even more susceptible to being pushed around further.
I'm not so sure they're going to make a deal, so they may want to also get ready to really
just try to conquer all of Ukraine and dare Trump to do anything, which they seem pretty
convinced he won't.
So the Europeans are in a state correctly.
We'll see if they can help Ukraine defend itself.
I'm worried about six months or 18 to 24 months from now that they decide, if we're over here,
US has walked away, we better cut our own deals with Russia, start the energy going again.
You can imagine a very bad cascade of appeasement.
But I've got to say to their credit, that has not been happening yet and their reaction
has been the opposite.
They do not want to betray Ukraine and Zelensky is not going to give up and Ukraine is not
going to give up and Ukraine is not going to give up
But sustaining the world order without the US onside
Asking the Europeans to do it and our Asian friends to do it. That's a tall task
I would have been very skeptical could happen a year ago now
I think maybe they can do it for a while at least until we come back onside
the other point I'll make make is that Congress could act to mitigate some of the damage,
but that would require a few Republicans having some courage.
We haven't seen a lot of that this weekend.
We saw a couple, right?
Yeah.
I mean, Don Bacon was on 60 Minutes, I guess.
But, I mean, the next time that he does something actually substantive rather than just with
his words will be the first time.
So we'll believe that when I see it.
I mean, just kind of gaming this out as you sort of talked about the potential ways that
it could develop as far as Europe is concerned.
Just think of the position Trump is in now, like the sticking point that really undergirded this
disagreement like beyond like JD Vance just like wanting to be a condescending douche,
like that the actual substantive sticking point was that Zelensky is trying to say,
I need security guarantees. Like that, that we can't trust Putin.
If you make a deal, right?
Like we might make a deal and then, you know, who knows, few months later, he, you
know, props up another reason to make an incursion somewhere or whatever, test the,
test the deal, I need security guarantees.
And Trump didn't want to do that.
Didn't want to give those.
Trump didn't want to do that, didn't want to give those. And from our position now, it's like even if Zelensky comes back,
tail between his legs, you know, Mark Thiessen is writing
in the Washington Post opinion page today, it's unclear today whether this,
whether sucking up to Trump fits under free markets or personal liberties
in the new rubric on the Washington Post opinion page, but he wrote that
Zelensky must suck up to Trump for the good of his country and must
come back and must get on Trump's good side and blah, blah, blah.
Even if that happened, there's not really a situation where you could trust either
side of a security guarantee if you're Zelensky, right?
Like maybe you have to do such a deal anyway, and it's just pragmatic, hope for the best, cross
the next bridge when you get there type situation.
But it's hard to really conceive that Donald Trump is going to offer any real security,
even if we have some skin in the game with rare earth minerals or whatever.
I mean, totally, that's really a key point.
I mean, who would trust Trump?
Let's say there's a fake peace agreement and even Russia gets some additional territory
or something and they're doing horrible things in the territory they have, and then they
have a fake excuse for an occurring non-accursion.
What is Trump going to do?
I mean, but this is where the Europeans saw this too and saw that, just to take that to
the next step, what is NATO anymore?
NATO depends on Article 5 and on the assumption
that we're all in if someone's attacked.
Will Trump act if the Russians do a little green men thing
in Estonia?
Will Trump act if the Russians try to subvert governments
and of NATO members as they have been trying
in Romania and elsewhere?
I mean, the degree to which the whole post-war structure
is at risk, not just Ukraine.
I mean, that I think is what the Europeans saw right away.
And that's where they're really talking pretty seriously.
I can't quite believe they can sustain a security arrangement without the US being
the anchor. That's been the case. We have been for 80 years. Maybe they will.
The incoming chancellor, Meritz, is talking that way. They are increasing defense spending.
It looks like they're going to.
We'll see.
I'm very worried that that's hard to sustain.
They'll have their own domestic politics.
Parties in Europe are going to say, what are we doing here?
America's gone in the other direction.
We need to go that way too.
So I'm very worried about that.
And as you were saying, how much is Congress going to do?
In theory, Europe and Congress could sort of make up for a US president, maybe, but we haven't
had to run this experiment for 80 years, right?
We haven't had a situation where an American president fundamentally wants to just destroy
the post-World War II order.
Yeah, and we talked about this with Susan Glasser on the show a couple of episodes ago,
and she makes the same point about Estonia, and it's impossible to fathom at this point that Trump would come to the defense of one of these other NATO countries.
I mean, maybe, you know, who the hell knows, right?
The last person in his ear at the right moment ends up being somebody that flatters him in
the right kind of way, but there's certainly no reason to have any belief that we would.
And that does call into question the whole NATO agreement at this point.
Meanwhile, it is worth mentioning the war is ongoing.
Russia launched an attack on Kharkiv yesterday that injured eight, including a
seven year old child.
And I just, I think that that is important to like point out because the Trump and
Vance side of this argument is kind of, it's premised
on this notion that like Russia is behaving, like we're not even asking anything from Russia.
Russia is not the problem child here, right?
Like it's Ukraine that's the problem.
And if we just decide to come to the table, then it'll all be good.
Putin will do what we ask.
And that is like in total conflict with what is actually
happening.
And I think it was a Friday or Saturday that the Washington
Post reported that under Pete Hegsath, somebody with Trump's
sign off, the Defense Department has stopped a program that was
trying to both deal with Russian cyber offenses and other kinds
of sort of, well, you know, those kinds of offenses, let's
say non-kinetic offenses here in the US.
And also we had some counter offenses, presumably going on to disrupt their stuff and they seem
to have called that off.
So basically, we're not considering Russia an enemy anymore.
I mean, how long can the sanctions last once you have this attitude?
I mean, why should Trump even keep them on at this point?
He has no, what's the reason?
What's he asking for?
What's he punishing Putin for?
And one thing that really alarmed me
about the article in the post, it's a little murky
and I'd be curious to see follow-up reporting.
It feels like we're also letting down all our defenses
against Russian intervention in the 2026 or 2028 elections.
I mean, why do we have, let's go back.
Why do we have this concern with Russian cyber
and social media type activities? I think we have good let's go back, why do we have this concern with Russian cyber and social
media type activities?
I think we have good reasons to have those concerns.
Well, as Trump said in 2016, he wanted Russia to intervene, right?
What did he say?
Please release the emails.
I guess that was about the stolen emails with WikiLeaks.
But Trump, he likes Putin because he likes Putin.
He likes authoritarians.
He also likes Putin because he himself wants to be an authoritarian here and he thinks
Putin might well be a useful ally to have in that effort.
What it said was that Heg Seth ordered the US Cyber Command to stand down all planning
against Russia, including offensive digital actions, according to three people familiar
with the matter.
So we'll see.
But I think your point is well taken that if you just accept the Trump framework presented at the press conference since, and frankly,
at the speech JD Vance gave in Europe, etc. If you accept their framework, there is no
rationale for sanctions on Russia, right? Like the sanctions on Russia are there because
of their invasion into Ukraine and because of their actions, you know, targeting our elections, right?
Like Trump thinks that those were hoax and that Ukraine was asking for it.
Cause you know, they were wearing their skirt too short.
So like they've put themselves in a box, maybe they want to be in this box,
but they've put themselves in a position where it makes it very challenging for them to even
like make the case in a way that is coherent for changing course beyond the course, the very Russia
favorable course that they're on.
We have tariffs also happening tonight, maybe we'll see.
Trump insisted that the tariffs on goods imported from Canada and Mexico will go into effect
Tuesday because of fentanyl, I guess.
He also doubled the tariffs on China to 20%.
The question is whether he will once again do the, I'm giving you a reprieve because
you're sending Mounties to the border thing with Canada or Mexico.
Howard Lutnick floated yesterday on Fox, the Commerce Secretary, that Trump is considering
reducing the tariffs down from 25%.
TBD, I guess, you don't want to keep going around and around here with
their little Kabuki theater act, but I do think that they're in a
tenuous spot economically.
I think that's actually really the more relevant point here.
Like the market has not been doing well.
Market's been coming back down.
A lot of concerns.
The Atlanta Fed projections for
GDP growth last week, way down from where they were after Trump was elected. And, you know,
so this kind of stuff is going to have real impact. And eventually, again, it's similar to this box
that I'm talking about with Russia. He's like rhetorically put himself in a box where he's
going to have to do these things at some point, you would think, or else he would feel weak and humiliated.
But I don't know.
We'll see.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, the tariffs thing is the most bewildering in the sense that it's, that just seems genuinely
to be his obsession.
And I don't even think it's really a bit of big maga obsession, particularly.
And if you combine it with slightly rising inflation, which looks to be the case, and slightly rising unemployment, which could be the case, that
could really hurt the economy.
It's such a question.
I mean, what do you think, Demi?
If the economy is weaker six months from now, does that make Trump revert to more normie
republicanism or does it increase his temptation and tendency to go in a sort of real authoritarian
direction?
It's a great question and one that I've been thinking about and I
My gut says that
It would lead to panic Right and lashing out and moving more towards the authoritarian direction
I don't I don't know. I guess it kind of depends on how bad it is, right?
But if it's just kind of somewhat
bad and things are, you know, muddling along and things are not great on the margins and, you know,
he's got rich guys in his ear saying, okay, this is hurting us too much. You got to back off it.
We got to get the tax cut through that. I could see that as a possible outcome here. But if things get really hairy, right?
You can get to a point of hairiness where getting rid of the tariffs and passing a tax
cut or whatever doesn't really remediate the problem, right?
And so I think that the worse things get, the more unhinged he would get and the more
he would move towards even further down
the authoritarian path, I guess is my instinct.
But I don't know.
And this is the thing about the first Trump term is pre-COVID, he like got pretty lucky,
right?
Like there weren't a lot of forces outside of his control that created crises, really.
In COVID, like we saw just a massive panic and foul up. And so I kind of think
that COVID, what we saw during COVID is kind of what we would see here. But I don't know.
Who knows? What do you make of that?
And maybe what we saw after November 3rd to January 6th.
Right.
Now, I think we just, again, have to come back to how the first Trump term featured
James Madison, Secretary of Defense, and Tillerson, whatever one thought of him, but then Pompeo, Secretary of State, and Bolton, and there in the White
House, McMaster, then Bolton.
I mean, such a different cast of characters, a Republican party that still had some memory
that they were supposed to act as members of Congress and not simply as Trump lackeys.
I mean, they were pretty bad, don't get me wrong, but it's so different.
That's I guess what strikes one the most, right?
Marco Rubio, pathetically trying to climb into Trump's,
make, stay in, I guess, Trump's, not even good graces,
but enough graces that he doesn't get fired tomorrow
by the most pathetic statement he put out afterwards,
you know, kind of, and then Lindsey Graham too.
And what was striking about those two statements
is they really were Stalinist, or Stalinoid,
I guess is the word, in the sense that it wasn't just, look, it's, you know, Trump
was did the right thing and Zelensky has to come, it wasn't Mark Tizen.
Zelensky has to come around.
We still have a chance to make this all work, but Zelensky has to be a nicer guy.
That would be bad, but that would be a kind of coherent point to say, but by
someone who is pro-Trump, but does actually want to help Ukraine.
They did not go that way, right?
They really were all in to show Trump that Trump had said Zelensky was a threat to peace or couldn't be a partner for peace
And we're saying the exact same thing and then Lindsay says something about we just may have to in effect get rid of Zelensky
So we are I mean the degree to which they felt they had to abase themselves
Is I think very sadly very revealing but yeah in terms of the authoritarianism, I don't know.
Yeah, he really triples down on the deportations more than to go on to Animo, more horrible
treatment of them, more raids.
You can imagine very ugly scenarios in that area in immigration as well as in others.
What if it does come out in some of these Doge efforts?
I don't know. God forbid, what if a real public health and say that some of these Doge efforts, I don't know,
God forbid, what if a real public health, real current quick public health effects,
I think the indirect effects are terrible for what our biomedical research capability
will be five years from now and what kinds of people will go into those things and keeping
decent people in government, there are a million problems.
But what if Ebola gets loose in Africa or something?
I mean, the degree to which Trump is not the type to say,
gee, I guess we made a mistake, we need to restore this stuff.
Maybe he would, he's done that a couple of cases, I guess,
in the last two, three weeks, I don't know, what do you think?
Yeah, I mean, he doesn't like bad news.
The thing that has always protected us the most from disaster with Trump is
like, he does have a hole in his heart where he wants to be loved.
You know, he plays the role of tough his heart where he wants to be loved.
He plays the role of tough guy who doesn't care, but he really does.
And so there have been several occasions where he got bad news and then you kind of back
off, do some face saving things.
And I'm not saying that he wouldn't do that, but I guess my point is sometimes problems
get out of your control, right?
It doesn't matter whether he backs off at that point.
Right, exactly. One more thing on the Doge. Sam Stein is reporting this in the Morning
Shots newsletter this morning. People should sign up for it. Nick Enrich, who is the Acting
Assistant Administrator for Global Health at USAID, he was placed on administrative leave
for disseminating memos outlining the failure
of the Trump administration to follow through on its pledge to allow waivers for certain
types of lifesaving foreign aid.
He sent another memo that the bulwark received.
I mean, it's pretty alarming just talking about the degree to which these cuts are going to have massive ramifications for children,
malnourished children, pregnant women, obviously, people with HIV and AIDS in Africa.
Again, this is a situation where Trump allowed Musk to go do the cuts, Rubio had said that he wanted to reinstate certain types
of aid and it's not happening.
It's not getting reinstated.
The damage is happening and the guy that's blowing the whistle on it, instead of them
backing off more and trying to put in place the waivers that Rubio wanted, the guy's getting
put on administrative leave.
I mean, I think that's a pretty alarming example of what we'd expect to see.
I've been thinking a little bit about what the domestic policy and foreign policy sides
have in common.
And it does seem to be a similar kind of just utter recklessness and cavalier attitude towards
existing structures.
Again, one can imagine some of these areas of AID and NIH and so forth saying, look,
we really want to save money.
We want to weed out a third, a half, two thirds of some of what's being spent in some of these
programs.
We're going to do it in a systematic way.
A year from now, you'll see progress.
Two years from now, usually presidents have a four-year horizon.
Four years from now, we'll be down 60%.
You guys will be really pleased.
You won't notice anything because you know what? A lot of this money
was wasted and was spent on DEI and on woke stuff and all this. That's the normal thing
you do, leaving aside whether they would have been right that the money is wasted.
The reckless is the pleasure they take in the slashing and leaving pregnant women without
care in Africa or in firing civil servants who've worked
hard for X number of years with no notice.
Which again is utterly unnecessary.
The amount of money at stake is minute compared to giving them a year, not renewing their
contracts for people a year from now or treating people in a decent way.
They like the cruelty of Doge.
They like the cruelty in a way of bullying Zelensky.
But the recklessness in both cases, assuming that things won't just really go bad in the
world or at home, is what the foreign and domestic policies have.
Elon's, Doge, and Trump's treatment of Zelensky are parallel in some ways.
I don't know.
We're a big strong country.
We could survive a lot of bad things and maybe six months from now it won't feel that different in people's lives
But I'm not so sure about that really I'm very struck just number two
I've talked to I don't know if you found this not political people. I'm here in DC
So I hear more of them, you know the brain drain and the character drain
We're gonna have for the US government to people in the military friends or friends
I don't
know them, wanted to come see me privately, thought maybe I could give them some advice.
I don't know if I really have much good advice.
They're big career rising stars in the military, young people, a little younger even than you.
They were going to stay in, they assumed, and that make that their profession for, they
hoped I think to become general officers, very high up.
And now they don't, do they want to be there with this stuff going on? Do they want to have to
wait whether they have to obey orders that they think might be unlawful, but they won't have a
jag to help tell them that because they fired the jags and they're putting in compliant people,
presumably. The number of people, this is the military, then there's public health,
and there's a million other things, right? I mean, the Justice Department, the degree to which whatever one thinks of the civil
service, the military, the civilians at DOD, the public health establishment, they all
are not perfect, God knows.
But the degree to which we're putting it all at risk.
And again, for what?
For what?
I mean, because they have some-
For what?
That's what I don't understand really, honestly though.
I mean, you know-
Enjoyment of other people people suffering, I guess.
I write, I mean, for, you know, to be able to say
that they are going after these shadowy elites
that people hate, I guess, as part of their, like,
imaginary internet war, like, really, I think is the answer.
Like, that they are on the other side of this kind of, like,
imaginary culture battle that they think that they're
fighting through tweets.
And I don't know, I don't know, because it's not about balancing the budget.
We know that based on the budget.
No, they're not earnest libertarians who have convinced themselves excessively that the
private sector will do this better.
We've got some studies here from, you know, Cato and somebody at AEI showing that's not the spirit of which is being, that might be dangerous in some way, but that's
not the spirit of which, that was Reagan to some degree.
That's not the spirit of which this is being done, you know?
In addition to requisites, the one also hallmark of Trumpism is the corruption.
So we should close by talking about the crypto scam, which I think might end up being the
biggest scam in the history of American politics.
To show you my sense for things this morning, like where I was at, I was going back to the
teapot dome scandal.
And I was like, how much money was involved in the teapot dome scandal?
It turns out it was $400,000 at the time was the bribe, which is about
6 million in current dollars.
So not nothing.
I mean, that's a big, that is a big scandal.
That was certainly, you know, something worth creating controversy
and firings over and ignominy.
But what is happening in crypto is going to be unbelievable compared
to that, like 10, 20, 100X.
Here is the announcement Trump put up.
A US crypto reserve will elevate this critical industry after years of corrupt attacks by
the Biden administration.
Every accusation is a confession, which is why my executive order on digital assets directed
the presidential working group to move forward on a crypto strategic reserve that includes these three particular currencies.
Then he adds to the thread later, because I guess probably somebody who had money in
Bitcoin or Ethereum was mad that they were not specifically singled out, maybe his son
Eric.
So he adds that obviously Bitcoin and Ethereum, as other valuable cryptocurrencies will be
the heart of the reserve.
I also love Bitcoin and Ethereum exclamation point.
How is this the fucking president of the United States that is sending this?
Like this is like a late night television scam level rhetoric here about his support for Bitcoin and Ethereum.
Eric Trump had tweeted last week about crypto by the dip exclamation point, which seems a
little bit like some insider trading knowledge to me.
I don't know.
I guess we would leave that up to the totally toothless SEC to look into.
But just to sum this up in the way that is the most simple, the theory of the case here
is that cryptocurrencies are so valuable, this digital gold, so to
speak, is going to be so valuable in the future that the United States needs to, the United
States government needs to purchase and hold massive quantities of several different types
of Bitcoin to hold in some kind of digital Fort Knox that we need to have for who knows, God
knows what in the future to ensure that the United States has enough of these supposed
currencies in order to, I don't know, deal with some future crypto related crisis.
It is an absurd proposition.
Bitcoin and Ethereum have some value.
Some of these other Ethereum have some value.
Some of these other ones have no value.
It is literally like buying,
the US government buying pet rocks or beanie babies
or something and being like,
we're gonna hold these in a strategic reserve somewhere
to make sure that in the future
we have enough babies for the beanie market.
And it is a preposterous scheme.
It is gonna enrich Trump family.
The secretary of commerce, Howard Lutnick and his family
are very deeply invested in this.
David Sachs, who is the crypto czar,
says that he divested from crypto,
but it's unclear exactly what all that leads to.
I mean, there's like no words for the preposterousness
of this proposed plan.
So I don't know.
Do you have any words for me? Noousness of this proposed plan. So I don't know.
Do you have any words for me?
No, you've described it very well.
This would be illegal in every country in the world.
This is not like, oh, the US has very strict rules.
We have SEC.
This is just slightly more relaxed attitude.
This is just stealing money from the taxpayers or from Marx or from, I suppose, the Marx
who didn't know when they were supposed to buy buy when they were supposed to sell on these exchanges
Yeah, the Trump coin you're stealing from the marks
Okay, which is bad enough in itself right the fact that our president is like running a massive
pump-and-dump
Operation to steal money from regular people in order to enrich himself and also to create
a fund where other people can bribe him, including possibly Chinese nationals like Justin Sun,
who put in tens of millions of dollars into Trump's various digital griffs.
And now the SEC is no longer prosecuting him, convenient.
I had this guy, Jason Calacanis, on the podcast a while back and some of the listeners listeners You know, maybe might not have been their favorite episode for some of them because Jason was
Trump curious, I guess I would call him not really not really pro Trump
But certainly, you know not anti Trump to the degree that we are
He's tech guy is a podcast including he's on a podcast with the Trump crypto czar David Sachs
So I think this is interesting because you know know, him and David have a relationship.
And like he wrote this, it's a terrible idea to spend taxpayer money buying the crypto
bags of the people who donated many millions to him.
It's even worse idea to pick winners, like pick random cryptocurrencies to invest in.
He puts it like this, why not a US strategic tech reserve where we buy Apple, Google, and
Microsoft shares?
Why not a real estate strategic reserve where we buy real estate assets from huge companies?
When you put it in these kind of contexts, you just see how ridiculous this is.
The people that are going to benefit from this are the people that have invested their money in these currencies made big these not they're not currencies but like made big bets
into these crypto assets and like now thanks to the taxpayers like they're
gonna see a huge return we've already seen it this morning like all these
currencies that Trump named are up 10% so if you like listen to Eric Trump last
week when he said buy the dip you've made now 10% just on the speculation side of it.
Like imagine the amount of money these guys would make if we really put US taxpayer dollars
into their like worthless cryptocurrencies.
It's like truly, I guess, I mean, at least in Teapot Dome, they were selling land that existed to drill oil in
for cash.
I mean, it was just a good old fashioned corruption.
You know, I'm going to give you something in exchange for cash.
In this case, we're just giving people's taxpayer dollars away in exchange for essentially nothing
so that a bunch of people can make a lot of money.
It's truly astonishing.
Do you think the copto-credit and plutocratic side of this
Trump, second Trump administration, it was always
there obviously in the first one, but so much more
visible and shameless and massive.
It looks like.
Just think about his whole career.
I, to me, it's just-
But they could pay some political price for that or
what do you say?
Yeah, I think potentially, no, of course, I think they
could pay a political price for this.
I mean, some crypto people are going to like it I think they could pay a political price for this.
I mean, some crypto people are going to like it, so we'll get some political benefit from
some corners.
But like, of course I think that they could end up playing a political price.
A lot of people didn't sign up for this.
And again, Trump somehow was able to maintain the reputation of being the apprentice business
guy Trump, rather than being the guy that went bankrupt in casinos and had a fake university and had all these other
pyramid schemes and other, other things that he was involved in.
So I do think that the second Trump term could end up looking, you know, being
the Trump university of terms where all of his scams crumble around us.
Unfortunately, you know, he would suffer a political price for that, but a lot of us
are gonna suffer too.
So there you go.
Bill, any other final thoughts?
No, that was well said.
All right, everybody else, it's Mardi Gras tomorrow.
Are you ready to celebrate?
Are you ready to celebrate?
With your beads, I'm gonna,
am I gonna do an uplifting episode tomorrow?
I don't know, probably not,
but we'll have some fun Mardi Gras music
to go with the episode.
We'll see you all back here then. Have a
good one. Peace. You can thank me now Uh, uh, yeah
Well alright
Here I go
Uh
Mahalo from the hardest act to follow
Lately I've been drinking like there's a message in a bottle
Aloha's to women with no ties
To men that I know well
That way there are no lies
You can thank me now for all the info I give to you niggas, I'm on the brink of influential
I'm here for you niggas, I guess a hit doesn't add up to a career for you niggas
I must have been hard to watch, what a year for you niggas
It's December 31st and we in Miami just meditating
You got your resolutions, we just got reservations
Livin' out a dream, it feels like I stayed up
And we just wanna party, Pat Ron straight up
Fuck that old shit, I'm on new things
OVO click, Red Wing boot gang
Yeah, we want it all, half was never the agreement
Who'da thought the route we chosen would ever end up this scenic
I can relate to kids going straight to the league
When they recognize that you got what it takes to succeed
And that's around the time that your autos become your rivals
You make friends with Mike the guy that AI'em for your survival
Damn, I swear sports and music are so synonymous
Cause we wanna be them and they wanna be us
So on behalf of the demanded and the entertainment that you take for granted
You could thank me now and oh my goodness you're welcome, you're welcome
At this point me is who I'm trying to save myself from
Rappers hit me up and I never know what to tell them
Cause they think that I can help them get back to where they fell from
But drink up cause everyone here is good tonight
Except the niggas that I came with, they good for life
Yeah, that's how you know it's going down
In case another chance never comes around
You, you could thank me now
Uh, go ahead
Thank me later, yeah I know what I said
But later doesn't always come, so instead
It's a, okay, you can thank me now.
The Bulldog Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.