The Bulwark Podcast - S2 Ep1029: Beto O'Rourke: Never Lose Hope
Episode Date: April 25, 2025Since this country's founding, we have been tested. And the Americans before us somehow stood up and fought the good fight. We can't be the generation that loses it all 249 years into this experiment.... But that doesn't mean we can't laugh about the stupid clowns—like Trump showing once again that he has no idea how tariffs work. Plus, RFK's dangerous proposed autism registry is selling a cruel fantasy. And Democrats need to lock down what they're selling and listen to what voters want from the government. Beto O'Rourke joins Tim Miller for the weekend pod. show notes Beto's Substack Beto's "Powered by People" NY Post story on the Venezualan stylist, Andry, imprisoned in El Salvador Tim's interview with David Pakman about not traveling abroad Tim’s book recommendation, "Diary of a Man in Despair" Tim's playlist
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to the Bulwark Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
It is Friday.
I need some therapy, so I brought in an old friend.
He's a former Democratic congressman from El Paso.
He runs Powered by People, which registers
and mobilizes voters in Texas and also works to make long-term changes in the state's electorate.
That's going to be needed. He's also on Substack now. Everybody's on Substack. It's Beto O'Rourke.
What's happening, Beto? Good to be with you here in El Paso. It's an absolutely gorgeous day out
there. Soon headed to Denton, Texas, we're doing these town halls
all over the state of Texas, and we're going to be at this place called Anderson's. It's
a brewery on Saturday. So I'm excited to be getting out there and to be with people right
now.
We got some Dallas suburbs listeners, get out to Denton and have a beer, hang out with
Beto tomorrow. So you say you've been doing these, the town halls, what's the vibe like out there among the people? Man, I got to tell you, it feels so good just on a personal level,
not to be watching or waiting or hoping or praying, but to be out there with people.
And there's certainly something cathartic and therapeutic about it for everyone concerned,
because I'll talk for 10 or 15 minutes and then the microphone goes around the room.
And anyone, we don't screen for party affiliation, we don't check the questions ahead of time.
Anyone who has anything they want to say is able to do that.
And from those conversations, not only am I learning a lot about what's on the minds
of people in Wichita Falls,
where we just held one, or Rice University in Houston,
where we just had one, but everyone else in the room
is listening to their neighbors and folks in the community.
And they may find common cause, they may understand
from someone who's drawn a different conclusion
on an issue that they care about, how they got there. There's something really powerful in that. And then we also, for our
group Powered by People, which does voter registration and uses relational organizing
to stay in touch with newly registered voters, we also recruit volunteers from those meetings.
We say, hey, we've had a great conversation today and we learned a lot. If you want to
now take action, which I believe is the antidote to
despair and the key to victory and fundamental to building long-term political power, then sign up
with us. We'll train you to become a volunteer deputy registrar to register voters. We'll train
you in our program and then we'll send you out there with other volunteers and you can do the
work right now. No waiting for 2026 or 2028 if anyone's actually doing that. You can do the work right now. No waiting for 2026 or 2028, if anyone's actually doing that.
You can do the work right now.
So I think that's essentially the formula, at least
as I understand it, is you've got
to meet the moment in the moment.
You got to get out there, whatever the fuck it is.
If it's a hands-off rally, if it's going to the school board
and speaking up at the public comments section, if it's going to the school board and speaking up at the
public comment section, if it's coming to one of these town halls or holding a town hall yourself,
if it's any of those things, do it. We need that right now. There's real power in coming together.
And as Lincoln said, public sentiment is everything. And when you get people coming together in numbers larger and larger,
they begin to influence and shape public sentiment on the things that we care most about.
And I think that gives us ultimately the power to overcome these challenges.
But at the same time, you've got to be patiently and persistently building that political power.
Democrats, at least in Texas, have sucked at this forever. Colonel Red's running. Let's get
excited. Wendy Davis is running. That's where we're running. That's great, but even better is doing
the work year in, year out to register voters, stay in touch with them, make sure they turn out.
Republicans have been excellent at this in Texas and in other parts of the country. And the outcomes show
just how effective they've been. So we've got to learn from that. So meet it in the moment,
but also do the long-term work that we're going to need to win and hold political power over the
long-term. I love this. You're quoting Lincoln. It all sounds nice, but I need a little emo betto
to help get me there. Okay. I need to figure it out because like, let's just be real. I mean, you were out there
last year. When we talked last time, it was August, I think it was convention. The last time we had a
podcast was during the Democratic convention. And you were at like the university in North Texas,
you know, meeting with students. You're on the road. You're talking to me about, you know,
your listening habits, all those hours on the highway, you know, driving across Texas. And then the election happens,
Texas goes backwards for the first time in a while, right? Like first time in a few cycles,
it trended back towards the Republicans at the presidential and Senate level.
And like, you're back out there and didn't, I mean, did you take a week and go, fuck this?
This is a waste of time.
Like, why am I even doing this?
Like what is the point?
I'm going to, I'm going to move to Spain with my kid and like family and like, we'll just
call it.
None of that.
You didn't have that for a minute.
No, I didn't.
And I don't think you do.
And I listened to your show.
I don't think anyone that you have on the show feels that way.
I have some bad afternoons. All right. I got to, I listen to your show I don't think anyone that you have on the show feels that way. I have some bad afternoons all right I got a I got a
set up I got to show up here at 9 a.m. to tape this thing every day but sometimes
in the afternoon I'm under the covers okay I'm reading a sad book all right
sometimes I don't want to do it. Right we all have our moments for sure but but I
think when when push comes to shove we all show up. We stand up to be counted.
We all know this is a moment of truth and we cannot be found wanting.
Every generation before ours has somehow pulled this off.
We're 249 years into this experiment.
Man, we have been tested from the very start,
the revolution and breaking away
from the most powerful empire on the planet at the time.
You get to the courthouse and Appomattox in 1865,
hundreds of thousands of people over many years
gave their lives to end the institution of slavery
and to bind the country back together.
You have people from New Orleans and El Paso
enlisting in World War II and landing on those beaches in June of 44 in Normandy to fight fascism half a world away to defend democracy here at home.
64 and 65 civil rights and voting rights.
So now it comes down to us and we are facing the greatest test, not of our generation or of our time, but probably of any time in this country's history, maybe going back to the Civil War.
And so when you look at it that way, you are so fucking lucky to
be alive right now and to have the chance to come through.
There've been precious few generations.
There's this great speech that LBJ gives in 65 after John
Lewis has just been beaten nearly to death, crossing the
Edmund Pettus Bridge.
Eight days later, Johnson convenes this joint session of Congress and he says,
as it was at Lexington and Concord, as it was at Appomattox, so it is today. These brave Americans
willing to lay down their lives so that we can realize our promise to one another. That's us,
man. And I'm not saying you or I are John Lewis. We never had an opponent this stupid though.
I mean, say what you want about Robert E.
Lee, but he was a worthy adversary.
I mean, you got to wake, it's like, really?
We're, we're going back to this?
Like the stupidest American after he's been convicted of crimes and like the
people of Texas look at that and say, yeah, we're going to give them more votes
than we did the last time.
I mean, that's, that's a little dispiriting.
You can look at the opposition and be dumbfounded because they are so
incompetent, they are so corrupt.
They are so craven.
They're surrounded by these quizlings who are making their separate pieces
and deals with the administration, whether it's law firms or universities or
the power brokers and the billionaires.
But you also have to look at us, and I don't mean just Democrats, but yes, especially Democrats,
but the pro-democracy, pro-rule of law, pro-US Constitution side.
What was on offer for voters in 2024?
If ever, and I know every election is a change election, but if ever people wanted and were screaming for
change, it was in 2024. And there was one side that offered
change. But if you knew nothing else, and if you could be
forgiven for being so busy, because you're working so hard,
and you're raising your kids and taking care of your folks, and
you know, fuck politics, I just don't pay attention. All I know
is that guy represents change. And those folks look like more of the same. And this country is not working for me right now.
And I don't need any more of the same. I need some fucking change in my life.
And so I think we have to look in the mirror and accept where we have failed. And we failed.
We had one job, one job in 2024, and we failed. That's not on Donald Trump.
It's not on the voters who voted for Donald Trump.
It's on those who are offering the alternative.
We have to learn from that, right?
We have to both stop him and then we have to overcome him and replace him in elections
peacefully, democratically, and nonviolently with the change that people are looking for
in this country.
When I look back, the more I've thought about it, we have what, five months distance from it
and look back at our failings and I think maybe something where you could provide some insight
when you said there like, let's look at what was on offer from this side, from the Democrats,
from the anti-Trump, whatever you want to call it.
And I think the thing that it really comes down to, when I was talking to James
Carville before the election, and I was like, everybody knew it was on his whiteboard in the
Clinton campaign, you know, change or it's more of the same.
It's the economy, stupid.
Don't forget how.
What was on Kamala's whiteboard?
And I asked him that, like, what's on her?
What's on this campaign's whiteboard?
And I don't, this isn't meant to like be an attack on her or whatever.
It's just like, let's just be honest about it. And he couldn't answer that question.
It was like a couple of days before the election. And like that kept sticking in my head. I'm like,
I'm worried about this. Like, that's something that worried me and all the other stupid stuff.
Like she didn't go on Joe Rogan. We didn't do this. We didn't do that. Like to me, it's like that.
Right. And, and I feel like your 2018 campaign for, you know, and it didn't, wasn't
successful, obviously, but again, it did way better than Democrats had in the
past, I feel like people knew what you were offering, you know, I feel like
people could describe what Beto was offering.
And I don't know if the Democrats have really had a presidential campaign that,
that did that successfully since 2008, honestly.
But my question is like, what is it though?
I think it's still, we're still kind of in a time
for searching on that front.
You know, you're seeing a little bit from AOC,
Ezra Klein's out there talking about abundance.
I don't know.
Like what, what is it?
What, like, what, what do you think it is?
I think the only way you find it is, is by
being with people.
When I ran for Congress, long shot bid in 2012
against a eight term incumbent, wildly outspent.
It was a five person primary.
And I won it without a runoff.
And I won it by knocking on doors.
And the knocking doors, it's not just the numbers
and it's not just the effort
and it's not just that voter meeting you
and learning your name. It's also learning from them and it's not just that voter meeting you and learning your name.
It's also learning from them what's most important to them.
No pollster, no consultant group, no focus group would have told me what a veteran told
me.
I knocked on his door.
He said, I can't get into the VA.
They told me to call back next year.
And this was in January of 2012 for his PTSD treatment.
This guy served us in Vietnam, came back damaged and wounded, now needs help.
And we were absolutely failing on our end of the bargain.
Next door, a similar story.
Next door, it's a widow telling me about her husband who took his own life.
I made fixing the VA the number one issue.
And not everyone in El Paso is a veteran.
Not everyone in El Paso has a family member who's a veteran, but people
care about veterans.
I cared about veterans.
And I think people more broadly understood, man, if this guy is going to fight this hard
for these people who've gotten this fucked by their government, I know he's going to
fight for me on the issue that I care about.
And we won that race.
When I ran for city council, I was knocking in on the West side and first door, I've given
my pitch and the woman says, that's great Beto, but there's this canyon behind my house,
wrestler canyon.
They're about to develop it.
I don't want it developed.
Second house tells me the same thing.
The third house I knock on the door and I said, hey, my name is Beto O'Rourke and I'm
here to save wrestler canyon.
You've got to listen to people and that's why these town halls are so important.
Wait a minute.
I didn't know you were a NIMBY, Beto.
I thought I finally found my first.
We're crossways with each other for the first time in two interviews.
I didn't know you were a NIMBY.
Okay.
We'll have to talk about that.
Let me finish this point though.
These town halls that we're holding, I just think are fundamental.
You know, democracy, what the fuck does it mean? Democracy is people.
And bringing people together in this deeply divided, isolated, polarized,
digital age where we're just consumed by our devices and the feeds that we're
getting on them, that is some profoundly powerful stuff.
And the other power there is that Republican members of Congress right now
fear Donald Trump more than they fear anything else.
You have to introduce the fear of their constituents and their reelection.
And Democrats, Democrats fear being in front of people right now because to the question you just posed, what's the answer?
What's the solution? I don't know what the fuck. How are we going to do this?
People are going to show up. They're going to be mad. They're going to want me to fight back against Trump. I'm just one member of Congress.
I don't want to face that.
I think all the more reason that you go in front of your constituents,
because no matter how brilliant you are, you don't have all the answers.
And if you really believe in this democracy, if you really believe in people,
you'll bring them together.
You'll listen to them.
You'll learn from them.
And you will form common cause and go out and do the
work and fight together. So I think bringing people together, having these town halls is
absolutely essential. And I think from that, Tim, we are going to learn and hear and even know the
language, the exact words that people are feeling right now and need to be reflected
back in the campaigns that are run in 26 and 28.
You don't ever lose your core convictions, your purpose for being and wanting to serve,
but that's part of it.
The other part of it is just being exquisitely attuned to the people that you want to represent
and fight for.
There's no shortcut.
You can't hire somebody, you can't spend enough money, you can't put enough
time on social media to get there.
You got to be there physically with people and hear them out.
And so that's why we're doing what we're doing.
That's a plenty of bad things about Trump, but you know, those stupid
rallies he had were his kind of version of town halls and he was workshopping
stuff all the way back to 2015, You know, what do people cheer for?
It wasn't the stuff we're cheering for, but you know, like that's where a lot of his messaging
came from.
So there is something to that.
I wonder what you're hearing.
I guess I had a mini town hall by showing up to Jazz Fest yesterday and having people come
up and talk to me.
And a woman came up and talked to me.
She owns a kind of like a tchotchke shop here in New Orleans.
And she's like, I'm fucked because of the China terrorist. Like I am
fucked. Like I don't even know what I'm going to do. Like I, you know, so much of the stuff
that we source for this small business, it's been around 60 something years, comes from
China. She's like, I'd love to get stuff from America, but like there's just not enough
stuff. And do we really want to be making these little tourist tchotchkes in America
anyway? Probably not. Right. So that was one thing that came up.
What are you hearing about?
What are your thoughts on that and also what else are you hearing about?
It reminds me of I was in Iowa in 2019 and spending a lot of time with farmers and growers
and folks in the ag community.
And I visited this one family farm and the two brothers took me out to this giant rotting
pile of soybeans.
And what struck me in listening to them and understanding both just the, the
pain and the pride that had been hurt.
This is what they do and they're not able to do it.
The economic loss, the threat to their future of being able to hold onto that
farm was the fact that it didn't seem like Trump was taking much of a political hit for the hurt that he was doing to them.
I listened to The Daily yesterday and they interviewed another farmer in Iowa who's absolutely
getting crushed by these Trump tariffs and the reciprocal Chinese tariffs that I think
are at 120% on what she's trying to sell.
It was unclear at the end of the interview, whether she held Trump responsible.
She, it kind of gets back to what you and I were talking about earlier.
She, she wanted change.
She wants action.
You know, she says, I wish Trump would, would understand what, what's
happening to me right now, but I, I know he's trying to do something.
He's trying to change something.
It's amazing the goodwill and the faith that he has engendered.
Maybe it's the cult of personality stuff, but it maybe also is just a reflection of
how badly broken our institutions, our government, our system, our society is for so many people
who are that desperate for change that they say, you know what?
I'll take the hit on soybeans.
Maybe I'll lose the farm.
I'll turn a blind eye to the mass deportations and the loss of due process and this absolute attack
on the constitution because this shit has been going on for decades and Democrats and Republicans
both say they're going to do something and no one ever does. This fucker is doing something at least.
I may not like every part of it, but he's doing it. So I think there's
that dynamic. At these town halls, I hear from people, a veteran in Wichita Falls who stood up
and said, hey Beto, tell me about the 83,000 people that they're going to cut from the VA,
most of whom, by the way, are themselves veterans. How is that going to improve wait times or the care
or the service that I get? And I don't know if that guy was a Republican or a Democrat. We don't
scream for the town halls. You know, another woman stands up, asks about
Medicaid. We're already the least insured state in the country. You know, we lead
the nation in childhood diabetes deaths. We're at the epicenter of this maternal
mortality crisis. If they cut Medicaid further, what is going to happen? And who is it going to hurt? So people see the train
wreck playing out in real time. They're really concerned about
it. They asked these questions. But Tim, they also asked a lot
of questions about the Democratic Party. Where are the
Democrats? Why aren't they fighting? What's going on here?
You know, back when the CR the government funding debate was
taking place, and almost every Democratic member
of the House but one stood strong and together
and Chuck Schumer signaled that he and the Senate Democrats
were going to do the same.
And then he caved at the end of the day
and cowed by whatever pressure he seemed to feel.
Man, that was like a stake in the heart of so many people
who are hurting
right now and are being hurt by Trump and want to see somebody fight back.
And so I think there's some real disappointment, not just lingering from 2024, but from what
is happening or not happening in 2025, and a real hunger for those who will step up and
take the fight to Trump.
This year, speak like a whole new you with Babbel, the language learning app to get you talking.
Learning a new language is the pathway
to discovering new cultures.
So why not embark on learning something new?
Babbel's quick 10 minute lessons,
handcrafted by over 200 language experts,
get you to begin speaking your new language in three weeks
or at whatever pace you choose.
And because conversing is the key
to really understanding each other in new languages,
Babbel is designed using practical,
real-world conversations.
Spending months with private teachers
is the old way of learning languages,
and nothing screams tourists
like holding the phone translation app
up to your face all day.
Babbel's tips and tools are inspired by the real stuff
you actually need when communicating.
With a focus on conversation, you'll be ready wherever you go.
As mentioned in the podcast here today with Beto and in my conversation with David Pakman
yesterday, I am leaving the country.
I'm not scared.
I'm not going to live in an open air prison because of that fucking small-handed Bulgarian
trying to scare us into traveling.
So I'm going to Europe.
We're going to do a little babble.
I don't know if I'm going to be ready to learn a whole new language.
I've got a lot of podcasting to do, but I'm going to do enough so that I can go into restaurants
and order and not feel like a tourist.
I think that's a fun little escape and something that we're working on.
You should do it too.
Why not? It's better than doom
scrolling. Need proof that Babbel gets you talking? Studies from Yale, Michigan State,
and other leading universities continue to prove Babbel works. One study found that using Babbel
for 15 hours is equivalent to a full semester at college. Let's get more of you talking in
a new language. Babbel is gifting our listeners 60% off subscriptions at babble.com slash bulwark get up to 60% off at babble.com
slash bulwark spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash bulwark babble.com slash bulwark rules and
restrictions may apply. I'm going to be dark one more time and then we'll uh I don't know then
maybe we'll change I don't know maybe I'll be dark the whole podcast we'll see how it goes.
I listen to all that it sounds great but then I start to think there's something underneath it that gives me a little despair,
right?
Which is number one, the woman's farm is going to go under and she's with Trump.
Like what hope is there that like, that people that, you know, have smaller challenges,
you know, turn on them, right?
Than that.
Like that, that is something that concerns me.
I think it's great.
They're doing the town halls. I'm jealous actually. I want to be around more people being in my hole
here. I think sometimes it's bad for my mental health. But the Democrats' biggest problem actually
is reaching the people that aren't showing up to stuff like this, right? Like where you got to
go to them. Like you got to somehow get in front of their face, right? Do you have any thoughts
on that side of the ledger? Because I do think that was another thing that you were good at in the 2018
campaign and the Democrats have just been really bad at recently.
If you just look at the numbers, like the people who are paying attention,
the least, the most casual voters, Obama crushed with them and now
Trump crushed with them this time.
Right?
So it's been a really a sea change there.
Like what, what are your thoughts about that?
Like there are a lot of people out there that aren't going to
show up to the town hall, you know?
Yeah.
Two things.
One, you got to physically go to where people are.
So I mentioned Wichita Falls earlier.
It's about an hour 45 minute drive, Northwest of Dallas.
Not easy to get to, not particularly close to a big city.
And so when we went there, you know, I reached out to the Wichita County Democratic Party,
the Wichita County Republican Party,
the Republican Women's Study Club, the VF, to everybody.
The ISD Booster Club, this is a town hall.
It's not partisan.
I'm not gonna drive home a political message.
I just wanna hear from everybody, come on out.
We had 450 people show up.
It was, you know, for Wichita Falls for for any place
That was really significant and Tim a lot of those folks are folks who otherwise
Have been tuned out or turned off
But they gave this thing a chance because it looked and felt different
The other thing the second point is you got to take it a step further
You've got to show up at the door of that person who didn't cast
a ballot. In Texas, when I ran for governor in 22, 9 million registered, ready-to-go voters in Texas
didn't cast a ballot. Abortion, the most obscene restrictive abortion law in the country. Uvalde,
19 kids, two beautiful teachers shot down murdered in that year.
The most pressing urgent issues were on the line in that election.
Nine million people didn't show up.
It's not that they're lazy.
It's not that they don't care about those things.
It's to your point that there hasn't been the work done to connect with them and to
connect the dots about what matters to them in their lives and the people who are running
these campaigns and the elections that will decide the outcomes.
So we've got to go to where they are,
like literally knocking on their doors, which we are doing.
We're also showing up when I tell you
we train our volunteers, we train them,
and then we deploy them where there are unregistered,
likely Democrats, including on college campuses,
engage with them in conversations,
bring them onto the roles.
And this is a really important step
that I don't know that many others are doing. We then say after we register the person,
hey, would you mind if I stayed in touch with you? And it's not going to come from the Democratic
party or even powered by people. It'll just be me, the guy that just registered you. We just met
eyeball to eyeball. Can I have your cell phone number? I'm going to text you in 30 days and see
if your voter registration card has come in the mail. And I'm going to be your personal voting sherpa.
You have a question about voter ID or voting location,
or because I'm a partisan organization,
if you have a question about the candidates and their values
and whether they connect with yours, I am your guy.
And so our more than 1,300 volunteers
connect with tens of thousands of voters in that way.
And we want to continue to grow that program.
Will it decide things in 2026?
I don't know, probably not.
Will it decide them in 2028?
Who knows?
But if you don't start building this stuff and stay on it persistently and consistently,
it's just going to be the boom and bust cycle that we have lived and died through in Texas
for the last 30 years.
So you've got to do those two things.
You've got to go to where people are,
whether it's the town halls or their front doors or the college campus,
wherever they are, you've got to be there.
Have you looked into cloning?
Like, can we get a couple hundred bettos?
I mean, Texas is pretty fucking big.
You know?
I mean, how many doors can you knock on?
You know, you're just this one guy.
254 counties.
It's these volunteers who show up who are fucking amazing, full-time jobs,
taking care of their kids, whatever they've got in their lives. They find the time to go out there
in August when it's just sweltering in Houston, probably not unlike what it's like in New Orleans,
and they're at the TSU campus or University of Houston campus. And they're out there talking to voters
and registering them and staying in touch with them.
It's really time consuming.
It's not easy,
but it is a really powerful connection
that they make with these voters.
So we have the numbers and we're continuing to grow them.
And again, these town halls also are a recruiting field
for bringing on new volunteers.
We're not gonna do it online, right?
You gotta do it in person.
I really think that's the secret.
And I think everyone today is enamored of money
and technology and those have a place,
but they can't, they're just a poor substitute
for the real thing, people with people.
I wanna keep that cloning idea though.
Just, you know, that might be a technology that helps you be in more places at once.
I want to go to the new actual news, you know, sort of getting in our feelings for the whole
podcast.
What is there something about the Trump administration?
Obviously, there's been so much crazy stuff.
What has struck you as the thing that's the most alarming, most concerning, most maddening. I think just the full frontal assault on the constitution and the rule of law, you know,
all the kind of hand wringing before he took office about whether he would precipitate
a constitutional crisis, you know, whether it would happen, what it would look like when
it did. And now we are in it.
And I think it's really hard.
I don't know, Tim, if it seems like an abstraction to people.
I don't know what folks at the Jazz Fest were saying
about the constitutional crisis that we're in,
or if it's too distant from people's lives.
I feel like that itself is kind of a patronizing,
dickish way to think about our fellow Americans.
I fully have faith in them that they get, That itself is kind of a patronizing, dickish way to think about our fellow Americans.
I fully have faith in them that they get or soon will get exactly what is happening, that
he's disregarding a co-equal branch of government, that it is only going to get worse.
At some point, there will be a clash between Trump and some majority on the United
States Supreme Court. And so, you know, you may or one might feel powerless in that, you know,
he's got a six, three majority there. He has both houses of Congress, he has a White House,
he has the world's richest man, he has all of the social media platforms. Who the fuck am I
to be able to do anything against that? And I just, I've got to invoke Lincoln again in that idea of public sentiment.
You know, 1965.
So what is that?
60 years ago.
You know, it's not an election year.
Folks have been working on voting rights for 75 years.
In 1890, the Congress had a Voting Rights Act before it.
And the pro-democracy party at the time, which was the Republicans, fucked it up.
They had the House, they had the Senate, they passed it in the House.
It died on the horns of a filibuster in the Senate.
And the president at the other time was like, you know what?
I've got more important battles to fight.
Fuck this.
So for 75 years, for 75 fucking years, you disenfranchised and basically
desitizenized so many millions of our fellow Americans.
In 1965, that march by John Lewis so galvanized the country.
It was this catalytic shock to the conscience.
Within eight days, LBJ is able to bring the country together, and by that summer, he passes
the Voting Rights Act.
Seventy-five years in the making creates the first true multiracial democracy in American history. More recently in 2018,
you had family separation. It was this quote unquote zero tolerance policy by the first
Trump administration. You make it 2000 miles to this country at our border with your baby
and right when you get to what you thought would be your salvation, that child is literally ripped from your arms. You're deported back to Honduras and that kid is placed in foster
care in America. People rose up. We had this event in Torneo, Texas. Congressman Veronica Escobar and
myself and others helped to organize that. One in a thousand people came from around the country. That was on, I believe, June 18th, Father's Day of 2018.
That next week, Trump rescinds the family separation policy.
It wasn't just because of the protest in Torneo,
but that protest and others and the influence
on public opinion and the sentiment of the country,
he just could not withstand that.
So when I mentioned these town halls or these rallies, you know, I
think some people dismiss them as virtue signaling or empty
gestures, or I'm glad that made you feel good Beto, but what
the fuck does that do? It actually does something, it
begins to shape how other people see what is happening. And we
don't have control of Fox News, we don't have control of the
Manosphere. We don't have control of a lot of the levers
of power, but we do have one another.
If we do everything we can with what we have, where we are, I am confident that we are going
to come through.
It won't be easy.
It may take us a while.
It's not going to be Democrats.
It's got to be the broadest possible coalition.
If we commit to it and if we continue to try, I'm confident we're going to get there. I want to talk about the immigration side of things and whether there's a catalytic
opportunity for that now. Because, I mean, the picture you painted of the child's separation
thing is so powerful. And we're here in this moment right now where we're sending these people to
El Salvador. And I agree with you. the fact that people finally did speak up against
this and both on the legal side, but also in protests and the media and
democratic politicians finally, I think has slowed down what they were
planning on doing with El Salvador.
I just, I think that there's no doubt about that.
Like there were more planes that were supposed to be going to
El Salvador and that stopped.
And yet there's still a couple hundred people that are there. Maybe some of them are really bad dudes. I don't, we don't know. It seems pretty certain that at least a couple of them are not,
you know, such as, you know, the one that I keep bringing up is the young man, Andre,
who there's like a New York Post article on him
yesterday. I don't know if you saw this, but it was like exclusive. Andre tried to come into the
country once and he was deported. Then he tried to come into the country again. And I was like,
okay. And then it was like a picture of him and he is, he's holding a giant stuffy teddy bear
and he's sitting under a rainbow arch of balloons.
And I'm like, I don't know, maybe they're fucking gangbangers out there, cuddling teddy
bears underneath a rainbow balloon arch.
Maybe, I don't know, maybe there's one gangbanger in the world that is a rapist who also loves
to cuddle teddy bears.
Seems pretty fucking unlikely though, and they haven't given us any evidence. And I do wonder if you think that this is something that people can be catalyzed on.
I do.
And it's all the more impressive because of the way that this has been set up.
Should you stand with any of these purported gang bangers or terrorists, then the Trump
administration, and Marco Rubio has done this,
will say to the American public,
well, whose side is Tim on?
Is he on the side of the American families
who have borne the brunt of these rapists
and criminals and killers and animals?
That's the language that they use.
Or is he on your side?
And so the fact that so many people
have been able to get past that false frame and say, you know what, who the fuck knows?
Because we don't know because you have shared no information with the public.
There's been no due process.
There's been no constitutional protection that allows somebody to defend themselves and allows the public to understand the details of the alleged crime.
We just don't know. And furthermore, when you were able to bridge
what is happening to that young man,
or to Kilmar, Abrego Garcia,
or we just learned today about a young man named Christian,
who was brought here as a child,
and we now find, thanks to one of these great federal judges,
that he's also been wrongfully deported,
wrongfully deported,
and there was a standing court order that said explicitly, you cannot deport this guy and the administration did it anyhow.
And in this case, it's just also worth just mentioning in this case in particular,
because I've been meaning to bring it up. The guy, I guess, was arrested for possession of cocaine.
I think we just have to be clear-eyed about this. I don't know. There are a bunch of guys
in the manosphere who voted for Trump who probably use cocaine. Like I bet Joe Rogan's done some cocaine.
Theo Vonn's certainly done some cocaine.
Like do we want the fucking punishment for cocaine use to be being sent
to a foreign torture prison?
Life imprisonment.
Put away?
Yeah.
Life imprisonment with no access to a lawyer.
Is that what we want for the country?
Because okay, I don't know.
I think that some of the listeners to the Theo Von podcast should probably be pretty worried
about who's going to be banging down their door tomorrow.
Yes. And that's, I think, the jump that people are able to make or the bridge that they are
seeing, which is, you do this to the least of us, and there's a reason you pick on the
tattooed quote unquote gang banger, or there's a reason you pick on on the trans person or there's a reason that you pick on this vulnerable or
Marginalized member of the society because who wants to stand next to them who wants that they're unpopular who wants to stand next to them?
But people are able to understand that this is the way this shit works. This is how
Authoritarians build power they find that group on the margins and they exclude them and they make them the scapegoat.
And then they take the next group and then they take the next group.
And pretty soon they come for you.
And what's amazing, you mentioned just like the bizarre blundering behavior of Donald Trump personally and the administration,
is that they say this shit out loud.
I'm going to go after the homegrown ones next.
What does that mean? It means you were born here.
You are a U.S. citizen under the constitution and any interpretation of the law.
And you too are vulnerable to deportation without due process to a hell hole prison,
the largest on the planet, which you will go into and from which you will never ever emerge.
We have to make sure that every American understands that whether you
voted for Trump or not, whether you would vote for him again if he somehow were
able to run again. You've got to know just what's on the line and I just I
know you may think I'm naive Tim but I just think if people in America know the
truth, I believe in them they're going to do the right thing. I mentioned every
test we've come through before. Look it took us a long fucking time to mount the defense and then the offense against
fascism in the 1930s and the 1940s. It took us a long fucking time to deal with slavery, a long
fucking time to deal with citizenship, civil rights, and voting rights from the end of the 19th
century up until 1964 and 1965. But at every turn, we came through.
And so are we going to be the generation,
250 fucking years into this thing, that fucks it up
and loses it forever?
No, it just cannot be.
And so, I mean, that's what you asked me earlier,
like, do you ever just want to give up and move to Spain?
I mean, do I get down sometimes?
Absolutely.
But fuck no, man.
I want to be in this fight with every fiber of my being.
And I know that there are millions, tens of millions
out there who feel the same way that I do.
Let's just keep doing what we can.
Let's find ways to come together in this fight.
And let's never lose hope.
Because you lose hope, that's exactly
what they want you to do.
So I am encouraged that those federal judges, and I do think the shaping of
public sentiment is beginning to place a check on the out of control,
unlawful Trump administration, but it's not enough.
We've got to do more.
I don't think you're naive.
I'm just trying to find the doubt.
I know there's doubt in there.
You know, I'm just trying to find, you know, you're the, I don't think you're naive. I'm just trying to find the doubt. I know there's doubt in there, you know? I'm just trying to find, you know, the thingy. I don't know. Did you ever paint
your fingernails black back when you were in a band? Like, I'm just trying to find that better,
somewhere in there.
We went to a movie with a friend last night. I saw a Pink Floyd at Pompeii,
which was just amazing, right? I'm not a huge Pink Floyd fan. I don't know their
catalog, but the music was just amazing.
And it was dark, right?
And it was disturbing.
And this friend and I were talking about music
that we grew up with, punk rock,
or the sad mopey stuff like the Smiths.
And I said, you know what?
I have a really hard time with sad music
because I just, I'll just take that slide
all the way through.
So yeah, I mean, all of us deal with darkness.
All of us are tempted by despair.
All of us have to find ways though, to overcome it.
For me, I don't listen to sad music so much.
I get out there and move my body.
I hike, I run.
Um, I get out there and I'm with people, you know, when I do, um, a town hall or
when I spend all day
at the University of Texas at El Paso campus
registering voters, and as you know, Tim,
some people are like, hey, great,
I'd love to get registered,
and others are like, go fuck yourself,
and then some people just don't respond to the entreaty.
Despite all that, and maybe because of all of that,
and I'm sweating through my shirt
because it's so damn hot here,
I feel so good at the end of
the day. I am so up. I'm so optimistic. I believe and I know that we can do this.
If I stay at home or I'm in my office and I'm online too much and I'm reading
the headlines, I'm like, Jesus fucking Christ, are we gonna make it? Maybe not.
So you've got to be with people. I know you're a fan, but Joe Strummer has this line,
without people, you're nothing.
And it's absolutely true.
And for those who, who mouth the word democracy, democracy is people.
And if you're not with the people, you're not going to win this.
I love that.
I love, I'm trying to break your unbreakable Beto.
I've gotten John Lovett to cry twice on this podcast.
It's not going to work for you.
I guess none of my, none of my tricks are working. I'm trying to break your unbreakable better. I've gotten John Lovett to cry twice on this podcast. It's not going to work for you.
I guess none of my, none of my tricks are working.
You mentioned one thing that you did a sub stack post on this that I wanted to
get to cause you kind of alluded to it during that inspiring filibuster about
the Trump 2028 element.
And I think what you wrote is important because there is a, you know, I think
that there's good reason to look at this as two fucking ways, right? It's like, this is a, you know, I think that there's good reason to look at this as two
fucking ways, right? It's like, this is a troll. Don't let him troll you. Don't play into his hand
and just ignore it and laugh at him and point and laugh. There's something to be said for that.
Like there's also something to be said for the fact that like, I don't know, pretty much everything
that he's said he might do, he's tried to do. And so maybe we should take it pretty seriously, even though he'll be, you
know, 83 years old or however old they'll be.
But I mentioned he's selling the hats now.
We can put it up on the YouTube.
He's selling fucking Trump 2028 hats now.
So, you know, it's not, it's a gag.
He's putting it out there.
Yeah.
I, I, I believe that past behavior is always the best predictor of future performance.
At the end of his last term, he literally did everything he could within his power to
illegally hold on to that office, despite the fact that he was obliterated at the polls,
despite the fact that his Department of Homeland Security and everybody who had purview over that election said it was the cleanest, the safest, the fairest in American history.
And, you know, not only did he incite violence, as we know from the reporting now, he also tried to get his generals and the United States military and any other source of power in this country to work at his behest to overturn
that election and illegally restore him to power. Who the fuck thinks that he's not going to do the
exact same thing at the end of this administration? You know, when the history books are written about
us, if we fail this test, the kids in 2100 are just not going to believe their eyes.
They're like, wait, hold on a second.
So this guy during the campaign said
he was going to be a dictator on day one.
And those motherfuckers elected him anyhow.
And then he told them that he was going to seek a third term.
And people laughed it off.
And they said, don't pay attention,
or that's a distraction.
And then he fucking did it.
What the fuck were they thinking?
This proud 250-year heritage, you guys blew it.
So we absolutely have to, and I do take this threat very,
very seriously.
And to mount the response in 2028 is to fail.
It has to be mounted today.
And it's why I've been talking about it.
I know others are as well. And again, why I'm encouraged by what the federal courts are doing, not all of them, but many of
them. Not only are the decisions important, and not only have we been surprised in some cases by
the Supreme Court's validation of those decisions, but back to public sentiment,
it really begins to shape the story that people tell one another about
what is happening in this country at this time. So it is a very, very real threat and we should take
it seriously. I totally agree that it's a real threat and we should take it seriously. I also
think we should point at him and laugh. I think I presented you a false choice. I think that it's
important to say these guys are fucking clowns
and you can't let them own you.
You know, I had a conversation with David Paakman on YouTube yesterday
because he's born in Argentina and he did this video
about how immigration lawyers have told me probably shouldn't travel abroad.
And when I first saw it, I was like, this is a little alarmist.
You know, this is like a little we shouldn, because I don't want people to be scared.
I don't want people to feel like they're in a prison in their country because of
this fucking ass clown, you know, I think that so far he's failing at pretty much
everything that he's doing.
And so I think it's important to point and laugh at him rather than be scared of him.
That said, particularly if you are a straight white person who is a citizen and has enough
resources, right?
Like somebody, or me, a gay white person, frankly, I'm not scared of him.
I'm going to travel to Europe.
If they want to try to detain me, okay, we'll see what happens.
If I'm the first US citizen he sends to Sikato, then I know the Beto will be out there fighting
for me, but I don't see it happening.
But on the other hand, if you were born in Argentina, like if you're here
on a green card, if you're here in a work visa, if you're trans, like the
threat is really serious, right?
And so like, I think we have to be able to hold those thoughts in our head, right?
Like he's an incompetent clown that you should make fun of.
And also like for certain, for particularly marginalized people, for
certain groups of people, like the threat is really a lot greater now than it's been.
And I think that that's kind of a hard thing for people to hold in their head at the same
time.
But I don't know, what do you make of that?
I think you're so right.
I mean, you look at the blustering buffoons that rose to power in Europe in the 1930s,
who were just the butt of everyone's joke.
They were criminally clownish.
No one took them seriously.
No one saw the threat.
And then they're in power.
And you look at other tyrants who wielded power
and just were absolutely destructive and incompetent
in managing their country,
leading to the deaths
by starvation of millions in Russia, for example,
just to use one.
So you write these clowns off at your peril,
but there is nothing wrong with pointing out
just how stupid and dumb and laughably losing they are
in everything that they wanna do.
I mean, the one signal gate scandal after another
by Pete Hegseth, the private makeup room
before he goes on TV appearances.
Here we are in Texas, two kids have died of measles
and it's been two decades since a child lost their life
to that virus in America.
And RFK, what a fucking idiot, a dangerous deadly one
at that, you can go across the board, Sean Duffy, Christy Noem,
they're just, they're all clowns.
But to your other point, they are clowns
who are causing the deaths and the real pain
of our fellow Americans.
I mentioned to you, I was at Rice the other day,
and one of the students came up and said,
Beto, so many of my fellow students
have had their visas withdrawn. I know you hear about it happening at
Columbia and these East Coast, it's happening right here in Texas. Who's going to fight for them? Another young
woman came up and said, Hey, my parents came here undocumented. I don't know what's going to happen to them. I
don't know what's going to happen to me. I don't know if we end up in that hellhole in El Salvador, what's going to
happen to me? Again, these town halls and that person being able to tell their story, not just
to me, but to every other person, including those, as you described, who
enjoy tremendous privilege in this country and in the long line of people
who will be targeted, attacked, and, you know, and terrible things done to them.
They're probably the last on the list.
But the last on the list is hearing about the people who are first in line and are bearing
the brunt of it right now.
And I think that builds solidarity.
And from that solidarity, you have real strength.
And that's what we need at this moment.
So again, real power in sharing these stories.
And you asked about what will catalyze on immigration or any other number of issues.
I think it is exactly, it is exactly that.
You know, John Lewis crossing the bridge, you know, why did people know about it? The TV cameras were
there. They beamed it across the country and around the world. It created so much pressure on Johnson.
He had no choice but to move forward. We've got to, and I know, I know we haven't found it yet,
and I can't tell you what it looks like, but we have got to find whatever version of that exists. And God
bless the people who are out there doing it right now, whether that's Bernie Sanders, or AOC, or Tim Walls, or
anybody who's out busting their ass. And maybe a certain path or route doesn't bring us to where we want to be, but at
least they have gone out there and tried to figure it out and brought people along, you know, during during the
path. So, you know, I just I think we've all just got to do what we can.
That's just the MO right now.
I've mentioned this book before, but for the listeners or folks who
forgot, there was this book called the diary of a man in despair.
She's a diary of like basically the wall street journal, Republican of Nazi Germany.
Like that, like him watching all this happen.
And it's just my main takeaway from it was just how he thought Hevler was a clown.
Like it was like totally an uncultured buffoon and a clown.
And like, we can't, we don't need to be scared of this.
Like the smart guys will, you know, will control, be able to control them.
Anyway, it's a, people are looking for some Nazi reading over the weekend.
I, I recommend it.
You mentioned RFK.
I've been trying to get to this.
There's too much, so much crazy shit happening.
But have you seen the story about the autism registry?
I just said nothing that's fucking insane.
Like, you know, you mentioned the two deaths from measles,
but I guess the point of this is that now HHS,
they're gonna try to backfill some evidence
for RFK's crackpot theory
that vaccines cause autism.
So they're going to create now, I guess, a government,
or they are aspiring to create a government registry
of people with autism and get medical records and stuff
to support this thesis,
is essentially what they're up to.
Yeah, fuck that guy.
It's so disgusting to prey upon the families
of autistic Americans
and offer them and hold out this false hope,
whether it's through the registry or I read some headline
that he's committed to finding the source of autism,
the cause of autism by the end of the year,
disregard all the thousands of studies and scientists
and doctors and frankly, parents of autistic children
who have devoted their lives to this,
just get out of the way, RFK Jr. is on top of this.
How cruel and careless to these families
who really are struggling, who really want answers
and they deserve them,
but they certainly don't deserve this.
It is the greatest show of disrespect that I can imagine.
And I understand and don't judge people who feel hope at what RFK Jr. is doing.
But finally, we talked about institutions and government and things that were supposed
to work for people that failed them.
Maybe this guy's going to break through because nothing else has worked so far.
I'm going to give him every ounce of hope I have. You just know that that is going to be crushed at the end of the day.
It's what all of them are doing.
Tariffs are going to bring back your jobs in Michigan or Indiana or Ohio.
Sending people without due process to concentration camps in El Salvador is going to fix our immigration
system. These are all presentations of false hope that people who are understandably desperate,
given how badly this country has failed them, are holding onto right now.
We have to show them that not only does this stuff not work, but that there is something
better on offer from those who believe in constitution, rule of law, and our democracy,
Democrats and the largest possible coalition around them possible.
One last point, Laff.
I'm curious if you're hearing anything in particular at this point from people on tariffs,
but Trump did an interview with Time Magazine.
The reality has not punctured the Oval Office yet, but I just want to read for me a couple of things
that he said this morning about tariffs, or published this morning.
We are a department store and we set the price.
I meet with the companies and then I set a fair price,
what I consider to be a fair price and they can pay it
or they don't have to pay it.
They don't have to do business with the United States,
but I set a tariff on countries.
We're a department store, a giant department store,
the biggest department store in history.
Everybody wants to come in and take from us. They're going to come in and going to pay a price
for taking our treasure, for taking our jobs, for doing all these things.
I would wonder, listening to that, whether he's ever been in a department store, but
I guess we know that he has because a court has adjudicated that he sexually
assaulted a woman in a department store.
But I don't, I don't think he really understands how things work.
And, uh, and I think that there's going to be a lot of pain for people with regards to these tariffs.
I just wonder what you think is a way to talk about this that resonates with people.
It is complicated.
It's so complicated, the President of the United States doesn't even understand how
it works, apparently.
Yeah.
I got to say, it doesn't know, Democrats or those who are opposed
to this policy and to the deep damage and pain that he is causing to the folks around
us kind of equivocate on this or aren't clear about it, that these tariffs hurt.
They're going to destroy the American economy.
The prices that you cared about in 2024 are only going to get higher and higher and higher. Those things that you want for yourself and your kids are
just going to be more and more out of reach for you. This is a tax, a massive tax. It's
not a department store. It is a tax that you and your family are going to be paying for
as long as these tariffs are in place. This is really, really bad. So I think you have to say
that. And I think you also have to elevate the voices of people who are being hurt by this in
real time. You mentioned the woman at the tchotchke shop in New Orleans. I mean, what does she do next?
She's going to go out of business, a soybean farmer in Iowa. What does she do next? She's going to
lose that farm and is not going to be able to pass it on to her kids.
The folks who can't afford things that they used to be able to depend on, what are they going to do next? As we become more isolated economically and through our alliances around the rest of the world,
life in every single way is going to become more expensive. The way we engage with the rest of the
world, whether militarily or diplomatically
or economically, we're just going to bear a much heavier and more painful brunt because we don't
have the rest of the world with us. The fact that Trump single-handedly has turned America's back
on the planet, has switched sides in a war for democracy in Europe, openly inviting Putin to do exactly what
he just did yesterday in the attack on Kiev that belatedly Trump, who looks so fucking weak,
saying, you got to stop this, Vladimir. The fact that he's done that, again, I keep thinking about
the history books written generations from now, people just will not be able to believe their eyes.
There's just no way this happened.
The most powerful country that has ever existed in the history of this world just
destroyed itself and the people that it happened. Now that's one version of the story.
If we don't get it right, we just can't allow it to happen.
Deep, deep damage is being done every single day and it will continue until we stop it.
Amen.
I don't really even understand how the department store analogy works.
We're tariffing their goods.
What is China buying from us?
I, the whole, well, he probably doesn't buy anything for himself anymore.
I don't think he understands how commerce works.
Okay.
Beto, I want to end here.
Are you, I don't know, man.
It seems like you might have another campaign in you.
You don't sound like you're one to pivot to podcasting like a lot of the
other politicians out there.
I've a lot of former politician competitors in the marketplace now, but
you're sounding like, I don't know, you want to go do something.
You got, you got any plans?
I love being out there.
Um, I love being with people, whether I was in politics or had some other
career or avocation, it had to be with people.
And so, as I mentioned earlier, I'm happiest when I'm holding
these town halls, when I'm registering people to vote, when
I'm gathering with our volunteers.
So, whatever form that takes, possibly as a candidate,
potentially just continuing to run, not just continuing to run,
it's just an amazing organization running powered by people,
helping, being useful
in whatever, whatever way I can.
I just think every other consideration has to fall by the wayside.
Now for all of us, you know, your, your country and history are calling and you
have got to show up and give this every single thing you have.
I think it's the only way we're going to overcome this.
So I just, I just wake up every day trying to just make sure that I stay on that track
and remain open to the ways that, that I can help.
So.
I'm going to take that as a maybe.
Yeah.
I'm going to take that as a maybe.
That's good.
I like that.
That's why I just be honest about it.
I don't, who the fuck knows?
So we don't know.
You're a young man. You're looking good still, you know, who knows what the future will take care of itself. Yeah. That's good. I like that. That's why I just be honest about it. Who the fuck knows?
We don't know.
You're a young man.
You're looking good still.
Who knows?
The future will take care of itself.
Do you have a happy song to leave us with?
You're not listening to sad music anymore.
You're on the road a lot.
Do you have a happy band or happy album, happy tune?
You know what?
I just put on Bob Dylan's New Morning last night and that got me to a really, really, really good place.
Um, that whole album, including the song, New Morning or the man in me.
Yeah.
I love that one.
Man, I'm using Lebowski.
Yeah.
It's a good one.
I've been playing that one for a while.
Drifting on the rug, right?
Yeah.
I might need to do that.
Just drift, drift off into a dream space for a little while this weekend before,
uh, before we get back into the fight on Monday.
Beto man, I really appreciate you.
Will you come back and do it again soon?
Absolutely.
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, and keep your suppose for what's happening out there.
Oh, wait, actually I do.
No, I have one more last thing.
On your sub stack, you've been doing three things that people can do or something like
that.
I don't have in front of me, but you have a title like three things you can do this
week or something like that.
Yeah, yeah.
Give us three things we can do this week or something like that. Yeah, yeah. Do you have us three things we can do this week?
So number one, the ACLU, we talked about kind of the bulwark that the federal courts have become
for our country. The reason these cases are making it to these courts are the attorneys,
many of them with the ACLU, who are bringing them to public attention and to trial. So the ACLU, which is operating in all 50 states, get behind them.
Locally on the border, there's an organization called Las Americas.
They're the ones who engage with many of these migrant families, mixed immigration status
families, folks who live in our neighborhoods who are under attack by Trump right now.
And again, if we fail to stand up for the least of us right now,
they will come for the rest of us pretty soon.
So LASA MEDICAS is a great organization.
And the last one, if you're in the North Texas area, come join us in Denton on
Saturday, we'll be there at four at Anderson's brewery and all comers welcome.
Republican, Democrat, independent, and everyone gets a shot at the microphone.
So come be part of it. It's really something special when you see people come together this way.
And it'll give you some hope.
So I hope to see people out this weekend.
That's Pedro O'Rourke.
I appreciate you, brother.
We'll be talking to you soon.
Adios.
Everybody else will be back on Monday with Bill Kristol.
Peace. The man in me will do, nearly any task
And ask for compensation, there's a little he would ask
Take a woman like you, to get through, to the man in me
Storm clouds are raging all around my door I think to myself I might not take it anymore To find the man in me
Oh, what a wonderful feeling
Just to know that you are near
That's my heart are reeling It's had spent a heart a-reeling From my toes up to my ears A man in me will hide sometimes to keep from being seen
But that's just because he doesn't want to turn into some machine
Take a woman like you to get through the man in me
La la la la la la la la la la la la la la
The Bullwark Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason
Brown.