The Bulwark Podcast - Tommy Vietor: Trump's Security State

Episode Date: August 22, 2025

The fears of jack-booted thugs and the military in the streets that filled the fever dreams of numerous people on the right since the 90s have come to pass. Not to mention that these are boom times fo...r private prisons, deportation camps, and huge data centers driving up electricity bills. (We're building things, Marc Andreessen!) Meanwhile, The Bulwark was live on the scene for the FBI raid at John Bolton's house—just the latest installment from Team Trump's pursuit of his enemies. Plus, Alex Jones is worried about Trump's cankles, and Gavin is proving to be a good fighter, but other Dems need to get in the game. Also, Gaza, Israel, and the exaggerated power of AIPAC. Tommy Vietor joins Tim Miller for the weekend pod. show notes Bulwark LIVE for FBI raid at Bolton's home (Substack) or YouTube Byron Donalds's Cracker Barrel tweet Third Way's blacklisted words Joe Rogan takedown Peter Thiel's antichrist lecture series Tim's playlist THE BULWARK LIVE in Toronto, D.C. and NYC: Thebulwark.com/events

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome to the Bullwark podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. I am punchy. I was up early. I've had a lot of caffeine. We're taping late, and we've got a troublemaker with us. He was a graduate of Kenyon College. He was the van driver for then-Senator Obama in 2007.
Starting point is 00:00:30 And now he's the co-host of a couple of podcasts called Pond Save America and Pond Save the World. It's Tommy Vitor. What's up, man? Buddy, great to see you. You and I were both up early, me because my children were tripping away in the nanit. You because you were covering an FBI raid. Yeah, we're covering the FBI raid. But it's important to bring that to you, you know, because I wanted you to be prepared for the podcast.
Starting point is 00:00:48 I texted you. Let's pull this up. Let's actually get a timestamp on this. I texted you this morning with a link to the news that we were breaking at the bulwark about John Bolton's house being rated at 632 Central, 432 Pacific. You replied within 10 minutes. Yeah, it was not great. What was happening with that?
Starting point is 00:01:09 I was up. I was making coffee. I just sometimes you're awake and you just got to power through. Your podcast needs a new like a sleep aid sponsor of some kind because that is way too early. All right. Well, the news referenced Donald Trump's, what, national security advisor from his first term. The man with the mustache, John Bolton, his house was rated. this morning first reported right here by the bulwark.
Starting point is 00:01:32 Our friend Ben Wittis was on site, later confirmed by the New York Post and others, more regime-friendly outlets that it was an FBI raid. In fact, he was being targeted for national security concerns, they say. It was a national security probe, I believe it was ABC, and Benny Johnson, another crack reporter, has that it's related to the classified documents issue from 2020, where he put some classified material on his book, maybe that hadn't been approved through the process. I don't know if that's the kind of thing that merits a home raid, but I was wondering what your reactions were bright and early this morning.
Starting point is 00:02:09 Yeah, I mean, my first reaction is, if you're watching this and you're not a subscriber to the bulwark on YouTube, do so because these guys are on the scene with breaking news. That's why you need to support independent media. They're telling you stories no one else is. So subscribe to the bulwark on YouTube and also become a bulwark plus subscriber because you love to get lots of great content. I'm actually dead serious. I'm not kissing your out. It's like, what works do an awesome work. I love all the journalists you guys have added to the roster.
Starting point is 00:02:34 I'm like literally begging you for contact information for like Will Summer every other day or somebody on the team. So anyway, we're doing our best. Done with that part. You're doing okay too. It makes me uncomfortable because I usually make fun of you when I talk about your outlet. I know. There's like an asymmetry. But on the actual news. I'm feeling up. It is, first of all, so this is a case probably from 2020. Yeah. And they had to execute a search warrant. weren't five years later that that's what happened here this was the urgent matter we're talking about this this information that john bolton has is so dangerous that it might get leaked into the world even though we think it might have already been in his book that they needed to raid his house and the cash pettel had to tweet about it that's what we're led to believe and that pam bondi tweeted about it with
Starting point is 00:03:17 the statement america's safety isn't negotiable america's safety was at threat i guess if there was not a dawn raid of john bolton's home for five-year-old material also tim look john bolton you I don't agree with his politics. He could be kind of a prick. He seems like a smart guy. Do you think that Bolton, knowing this case was still looming in the background, seeing Donald Trump get reelected, wouldn't, like, bust out the shredder? I would have.
Starting point is 00:03:43 I mean, that's the more nefarious version. It's good to know that you're a shredding documents type. Oh, yeah. You know, John Bolton's lawyer couldn't have worked with their lawyers. And they said, okay, hey, you know, we think you might have some documents. Can we go? And that's how this stuff is worked out, usually. Like, going back, because, you know, they'll, they'll,
Starting point is 00:03:59 I'll do the what about Mar-a-Lago stuff. The reason why Mar-Lago was raided because they went through that normal process by administration, asked them for materials, they said that they would give it, they didn't, they stonewalled them, then they were caught lying about the fact that they weren't giving the materials,
Starting point is 00:04:12 they refused to give them, and then eventually, you know, they raided Mar-a-Lago. This was not, by all accounts, not that, right? Like, this was a situation that was kind of adjudicated, actually, five years ago, and now they felt like, you know, it's just hard to think about any even, fake rationale for this other than
Starting point is 00:04:31 we're trying to intimidate regime opponents in this one that was an opportunity since there was already an open investigation into it. Yeah, in the Mar-a-Lago case, these classified documents were sitting in a room like next to the shitter at a club that we know had been penetrated by like Chinese spies a couple times and it's full
Starting point is 00:04:47 of foreign nationals and anyone who wants can buy their way in and get access to Trump. So there was a real kind of national security concern, these documents sitting around. Lots of people going through Cougars, Chinese spies. You know, to your point about John Bolton being a prick, I don't know that he's having a lot of parties. Like the Georgetown Cocktail Party Circuit didn't really roll through John Bolton's house. No, I think he was kind of a private man.
Starting point is 00:05:08 And until recently, he had a security detail who might prevent these kind of espionage matters from happening at his house, but then Donald Trump got rid of that. So, you know, lots of layers to this thing. I wonder, Tim, if this isn't, what, the book was published, right? So to the extent the Trump administration was worried about classified information being in the book, And I don't believe that they were. I think they just thought the book was going to be embarrassing. That ship has sailed.
Starting point is 00:05:28 I wonder if it wasn't just kind of handwritten notes because just for a listener is like, if you're in a classified meeting and you take notes, those notes are considered classified. Now, John Bolton would have gone through a process with the various intelligence agencies to clear everything he wrote before he published it. But maybe they're saying the notes were, shouldn't have been. So how did that work? So like after you were the van driver, you did rise to being, you know, spokesman for the national security team for President Obama. So you, like, I've not, I've not been in those meetings. Like, what happens?
Starting point is 00:05:57 Like, you're taking notes. You come out. Is there a dude with a burn bag there asking to confiscate your notes? Is it a trust system, honor system? No, it's entirely a trust system. I mean, well, there's some documents that are so sensitive that they are given to you at the meeting and then taken back by, you know, the various, like, CIA person there. Frankly, those are the kinds of documents we saw at Mar-a-Lago.
Starting point is 00:06:18 Like, if you look back of the photos, some of those cover pages with, like, bright red with stripes, Like those are intelligence products that came out of the NSA or the CIA or someplace that are code word sensitivity, which means it's not like not even top secret. It's another layer above that where you have to be read into the compartment to be allowed to have access to this information. But if you're John Bolton and you just walk into a national security meeting with your little binder or your little notebook and you're just writing stuff down, like that just goes and sits in your office. But when you leave, none of that comes with you. When you go home. Unless you get it cleared. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:50 Yeah. When you go home at night or when you leave the administration. Got it. We do have to rely on Benny Johnson for our reports now. It's like men in black. The real news is in the, you know, National Enquirer. It is widely known that Bolton mishandled and took classified information for use in his book after he failed to get approval for publication. The rate of his residence comes after investigation. So that's, and they're not even claiming it's something else. No. No. So, I mean, this is like facially absurd that his house needed to be rated over this. I'm wondering what your thoughts are about just like, The degree of alarm about kind of the broader chilling effect, a fact. Like, do you, like, are you seeing this as like very bad one-off targeting of, of somebody that spoke out against Trump or kind of a first blow in what a broader campaign that they're going to be trying to look into? Feels like a first blow. I mean, listen, I think that Donald Trump has a very specific list of enemies.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Cash Patel helpfully laid out a lot of them for us in his book, I believe. And if I were someone who testified against Trump as part of the January 6th committee or something, this would send a chill up my spine. And, you know, maybe it's not classified information, but we're also going after people at the Fed for mortgage fraud. I mean, they're finding some novel ways right now to punish any perceived enemies. Do you hear from people? I like there are a lot of careers in the national security world. And I guess it's been a minute since you were in there. I mean, there were the big bold names that, you know, they're now targeting, right?
Starting point is 00:08:17 People that are on Cash Patel's enemies list. And then subordinate to that. are like people that worked on these investigations who were basically being run out of these institutions, they're not being investigated, but they're being pushed out of their jobs. Yeah. And then, like, there's kind of another category of people who's just sort of been around to her career experts who maybe were there you worked with and then stayed through Trump one and stayed through Biden and stayed through, you know, have you heard from any,
Starting point is 00:08:39 like what the feeling is among people that have been sort of involved in all this? Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of fear. It's worth saying that the punishment is also extended to stripping of security. clearances. And to your point, like initially it was like John Brennan kind of high profile names, but Tulsi Gabbard just did like 35, 36 more people recently. It all came out via, I believe, a letter tweeted by Laura Lumer. I think this is how this was disclosed. And it included people who hadn't had a clearance since like 2021, who were like, okay, stripping away something I no longer have. So I do think like that kind of stuff does send a chill down the spine of anyone at the CIA or
Starting point is 00:09:18 of the State Department or the intelligence community. I mean, there was a report that Tulsi Graberd was trying to gather together all the sort of internal intelligence community messaging systems data so they could search it for, like, I guess, leakers or loyalty or something. I mean, can you imagine a worse idea than pulling together a database of the most sensitive conversations ever had by the intelligence community so the Chinese could come find it? Yeah. So I pay grok to scrub that.
Starting point is 00:09:48 Grog that just for two minutes ago declared itself a neo-Nazi. I guess the other context here is sort of on the potential next steps. Do you think your former boss Barack Obama is shaking in his boots right now? I'm guessing no. I think the Supreme Court has led him to believe that he has broad immunity, thanks to Donald Trump. I understand he's a former president. I think he's not totally following the George W. Bush model of like sitting out of politics completely. He's campaigning around elections and stuff.
Starting point is 00:10:18 I do wish the Obama office response to that whole thing had just been like, man, whatever's in the Epstein files must have been bad, period, send. You know, like, play ball a little more, right? Like, we should not pretend this is on the level. No, it's not on the level. And that's, we talked to this a little bit earlier this week, but like, how do you navigate that balance between, like, there's some absurdity in this and, like, it's clownish. It's ridiculous for, like, the attorney general to talk about how this raid was, like, necessary for America's safety. their threats against Obama are clownish, for sure. And then, like, on the other hand, I mean, a lot of these guys are clowns, and you cover it
Starting point is 00:10:56 for parts of the world, like Erdogan's kind of a clown, right? And, like, you get into this place where people, they are scary clowns. People get afraid, right? It has, like, real ramifications on the choices people make and their careers and lives and, like, what they're willing to do for the country, right? Like, how do you sort of navigate that? yeah the guy in it was ripping arms off of little kids and stuff and you know down here all the boats float i think you guys i don't want to go full jvl on you but i think you guys brought in some of the necessary historical perspective here which is like hitler was viewed as a clown musilini was kind of a buffoon like you can be a buffoon and an evil buffoon and use the the tools of government uh in in truly evil ways so like i'm not saying trump is hitler like i think sure i think we all sound silly if we if we jump right to that like erdogan like i don't know i don't want the country to become turkey he either there. Like, there's, there's a lot of bad steps between us and Nazi Germany. Yeah, or Venezuela, right? Like, Maduro is not the
Starting point is 00:11:52 sharpest knife in the drawer, but, you know, he's clinging to power for a very long time. And so I think it is very concerning. I think once the power of the state is enormous. And Donald Trump has filled this administration with a bunch of people who have been thinking for a long time about creative ways to use that power to punish Trump's enemies and their own enemies. And that's what makes me a little worried because you know you and i both have gone a few rounds with uh dan bonjino in his former iteration as a twitter troll uh cat and cash yeah with minecraft head and as a podcaster and you know the other day when i saw that he was layered and now there's a co-de deputy director of the fbi i found that quite funny and i tweeted making fun of him and i was like should i tag this guy or not because he
Starting point is 00:12:35 can make one call make my life a lot more complicated but i did because i'm reckless and stupid but i think about it. No, because you have courage. You're like, these are kinds of questions that we weren't asking this country before. You know what I mean? Like back when we were on other sides when you were working with Obama's NSC and I was like trolling you or Liz or anybody. I wasn't like, ooh, I'm worried. I'm really worried
Starting point is 00:12:57 that John Brennan might come after me now. Like if I say, you know, like just the fact that that thought crosses your mind is a change. I don't know, man. I did my rant on Monday about the distractions and you bring up the Epstein thing. It's easy to make the joke. Like, I don't think that John Bolton was on the Epstein list. I don't think that's his cup of tea.
Starting point is 00:13:16 I think he has some other, I think John Bolton has some other vices. Yeah, yeah. So I think it's easy to bring up the distraction joke. But to me, it's like, this is the core of their program. Like, I mean, maybe a secondary benefit of this is it gets Epstein out of the news. But, like, the core of their program is revenge and consolidation of power. Correct. And I don't want people to lose sight of that, I guess, is my main message.
Starting point is 00:13:37 Yeah, I agree with you completely. Like, I think during that two weeks of sort of fever pit, conversation about the Epstein files when Donald Trump kept hitting the Barack Obama did treason button that was a clear effort at distraction but Donald Trump sending troops to the street like that is his core message that is something he wants to talk about it's law and order Dems are wimps I'm cleaning up the cities let's fight about it you know it doesn't belong at your Labor Day plans getting burned by your old wireless bill well some of you guys are probably like half of the bulwark staff on vacation
Starting point is 00:14:11 right now at the beach or, you know, I'm doing three-day weekends or at Disneyland, unlike me, slaving away here in my hole. You don't want your wireless plan on those vacations to hold you back. That's why I encourage to switch to Mint Mobile. Say bye-bye to your overpriced wireless plans, jaw-dropping monthly bills and unexpected overages. Mint Mobile is here to rescue you. All plans come with high-speed data and unlimited talk and text, delivered on the nation's largest 5G network. Use your own phone with any Mint Mobile plan and bring your phone number along with all your existing contacts, ditch overpriced wireless, and get three months of unlimited service from Mint Mobile for 15 bucks a month.
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Starting point is 00:15:38 limited time new customer offer for first three months only speeds may slow about 35 gigabytes on unlimited plan taxes and fees extra cement mobile for details to that point troops in the streets this is coming across an AP we've got a lot of breaking news today real news defense secretary Pete Heggseth has ordered the National Guard troops patrolling the streets of Washington will be armed good then announcers that today and they've been kind of discussing that
Starting point is 00:16:05 National Guard troops include troops from a bunch of red states going to my state. Louisiana has sent 135 guys there because we don't have anything better for them to do during hurricane season, then sit outside the Shake Shack at Union Station. What do you make of kind of the threat assessment with the DC takeover, military takeover? I find it chilling. I mean, I view this from a perspective of someone who lives in Los Angeles and we had our own made-up troop deployment for a very long time. And I remember talking to Gavin Newsom about it, and he was so pissed off
Starting point is 00:16:35 because these were National Guard members from California who were taken off duty to like prevent wildfires or do things that really mattered and suddenly we're just like kind of sleeping in random buildings in Washington, D.C. to deal with protests that had gone away like three weeks earlier. They're doing perimeter service around like park rates. Random government buildings. Yeah. And so I look at the D.C. thing. And like I can squint at it. And on one way, I just see like, you know, the political fight he wants to pick, right? Which is Dems are weak. gun crime and he's going to clean up the city and come at me, bro, if you disagree. But then I look at it a different way and I'm like, is this, you know, like just kind of paving the way for martial law or, you know, January 6, 2.0? And the fact that all these other governors are so horny to get in on the deal and they want to send their National Guard guys to Washington is pretty, it's pretty gross. And like, also most of these National Guard men and women, they don't want to fucking be there. They don't want to be doing this. They have jobs and families. They're humans. Yeah. You know, we're in back to school time. You're taking these folks out. Like, what if they're a single parent, which is true in some of these cases, right? Like, it's like, they've got to go find child care now and they're going sitting on the fucking mall.
Starting point is 00:17:44 Yeah. You know, in D.C.? It's crazy. Your point about the Red State governor is being horny for this. Like, that's to me the alarming part is like, their horny for it, nothing has happened. Yeah. Like, literally, like, the pretext for this was nothing, essentially. Like, Big Balls.
Starting point is 00:17:57 Mr. Balls got manhandled. Big Balls was manhandled in Dupon Circle, which has never happened before. Big Balls got knocked around on 14th Street. And it's like, not great. I'm not for that. That's bad. Like, the cops arrested the guys that did it. The cops were like there on the scene in five minutes.
Starting point is 00:18:12 It wasn't like there was this, you know, it wasn't like the police weren't doing their job. It was bad that this happened. It wasn't like police were to do it. So that was the pretext for this. You know, man, a lot of bad shit can happen between now and 2028. If these guys are sending in the troops because Big Balls got manhandled, like what is going to happen if there are actual riots in one of these cities? What's going to happen if there is? you know, other unrest, right?
Starting point is 00:18:38 Yes, I'm very worried about that. I mean, there's a lot of conversation you hear these days about, like, why aren't there protests? You know, where did all the, where did all the people so worried about Gaza go who are protesting under Biden and who are not now? And it's like, well, now there is a real threat of deportation or having your visa remoked or being arrested or beaten up by some ice guy and thrown into some, you know, you know, administrative purgatory for God knows how long before you can get out.
Starting point is 00:19:01 And, Tim, the thing I think about, too, is, you know, it would be nice if we lived in a world where if something bad happened on Donald Trump's watch, he would get blamed for it. But I think, you know, that we have a lot of evidence to suggest that's not what will happen. And if there were a terrorist attack, I think his approval would, people would rally around, you know, toughness and God knows what he would do. So, yes, I worry a lot about that. Yes, terrorist attack, right? Like, I mean, that's, what's your message to, like, your dumb, you know, candidate buddies a call? Because I, like, I make fun of the consultant speak and the caution, you know, and I, I, I,
Starting point is 00:19:35 I think they deserve to be made fun of at times. I also understand, like, the notion of, like, we don't want to have our hair on fire about the stuff in D.C. We want to demonstrate we care about crime, people care about crime. People don't want crime running rampant in D.C. So I should caveat my comments on this by saying, I want a secure border. And I want crime. And I'm against crime in D.C. too. Is that the right approach, do you think?
Starting point is 00:20:03 or not? I mean, I just think there's an honest answer that you can go to, which is, I care about crime, too, but the way you deal with crime in a city like Washington is not to deploy the U.S. military who have absolutely no training in law enforcement. Like, this is self-evidently crazy. They're in the wrong places. They're not in high crime neighborhoods. They're sitting at Union Station. They're guarding the salad bar at the Sparrow. It's a joke, right? Like, call out what he's doing as a stunt, which is clearly It is. It's not a distraction, but it's a stunt. It's not designed to actually solve a problem. It's to get a story about the problem. Yeah. The stunt is one route. Another route is to talk about it as if it is a massive scheme by the federal government and the jack booted thugs to take away your rights. And one person that's been on that beat is a guy named Tim Dillon. I know who you listen to. Tim Dillon is a, I've come a MAGA comedian's probably wrong, but kind of a culturally conservative comedian. that has some MAGA tendencies at times. He had dinner.
Starting point is 00:21:07 He had dinner with J.D. Vance recently. So his show has been interesting in the last couple weeks. I know you've been monitoring like I have. I want to play one clip from him earlier this week. They've already got the cops on the street that are, I mean, that are not cops or the military. They've already got the National Guard on the street.
Starting point is 00:21:24 They already have all your information in D.C. And now they just get to decide what is and isn't over the line. That should scare everybody. You're fucking not. dude. If this doesn't scare you, you're nuts. All of these things at Alex Jones, you know, and I've had Alex on I like Alex, all these things that Alex Jones was like worried about when I listened to him in the late 90s, early 2000s are coming to fruition, military in the street, the FEMA camp, the tech
Starting point is 00:21:54 company that monitors everything, the surveillance. This is all of that. Take out the aside about how he used to talk about how he likes Alex. It's kind of like how I talking about you when I'm on another podcast. I'm like, if I'm disagreeing or something, you say, now I like, I like, I like, I like, we have some disagreements over the years, but I like that. Some good ideas. So he has to caveat that he likes Alex.
Starting point is 00:22:12 But if you take the Alex out, couldn't the Democratic Senator have said that? Yeah, look, I think voices like Tim Dillon are really important because there is a crossover between the audience that listens to Tim and Alex Jones and Joe Rogan. And I think it kind of, he's helping you sort the difference, which is Alex Jones actually wants the FEMA camps in service. of keeping liberals out of power, right? Like, there's an authoritarian tendency there. Tim Dillon is like, if this is not what we signed up for,
Starting point is 00:22:40 I didn't want, like, ICE agents rampaging around cities. I listed that whole episode this morning, Tim, like in preparation for this. You had a lot of time. I had a lot of time this morning. He's this whole bit about how, like, what are you podcasters doing that will stand the test of time? And he goes, fascism, welcoming in fascism, which is really funny. And they did a whole bit about people getting fired at Lakeinta hotels because of automation
Starting point is 00:23:01 and their only job left. is to join ice, so then everyone in the country joins ice, and there's one immigrant family left, and we all try to deport them, and then we deport each other so that Mark Zuckerberg and Peter Thiel can divide up the world. Like, he is calling out the game and calling out the bullshit. And a friend of mine who is like an avid reader of the Joe Rogan Reddit and kind of understanding that world sent me this incredible video, which I actually pitched to your guy Will Summer. I don't know if he'll do anything with it. There was an hour and a half takedown of Rogan's show and how it is evolved and gone from like a normal comedian who is sort of poking holes
Starting point is 00:23:38 at power and worried about things in the world to like someone who is constantly welcoming on the worst politicians, the worst tech people and kind of a part of the problem because they feed his paranoia. I saw some of this. It's very long. This video is very long. Someone else sent this to me. Yeah. I watched a couple minutes of it. We'll put it in the show notes for if somebody wants to really nerd out this weekend, you got nothing better to do. I'll grab it. I watch for things like this. I think it's really interesting when someone like a Tucker Carlson is calling out Trump for, you know, for bombing Iran or someone like Tim Dillon is calling out Trump for this ICE FEMA overreach stuff. Yeah. I want to just go back to the substance of Tim Dillon's critique
Starting point is 00:24:16 here, though, for a sec, because one thing I've been wrestling with, which is kind of this pickle the Democrats are in, which is like nobody, not nobody, but only a minority of the country as significant minority of the country is happy with how things are going, happy with the institutions, wants them protected, right? Like, if those are the only people voting for you, like, you're not going to win a lot of elections outside the Northeast or people feel pretty happy with society up there, your home, your homeland. Love it. So what the Democrats need is candidates that can channel outsider credentials and themselves take on the mantle of going after power, going after the things that people don't think that they liked. Obama was, I think, to benefit by this, A, by just his identity, but also the Iraq war, right, had this, like, way to be an outsider, even, you know, and kind of channel some outsider cred. And Democrats haven't really been able to do that the last three presidential cycles, right?
Starting point is 00:25:14 It's very much been we're defending institutions, for good reason, right? Because Donald Trump is attacking these fucking institutions. You're being a dick about it and, like, and it's causing real harm. And so that puts Democrats in this bind where they're like, well, no, but, you know, the FBI is doing some good things, you know. And like the Democrats have been found themselves in this position, right? Always defending these institutions. That argument by Tim Dillon there, there's no reason that couldn't come from like a libertarian left Democrat or like even a leftist kind of Democrat that is that's making the attack that's going out there. These guys are the ones that are consolidating power.
Starting point is 00:25:50 These guys are ones that are turning the fucking military and the FBI into a bunch of jackbooted thugs. And with Palantir, they're stealing your data and they're, you know, giving show. away to the big tech executives that go to Washington. That is a coherent, outsidery message that a Democrat could give. And I don't know who the right vessel is for that. But I don't know. What do you make about the Tim Dillon Democrat? I think that there's a real opportunity with like the Tim Dillon, Joe Rogan world to peel
Starting point is 00:26:17 off some of those voters or at least disenchant them with Donald Trump. Because you're right. Obama ran against Washington. I mean, he had been a senator for like 30 seconds, but he ran on the Iraq War, but also ran against Hillary Clinton, who was like the avatar. of all things, Washington, right? But I do think what you're talking about, like there is a ton of space
Starting point is 00:26:33 for exactly the kind of message you're talking about, which is like, hey, have you guys heard of Palantir? Are you good with them consolidating all of our data into one giant database so they can track everything we do?
Starting point is 00:26:44 That seems crazy to me. Guy that started is currently doing it four different sessions on the nature of the Antichrist, which is a little concerning. Yeah, when you love your job, it's not work. So he's doing that.
Starting point is 00:26:53 The Department of Homeland Security was a mistake. It is too big. It is sprawling. It is an insane organization. You could run on breaking it up in more limited government. Some Republicans will pick up piece of this, you know, Tom Massey, Rand Paul, et cetera. But there should be a reform message in there for Democrats.
Starting point is 00:27:10 I don't know. Yeah, I mean, there were Democrats like this. We were growing, I were the ones I didn't like, you know, because they're going after the Bush security state over this. But go after the fucking Trump security state. I think that that's a totally legit message. Anyway, okay, there you go. Look, Abolish ICE was an overreach. Anytime you say, like, we should abolish something, I think.
Starting point is 00:27:31 You lead people to say, well, what do we replace it with, right? And we've seen that with abolish the police, et cetera. But picking out strands to attack ice on is so, it seems to be so obvious to me. Like, why are these guys wearing masks? We should pass a federal law where they can't wear masks. It seems like there's so many little things we could do like that. Oh, Canada. Hey, y'all.
Starting point is 00:27:51 We're going on tour this fall. We're going up north. I demanded it. I wanted to support. our Canadian listeners and friends being attacked by this administration. So we're going to do the whole deal, Mounties, Tim Hortons, maple syrup. I'm going to be drinking Seagrams on stage. Seagram's Canadian anymore? I said that in the last episode. I think they might have been bought by a multinational corporation. Anyway, I'm going to have a Canadian cocktail on stage. You guys
Starting point is 00:28:18 can tell me what I should do. And yeah, we get to all be an ally ship against our terrible mega president so come check out me sarah longwell canada's favorite sam stein we're going to be in toronto in september i want to see you there especially if you're canadian but if you're american you want to go support our friends up north and come hang um would like to see you too if you aren't up for stamping your passport you can catch me sarah and jviel in dc or new york city in october as well anyone can grab tickets or more information now at the bulwark.com slash events they didn't tell me to tell you this in the ad read but since you're a friend since i'm looking at you're a up for you. I'm letting you know
Starting point is 00:28:57 that I was looking at the pre-sales. That Toronto ticket's going to be a hot ticket, baby. So if you want to go to Toronto, I'd jump on that now. You should jump on all of them now, but Toronto in particular, take a look at your schedule, see if you can make it. Hope to see you in Toronto. Once again, it's the bulwark.com
Starting point is 00:29:14 slash events. Another news item today. Alligator Alcatraz. We've got a ruling. Some good news. Something happened. Good. A federal judge that was last night. I had a ruling prohibiting state and federal officials from bringing new detainees to the Everglades detention camp.
Starting point is 00:29:34 The ruling demanded that the state began dismantling elements of the facility, including temporary fencing, lighting fixtures, and generators, among other equipment within 60 days. I was reading the Washington Post story on this. One thing, and I knew it was bad, but I guess I just didn't realize the extent of it, the site had no electricity.
Starting point is 00:29:51 Yes, I saw this too. Yeah, so everything had to be powered by generators. including portable air conditioners drinking and bathing water clean water had to be trucked in sewage trucked out and sewage trucked out like what in the fuck why in the middle of the everglades like this is it i i don't know i was just like imagining the 2035 like ai netflix movie about this and like the scenes of the guys whose job it is to take the sewage out of alligator alcatraz through the fucking everglades with alligators jumping at them like this is this is absolutely insane and insane and again i think it goes you could you could see a tim dillotry
Starting point is 00:30:31 voice crew like making fun of this and mocking this but what what do you make of the news well so i look obviously alligator alcatraz closing is good news i mean it was just an abomination and i assume we should say that they will appeal the desantis the sanctimonious freaks say that they're going to appeal this they will appeal if it were too closed i think it was a good thing i did wonder reading the story tim i mean look i know there's a little bit of republican dna still left inside you there's like a little piece of you that wants to go to a cracker barrel right now and, you know, throw a trash can through the window because you're mad about their logo. What did you make of this quote?
Starting point is 00:31:02 This brutal detention center was burning a hole in the fabric of life that supports our most iconic wetland and a whole host of endangered species. From majestic Florida Panthers to wizened wood storks, said this person from an environmental group. I mean, I do a lot of shit talking about the environmentalists on here because I still have, you know, I do still have some things here. And my, I do have a natural instinct. to not care about the wizened wood stork. That said, one cheer for the environmentalists
Starting point is 00:31:30 and environmental nimbism kind of finally does something. After they took some strays yesterday on yesterday's pod, they were the leaders on this on this. I also said this though, like the Everglades, even Republicans, like Jeb and even DeSantis actually, before this like fucking, you know, stunt. It was sort of like how Colorado Republicans when I was growing up had like a little bit of a green streak
Starting point is 00:31:52 because you wanted to protect them in mountain. You were like an outdoorsman. You wanted to do skiing and hiking and all that sort of stuff. Florida, like Republicans, like the Everglades was like a point of pride. It was like where they went, you know, took their kids and stuff. And so there was like Everglade restoration was like a thing. And so I don't know, man. I just, like even down there, I would have thought that there might have been some blowback to this.
Starting point is 00:32:15 But I think it was an elite. I think it was like all these other things. I think it was elite Republican thing. And most of the regular Republicans in Florida were like, yeah, give me my, give me my alligator alcatraz hat give me my alligator hat we chopping them migrants you know i don't know bennie johnson
Starting point is 00:32:29 yeah i'm with you i know some republicans who are kind of like conservation republicans right they want clean water and you do hunting and fishing etc there's seven of those out there yeah there's a couple left yeah i didn't realize that um alligator alcatraz have been built on a runway for this abandoned airport project it was supposed to be the biggest airport in the world but it was blocked by Marjorie Stoneman Douglas on environmental ground.
Starting point is 00:32:53 So I guess there is some history and some DNA of this whole facility being blocked because it's just an environmental disaster. But yeah, I mean, look, this is, you know, I don't know. I heard you talking about feeling like DeSantis is sort of in a nadir at the moment in terms of his political wins and losses. And hopefully this kind of adds to that downward slope. Hopefully so. What about just a broader, how about this fight, like just as a political question?
Starting point is 00:33:17 And like, so maybe this gets shut down, right? They're building another camp, right? Somewhere else in Florida. We're building some here in Louisiana. You know, and this is boon times to the private prison industry. Yep. I do feel like this is like, do people like that in the micro they do. But I do feel like it's something that can be campaigned against.
Starting point is 00:33:38 Or is that, I don't know. What do you think? I have had the same thought and hope, which is that this is overreach. and that when you're branding prisons like Ron's going to move all these people maybe to another old prison in North Florida that they're now calling deportation depot when all these things are like branded
Starting point is 00:33:55 and they're selling merch and Benny Johnson's doing live streams there. Some people like the merch. I went to a Matt Gates event in the Panhandle last summer as part of the service journalism I do for all of you.
Starting point is 00:34:06 There were definitely some people there and some children actually even that would have been wearing the merch so like there are some people out there but I think it's like a 35 45, 40 percent. Maybe there's 60 percent who's sort of like, I don't know. I do think we should deport the murderers, but like, we don't have to like torture them. We don't have to like let them get eaten by alligators. And I don't think we should deport the really nice woman who, you know, like sells
Starting point is 00:34:27 fruit down the street or whatever. I think a lot of people are offended by that. And does America want to be known for like our gleaming camps? No. That's just another thing. I just, I don't think like there are people also still have this pride of it. It's like, okay, well, what are the big programs that are happening right now in the Trump administration. It's like we've got data centers that are taking up huge amount of electricity, rising bills electricity costs. So we've got these huge data centers and huge deportation camps. Like that's what we're built. It's time to build, Mark Andresen said, like, that is what we're building now. Deportation camps and data centers. Is that, no. That's not the sign to me of like a particularly healthy society. No, and it's just weird.
Starting point is 00:35:05 And also, I saw you make this point to our good friend, Dean Kane. Oh, yeah, Dean. Our population is shrinking for the first time and God knows how long. Aren't we down like 1.5 million people this year because of all the deportations? Like that's not a healthy thing. That's not a club we want to be in. You made the point that you see that in places like Syria more often than the United States. Yeah. Dean's ability to move his face is also shrinking.
Starting point is 00:35:28 He has a limited range of motion in his face. Also, one thing on that, I saw you, he called him out for being an actor. He got very sensitive about you saying that he was an untrained actor who wanted to be an ice agent. And at one point, he asserted that he was also an NFL player. But I believe he was a guy who went to Princeton who showed up at an NFL camp and got hurt and then never actually played. I think you got to make the 53 roster to be an NFL player, Dean. A little fact check for you there on Dean. I'm just saying, look, I could never sniff the field, but I'm just saying, Dean.
Starting point is 00:35:58 What was your high school sport, Tommy? Football, lacrosse. Football? So, Kenyon was there any? Kenyon didn't have a football squadron. Kenyon had a football team. The coach tried to recruit me, and I told him that I was small and, slow and I didn't want to play.
Starting point is 00:36:12 And truth, you just kind of wanted to get high instead. Yeah, and we had fall ball ball for lacrosse. It was a lot more fun. Yeah. Yeah, you know, Kegger was there. Sarah was more of a softball, maybe. Yeah, I mean, Sarah's, like her build is a little bit more athletic. She's a good player.
Starting point is 00:36:26 I think she's a good player, yeah. All right. What else did I have on our list? I had something else on Alligator. I felt like I had something else talking about. We got way late. All right. Let's talk about the Democrats a little bit.
Starting point is 00:36:37 What, your governor is Gavin Newsom? There's been a lot of Gavin Nussum, agoniste, what's that word? Agony over here. we're sort of like I guess you gotta hand it to him it's working it's working and I guess I don't know what I mean when I say it's working is it working like is it convincing anybody I don't know
Starting point is 00:36:57 is it working in the sense that like he's giving Democrats and Democratic aligned and anti-Trump aligned people something to rally around and something to feel good about and like is it breaking through outside of our little political obsessive bubbles
Starting point is 00:37:12 like the answer to all that is like obviously yes and the answer to the narrow question of what he's doing on the gerrymandering part is like everyone agrees is right and good so i don't know we need to spend any time on that but like the broader political strategy what do you think about that well i think the fact that there is so much conversation about like a twitter stick tells you a lot about how desperate democrats are for like something for anything right because i think my reaction was probably similar to yours like i saw those tweets and like initially i winced a bit
Starting point is 00:37:44 But then they got better and better. And unfortunately, there's some funny ones. There's some legitimately funny ones. And unfortunately, I am. Tommy Lorenin toilet. That's good material. That's good material. There's just no two ways about it.
Starting point is 00:37:58 Yeah. And look, Tim, like you, I am unfortunately reverse polarized. So when I saw Dana Perino and all the Fox News host getting mad about it, I enjoyed that. Truly, I don't really read most of them. Like, I think it's a fun tactic to get attention. He's clearly, like, meeting the moment. You see all this polling.
Starting point is 00:38:12 The Democrats want a fighter. and I think this is giving them that. I suspect he won't be doing this bit in like six months, nine months. I could be wrong. But I do think there's a broader thing he's doing to him that's really smart, which is you see Gavin Newsom on progressive media channels all the time. He's talking to Brian Tyler Cohn, he's talking to the Midas Touch folks. He's talking to us.
Starting point is 00:38:34 And that is really smart because this is what Trump did. Trump built up those shows. He went on those shows all the time. He helped them build their channels. he built relationships with their audience, and that has to be a long game thing. You can't just do that around elections. I just, like, do one interview with, like, Adam Mockler or, you know, or the bulwark. Like, you got to be on talking to those folks all the time.
Starting point is 00:38:54 And that's something I'm really glad to see him doing, because every once in a while, it'll be like an op-ed from some former Biden digital person about how Democrats don't have media infrastructure and need to work on. Clarity catching strays now on this. Well, you guys had four years to, like, to try to help and nurture these things. and you didn't do it. So, like, I agree with the observation, but it's great to see Gavin Newsom kind of putting some skin in the game.
Starting point is 00:39:17 Yeah, that is a good observation. And I do, you know, it's tough sometimes because you see them out there on the circuit and not everybody is bringing the high-quality material, you and Brian Tower going on. There are some of these shows he's on. I'm like, okay, I don't know. Not my cup of tea per se, but let a thousand flowers bloom, you know.
Starting point is 00:39:38 The Nelk boys have an audience, too. I don't know if we do need to build up that Biden deadenders but that's a personal thing and so I think that it's good that he's doing that here's my worry and this is more of an existential worry I worry it's working too well I worry that he is
Starting point is 00:39:53 that it's working too well and that he is he cements himself as the person that is fighting Trump and that it's hard to dislodge him and that he brings out and I don't I don't actually mean this is a judgment on Gavin because I think the strategy is good I mean it kind of a judgment
Starting point is 00:40:09 on all of us as humans we're all fall We're all sinners, Tommy. I called you John, like Megan Kelly. We're all sinners. I worry that it brings out the worst in everybody. And everybody gets so excited and our nipples get so hard, you know, that like Tommy Loren has been called a toilet, that it kind of, the snowball starts rolling down the hill,
Starting point is 00:40:33 and it turns into an avalanche, and it can't be stopped. And, like, we're living in this forever. Is your concern one of tone and just like, coarsening of the culture or is this you're concerned that Gavin's going to be the nominee and you think that's bad. I kind of both. A little bit that Gavin is that
Starting point is 00:40:50 I worry a little bit about that because I think that there's some issues that he would have reaching out to like people and that Barack Obama got to vote from in Pennsylvania for example. But yeah, coursing is the wrong word. I'm coarse. I don't mind course. It's more just like that I don't know man. I guess
Starting point is 00:41:06 I want a fighter but it would be nice to be able to have somebody that also fights for something that is a little bit aspirational and that the fighting is not just I'm the best at swirling people. Because I love swirling maga. I love it.
Starting point is 00:41:23 Great. It's good. I don't think it's bad. I'm not worried about. Of course, in the culture. I just, as an end in itself, it is pretty corrupting, though. See, here, I guess where I disagree with you is, I think we are swirling maga in service of getting attention
Starting point is 00:41:39 to this redistricting fight. And I think that is valuable. And I feel like there is actually an end game to this silly bullshit into the longer term concern that like, I know, I heard you in JVL, I think, talking about this. Like, is this going to cement this guy? Yeah. As the Democratic frontrunner and the nominee, I just would like to give you some advice. I heard you give Democrats several months ago when they were talking, they were all worried about should we talk about immigration? Should we be pivoting to Medicaid cuts? And it's like, it's just so far away. God knows what we're going to be talking about in two months. Like, I'm so happy that Gavin's out there punching away. And I,
Starting point is 00:42:11 do think, I hope that we'll see some Democrats, see what he's doing, see the attention he's getting, see the growth on his socials, the people Googling him and be like, all right, I got to get in the game more. I got to show people something. I agree with that. I needed this pep talk. Thank you, Tommy. I agree with that.
Starting point is 00:42:25 The more fucking Democrats should get in the game on this. And that would assuage my concern. It's about Gavin, you know, monopolizing the playing field. That everybody needs to do the all caps tweets. He's done a great job with that. But, like, the concept is there. Yes. Get fucking pissed.
Starting point is 00:42:41 You know, throw some fastball. Make it interesting. Like, look, Andy Bashir seems like great. He's an incredible record. His approval in Kentucky is astounding. He's a good looking guy. He's got a great family. But it's like he's got to break through somehow and solve this last mile problem of having
Starting point is 00:42:55 other Democrats hear who the fuck he is if he wants to run for president. We've talked a little bit about kind of the Dem brand like challenges issues. The thing that I'm the most wrapped around the axon is like how to break through. outside of like this narrow blue wall path to victory and this like which gets you 52 senators at most and you know 290 electoral votes at most like how do you make iowa a swing state again you know there's pull out yesterday sheridan down 50 44 whatever pull it's way too early but like just how do you think about this challenge of how democrats can kind of get out of their the narrow audience that they're reaching right now, relatively narrow.
Starting point is 00:43:42 So a few thoughts. First of all, I kind of think we got a chance in Iowa this year. Rob Sand is a great gubernatorial candidate. He's one statewide. He's your doppelganger? He looks at he's far, he's a far more chiseled jawline, but I appreciate the compliment. But, like, you know, he's a guy who, like, he hunts and he fishes, and he's authentic, and he's from Iowa, and he's won, he's an auditor, and he's got an interesting background.
Starting point is 00:44:06 And then Nathan Sage is kind of like filling the space of the a little more, you know, I think lefty blue collar union voice there. So maybe we have a chance. I know I'm maybe I'm probably totally wrong. Iowa could be totally gone. But I tend to view that politics as just a giant pendulum that is constantly swinging. And when I see Chris Rufo flipping out about the cracker barrel logo, I start to think, boy, this pendulum is swung way too far back. We're going to talk about it. But people, I think people are. going to start to find that shit annoying. And I think I don't want to jump us to the 2028 primaries or start talking about presidential politics yet. But I do think that is the process that gets you attention from the media that allows you to deliver a message more compellingly. So once people start getting into that game, I do think it will help us have some fighters that actually get covered. If I've offered to you the working theories out there for how Democrats could appeal better to some of the demos
Starting point is 00:45:05 who they've lost ground with. You have the group out there that is absolutely adamant that needs to be a populist leftist. Economic populism is the only path. You have a group out there that is absolutely adamant
Starting point is 00:45:18 that the Dems need to hippie punch the left, like that they're just too, got too far to the left on progressive issues, whether it be trans or guns or whatever. You've got our abundance friends who think Democrats just should govern better.
Starting point is 00:45:31 I think there's a little bit truth to all those, but like my personal pay, issue is I just think that like the vibes of the candidates have gotten really bad. I think you need to find better. The vibes need to be totally different with the candidates themselves. Like is really the recruitment is about as big a problem as anything. Taking those four or you're welcome to nominate a fifth. Like where do you think is the secret sauce? I think I would probably pick, you know, little bits from each. But I do think like if I were to have to pick one, I would look populist
Starting point is 00:46:00 economic focus on kitchen table stuff. You fucking live. Unbelievable. Well, that doesn't mean you have to be like the furthest left, populist, economic kind of guy. But I do think, like, a relentless focus on that message is what helps Zoran Mandani. And I think, what's this guy's name in Maine who just announced who seems pretty cool? Grand planter. Grand planter, right? Like, that his announcement video is like him on, you know, his oyster boat, right?
Starting point is 00:46:26 Just talking about economic concerns. What did you think about him saying the word oligarchy in that? Didn't love it. Yeah, okay. Didn't love it. I'm not, I'm not part of it. I'm not part of the third way. They released a long manifesto today, which is like a reverse unabomber.
Starting point is 00:46:40 It's just a bunch of words you're not allowed to say. This apparently is based on no polling or specific research. It's just things these guys don't like. And by the way, I didn't like a lot of them. One of my favorite ones is the third way. It's like, stop saying small D democracy. And I was like, I will not allow that because it makes for so many good jokes. Every time Love it says small D democracy, it's a free whack for me.
Starting point is 00:47:02 So please continue saying small D democracy But they have some other things out there Cisgender they don't like Bipoc I'm not a really a huge fan of Bipok myself incarcerated people Anyway subverting norms
Starting point is 00:47:16 Why aren't we allowed to say Subverting norms Overton Window we're not even allowed to say Why can't we say Overton Window third way I like Overton window Don't dumb me down It was a lot of jargon It felt like a list
Starting point is 00:47:28 Were you triggered No it just seemed like a list It was a list from a bunch of overly online centrist that they could use to tell a bunch of overly online lefties to shut the fuck up, which like, that's fine. Put it out there. But like, there's no data backing this. Like, yes, talk like a human being. Be yourself. I didn't like the word oligarchy either. That was the only thing that video that bumped me except the I agree with you on the guitar riff. I'm going to talk to people who made that ad. I don't like that guitar. Please, do you know the people that made the ad? Yes. Please tell them. It's all love. It's all love. You know, great ad, good message. They're doing good work. But I just, I've got to go fucking crazy if I hear the same guitar riff that's been in every Democratic ad for like three cycles now.
Starting point is 00:48:13 Literally, it's my second shout out to him. I got, I can find you somebody. I got pals that do this. Same. We can do other guitar riffs. We're centering better music. We're holding space for better music. Those are other words.
Starting point is 00:48:25 We like that guy, so you're on the economic populist left stuff. All right. Well, while we burnish your credentials. Well, can I just say, though, I agree with you, like that I think candidate ID and just people who are interesting and compelling that you like that, they're inextricably linked. Zoran Mamdani is a guy who talks about populous stuff, but he's also super compelling, like charming, interesting, great of making videos, great at talking to people. Like, you can't disaggregate those two. No, he's a good hang. He was a good hang on the green room, even, you know, even after I gave him some shit.
Starting point is 00:48:55 All right, while we're, you know, burnishing your shit-lib credentials, let's talk a little bit about Gaza. There's a Washington host story this morning about, I guess, a UN report, the Global Authority on Hunger, says famine has been officially confirmed in the Gaza city region and is projected to spread within weeks to two more population centers in the wider Gaza Strip. You guys made some noise recently over on your pod, talking about how Dems seem to talk differently about this, which, well, why don't you just talk about it? Where do you think things are? The sort of broader points about the war in Gaza or U.S. relations to Israel generally? Both. Just go. I think Democrats and a lot of elected officials, when they talk about the U.S. Israel relations, are using talking points that were drafted by someone in the 1980s, maybe on a typewriter.
Starting point is 00:49:50 They are very dusty, and we need to evolve them. By someone that's not an anti-Semitic dog whistle, though. You're just saying that that person happened to live 40 years. ago. You're not saying that it happened by Harry Rosenstein. I'm saying that we are, Joe Biden used to do this all the time. He would talk about the Israel of Golda Maiir and this bastion of freedom and democracy in the Middle East. And if it didn't exist, we'd have to create it when the reality is since 2009, it has been Bibi Netanyahu's government. And he stayed in power by including in his government coalition increasingly radical, in fact, terrorists supporting like extremist
Starting point is 00:50:27 individuals, like Ittmar Ben-Gavir, the security minister, Smotrich to finance minister. And I think Democrats, the reality of the makeup of this Israeli government is something that I think is really hard for a lot of people to come to terms with because they either have an emotional attachment to Israel or they have this, you know, belief from decades of just sort of like affinity cultural or whatever it might be. And I think there's a couple of things happening right now that are actually crises. Like there's the crisis of the war in Gaza, which has been going on for nearly two years in the starvation that's happening there, but also like the Israelis are about to escalate the war in Gaza. And then in the West Bank, you not only have like these rampaging
Starting point is 00:51:04 settlers, like leading pogroms through villages and like driving Palestinians out and killing them, including American citizens, by the way, but you have this ongoing constant construction of settlements that is carving up the West Bank in such a way that there is no hope of a two-state solution. In fact, at this point, there basically isn't because there's no contiguous territory that could be a Palestinian state. And so the hope is, like, let's just acknowledge reality and talk about things as they are, not as they were 20, 30 years ago or as they wish they would be. And let's also just be honest that, like, groups like APAC are not, they don't support Democrats. They support candidates in primaries to take out progressive Democrats. I was with you up to the very last sentence.
Starting point is 00:51:47 I think that, like, just being awake to what is the reality on the ground in Gaza is necessary to being able to talk about this in a way that is honest, right? Like, and I think, and I saw you getting, and it was some folks that, there have been a lot of folks that were big critics of Israel immediately after October 7th, like even really before the war was being fought, you know, who are now saying, oh, well, now you guys are coming around to our point of view. And, and whatever, I guess, you know, you can try to wave the bloody shirt or something if you want. But like, you know, where we are now, there's no plan, right? And Israel set, and the plan is basically to ethnically cleanse Gaza Strip. Just send people to South Sudan. Right.
Starting point is 00:52:31 They're saying people to South Sudan. So, like, that's where it is. So if it was another thing, we're like, we're going after Hamas and then we're going to figure out, you know, we have a plan to extricate ourselves. Like, that's not what has happened. So we are, we are. And it's really, it sucks. It's really sad. And I just think that, like, to your point, like being clear about the situation is it actually lies with the situation, I think is.
Starting point is 00:52:53 necessary to be able to talk about it. Now, I find the APEC thing very straight. This is like not just related to APEC. It's like related to all this sort of stuff. I feel like it's a lot of people that don't actually pay attention to politics, understand politics that closely that feel like APEC is more powerful than it is. All of these donor stories, it's like we're in a post Citizens United world. It's like the fact that you took $20,000 from people on a board or whatever. I don't fucking know, man. Sometimes I feel like they're like made into this like all powerful boogeyman in a way that makes me a little uncomfortable. No, I don't think there are anything close to an all powerful boogeyman. I think actually what you've seen over the last
Starting point is 00:53:34 six to 12 months has shown kind of stark terms that they're not. I do think you'll, you see a lot of policing of policy and speech by various groups in this space. Like Jonathan Greenblatt from the ADL wrote a New York post op-ed where he called me an anti-Semite because I said BB Netanyahu dragged Donald Trump into the war with Iran and I think like 10 years ago that kind of thing would have like really stung and worried me but now I think like you hear those kind of attacks so often and they're so cynical and they're in such bad faith that the power is wearing off I think what frustrates me about APEC is they do have a party line and that party line includes like bullshit like the U.S. and Israel should never disagree in public we should deal with our
Starting point is 00:54:18 disagreements behind closed doors. I'm like, well, you know who that really helps? Bebe Netanyahu and never gets criticized from America in public. And, you know, so I think that that's kind of the stuff I'm talking about there. And then in terms of like that tweet that got all the lefties mad to me, Tim, basically I said, like, I saw a bunch of people tweeting like, you know, fuck you if you're, you know, just now coming around to thinking what's happening in Gaza is bad or a genocide or what have you. And I just think like my brain is always wired to think in terms of a democratic strategist. And like, how do we build the biggest coalition to tackle a problem? And I think if we're scolding people for agreeing with us, that is unbelievably stupid and we shouldn't do it.
Starting point is 00:54:55 That doesn't mean there shouldn't be accountability at some point for politicians who voted in certain ways that we disagree with. But, like, in my mind, I always have like a 70-year-old Jewish grandma in, you know, in New York, who is like a deep emotional connection to Israel, is a big liberal, cares deeply about Israel and has watched this war over the last, you know, 22 months and is increasingly horrible. And I want that person to be part of this coalition, even if she won't agree that it is a genocide, right? Even if that is a bridge too far for her, given the connection of that term to the Holocaust, right? But we want that person marching, rallying, voting, calling Congress. And that's my whole point. Yeah, and saying we don't want people to fucking starve. Yeah, we don't want to starve kids.
Starting point is 00:55:34 You don't want that person. You want that we don't want kids starving. What we don't want is, you know, anti-anty starvation reporting by the people at the free press, you know, talking about how, you know, we really can't talk about the malnour nourished boys because they also had other, you know, their arms were blown off. So the free press, they wrote this piece, I think it was 12 examples they found of malnourished children who have been featured in photos in Western news reports where those kids also had preexisting conditions. And like, look, on one level, more context in reporting is fine. It's great. But like some of the examples they used were CNN failed to mention that this one kid who
Starting point is 00:56:10 is looked emaciated had part of his skull blown off by an Israeli shell from shrapnel. I was like, I'm sorry, what point do you think that is making about this war? And it's just clearly like, this is the free press going after various mainstream organizations in a really cynical way to suggest that they are overplaying or manufacturing reports of famine or starvation. And it is bullshit. And I know, like, the other thing, Tim, that never gets talked about is the Israeli government will not let reporters go into Gaza and report from the ground without an IDF minder.
Starting point is 00:56:43 It would be much easier for the New York Times to fact-check stories. if they had people on the ground, but they're left, like, trying to call the mom of some kid. And, like, they can't, what are they going to do? Call a hospital that's been bombed, try to get records. Like, come on. It's a challenging reporting environment. You can't admit that maybe the Iranian bombing didn't go quite as bad as you thought it was going to. It didn't.
Starting point is 00:57:02 No, I don't think it's over yet, though. I just, I don't think this is. It's important that we question our priors. Oh, no. I'm agreeing with you on Gaza stuff. So it was important that I threw out there a little neocon challenge. No, well, I think it's, look, did it lead to World War? three, no. I think the war ended
Starting point is 00:57:18 for just, I'm giving a real answer to kind of a funny question. I do think the war ended because we basically, like, we're about to run out of interceptor missiles for a lot of the missile defense programs, and the Israelis were like, all right, it's time to stand down, and the Iranians were ready to stand down, too. I just don't think this is over. I don't think the 12-day war is going to be how this thing
Starting point is 00:57:34 ends. I think there's going to be more conflict. We have a few laughs. We have to get to. We're running out of time. But I do, I do it. Before we get to laughs, I just want to really quick check in on your feelings. I don't know, man. I arrange between like anger i've got i get a lot of anger sometimes mostly in the immigration stuff little bouts of sadness little bits of sadness but i the thing that worries me the most is i self-identify we'll do a little therapy talk sorry third way we're going to do a little therapy talk
Starting point is 00:58:00 here as i self you know as i look internally is i'm getting kind of numb i think yeah i'm self-identifying as getting kind of numb and i don't like that so i don't know what how does that strike you yeah i think that's a lot i mean i i feel that way a lot there's clearly the white house is strategy is to do something outrageous every single day so that they can drive the narrative. And there are definitely times where I'm like, what's he doing at the Kennedy Center or the Smithsonian? Like, do I have to like read about that and be like, you know, it gets exhausting. And that's their goal, right? It is to exhaust us. I'm sort of like you. I think the story, the more specific, the story or the thing, the more outraged I am. Like the story of Andre,
Starting point is 00:58:40 Hernandez-Ramero getting rendered to Al-Salvador, like seeing the photos of him crying for his mother, his head being shaved, knowing he did nothing, knowing the horrors they would inflict on him. Like, you feel that in your soul and you can't shake it. I feel the same way about some of the images and videos you see out of Gaza and to just know that we're like funding this and funneling arms to bomb these kids. It, like, it can break you if you really think about it. But like the day to day of Trump, like I to him, it's easy to feel numb.
Starting point is 00:59:13 It's constant. Yeah. Do you fight it though? Or do you embrace the numbness with mid-afternoon cocktails, gummies? It's more of an edible. It's not always, it's late afternoon. Post-bed time, yeah. California sober.
Starting point is 00:59:31 I tend to find that like if I learn about, if I dig into something, if I learn about it, then I start to care about it more. If I just sort of like, I need to let this one go, then I'm numb. Self-care? Self-care. A little doing little self-care. Let a few stories go. Do you have any advice?
Starting point is 00:59:45 for people on this listeners? I think my advice would be you don't have to read all the news, like, sincerely. That was like, remember 2017 and 2018? I do think that was a feeling that, like, kind of resist Libs had. It's like, I'm going to read all the news. I'm going to watch all the panels. And I don't know that that's good for us. I give that advice, too.
Starting point is 01:00:02 Take a break from my show. If you're a daily listener, we appreciate you. No, not this show. But take a fucking break. Yeah, take a break for my show for a day or two. That's fine. That's okay. Download and you'll survive.
Starting point is 01:00:10 You'll survive. Also, though, an equal balance to that for me, like how I want to take a break at times, and people should take a break for their own, you know, to find things are more fulfilling, is I don't want him to take away the things that I care about. Like, don't let, you know what I mean? Like, not to be, whatever, corny, but like, don't take, don't let him take your anger and sadness or passion or care away. Like that, I worry about that almost as much sometimes, where it's just like, fuck,
Starting point is 01:00:37 I don't know. You know, the things that I used to really care about and feel passionate about, it's just it's hard to. And so while simultaneously I want to break from the crazy, I also don't want to numb myself to not care about things that matter. Does that resonate with you at all? 100%. And I find it kind of playing out in some specific places.
Starting point is 01:00:58 Like climate change, still a pretty big problem. It feels like we're rolling back all the things we did to stop it. I have two little kids. I have a two-year-old and one-year-old. I really worry about what planet they are going to inherit because of us. It's easy. What do you start to think about? it. You go to a dark place. It's completely demoralizing. It's like kind of nihilistic. But yeah,
Starting point is 01:01:18 I don't want to like lose that passion and sort of feeling and motivation to like actually do something about it, even if it's outside of government. All right. We're going to we're to end with a laugh. Two laughs. It's a tweet from Byron Donald. You've talked about Cracker real quite a bit. And I don't want you to be a smug coastal liberal. Okay. Smug coastal liberal agnostic. I'm assuming you're agnostic. I don't know. I've been asked lately. But this is congressman. Brian Downs, think he's going to run for Governor of Florida, or already is maybe. He says this, in college, I worked at Cracker Barrel in Tallahassee. I even gave my life, I'm sorry, I even gave my life to Christ in their parking lot.
Starting point is 01:01:59 What? Their logo was iconic and their unique restaurants were a picture of American culture. He really just snuck that one in there. I gave my life to Christ in the parking lot. Cool. I love that. And we all have places where we did, you know, have memories. I remember I did my first communion and all that.
Starting point is 01:02:17 But what do you think happened in the parking lot? Do we think that's a euphemism for like, I got a hand job? That's where my head went. Am I wrong? I don't know. I was thinking maybe he was so fucked up, like on drugs in the Cracker Barrow parking lot that, like, he crashed out. And he decided that day, like, he hit rock bottom. And that day he decided that he was going to find Jesus, which I hope.
Starting point is 01:02:41 I hope that is true and that he found something that served him. I don't know. We need to learn more. I've got follow-up questions about that. Yeah, I guess I was never a cracker rail guy. I think I've probably been once or twice. My memory of it is that it sucks and that I don't care. And I can't believe people are talking about this.
Starting point is 01:03:02 I'd love to go back to yelling about Sidney Sweeney because at least I was entertaining. You like talking about Sidney Sweeney's. I know why. I know why you like those photos coming across the screen. Great Gene. men still can like jugs. Yeah, here's the thing. The old Cracker Barrel logo was great.
Starting point is 01:03:17 I was in a big Crackle Barrel man myself either. The logo was great. The place had a vibe. Bill Crystal, the old sage and the Slack correctly pointed out something I did not know, which was that it was always phony though. Cracker Barrel was founded in 1970 as like a fake old thing. Like it's not like this thing that's been here since night. You know, so, um, whatever.
Starting point is 01:03:37 It had a good vibe. It was good branding. They fucked it up. The ad wizards are terrible. The whole, you know, marketing trend towards minimalism is totally bad and wrong. And I concur with that. I don't know what it has to do with Woke or what it has to do with Byron Donald's path towards redemption in the Lord Jesus. But I do think it was a bad change.
Starting point is 01:03:59 Look, I'm thrilled for Byron that he found God. Me too. I found it at a Waffle House one time. I mean, he hasn't really shown, I guess I should just say. He hasn't really shown a lot of Jesus-like behavior over the past few years. I mean, he is representing a state that has alligator alcatraz, which we just were discussing, where, like, we have people who did nothing wrong who are in a fucking hellhole in the middle of the Everglades where they have to have clean water shipped in. So anyway, I don't really think Jesus probably would have been before that. I don't speak for him. But anyway, I do like, whatever. You never know, Jesus, you know, he shows up in a strange places. He works in mysterious ways. Yeah. So, here's the political question I want to ask you. Like, am I being sanguine about feeling like the, like, absurd, woke attacks have lost some of their luster? Because there was a time when people like us would mock Kid Rock, you know, machine gunning a bunch of Budlights.
Starting point is 01:04:48 But then it became a huge thing. And a bunch of, you know, MAGA crazies, like really harmed the stock price for a long time. And I think it's scared corporations, right? Into like, it plowed a lot of ground to get to where we are now, which is where, like, you know, Donald Trump will try to sue you for a billion dollars if you have a DEI program. But like when I see Chris Rufo tweeting about the crack crack cracker barrel logo, I do wonder. if they've jumped the shark a little bit and the people are going to be like, come on, man, this is so fucking stupid.
Starting point is 01:05:16 I think so. I think we're past peak woke and past peak woke lash. And I think that's a good thing. Yeah. We have one more laugh ahead that breaking news, Donald Trump Jr. has just tweeted. Someone's going to have to explain why George Conway was already at John Bolton's house at the crack of dawn.
Starting point is 01:05:29 So I guess Donald Trump Jr. was watching our live stream. Nice. I will, I guess, say to Donald Trump Jr., that like George Conway showed up like an hour after the Fed showed up and he lives five minutes away, so you don't really need a crack investigative team to figure out how he did that. Yeah, he was like, he lived on the street, right?
Starting point is 01:05:43 He's like, I was at an apartment in Bethesda. It's not that big of a town. They're in Bethesda together. Great. All right, last thing, it's a long clip. So I think we'll have to play it in two parts. Alex Jones, aforementioned Alex Jones, has some concerns about his president that I'd like to share with you. Trump has got great genetics.
Starting point is 01:06:01 He's tough. And if he takes care of himself, he can make it through these years and then after. But if he doesn't, he's going to. to have, I predict Trump is going to have some type of collapse from the next 12 months at the current trajectory. And so I'm going to be talking about that today. He's got extremely swollen ankles. So he's going to, a collapse is coming in the next 12 months for Trump.
Starting point is 01:06:28 Did you watch this whole segment, by the way? I've got more. Okay. More is to come. First, I want to know if you have any thoughts about the collapse coming in the next 12 months. Sounds exciting. I'm thrilled to hear it. Alex Jones is ahead of the curve
Starting point is 01:06:41 probably on all things Biden's health unfortunately. That's true. We should probably admit that. Good point. We should probably admit that. Maybe Alex Jones really has his eye on elderly deterioration. Watch out, Trump fans. A collapse coming next 12 months. All right. I was most
Starting point is 01:06:57 intrigued and I got to say Tommy you hate to hang out to Alex Jones, but the man is a talent. I mean, we're here in the broadcasting space and when you listen to this next clip and what this guy's doing, he's just He's on another level, and you do have to credit him for that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:12 The main piece of evidence, as, as reference there for that Donald Trump will collapse in the next 12 months that Alex Jones provides is his cancals. Let's listen. If you pull up the ankles from Alaska, they're straight on shot. They are big. They are swollen. They are like really big. My next 19 and a half inches, his ankles look like they're.
Starting point is 01:07:39 Big neck. 15 inches around. That's not a good sign for the heart and the rest of the body. The rest of him, he's lost weight. He's not that fat. So that's not good. Everybody that you've known that's having heart problems, that's not good right there.
Starting point is 01:08:02 Okay? Okay. They're getting bigger and bigger. Oh, someone make a TikTok audio out of that. That is good. The cancels are getting fucking thick. The bigger and bigger. So, Tim, this is like a 25-minute, 30-minute segment.
Starting point is 01:08:21 Did you watch all of it by any chance? I caught eight minutes. I watched all of it on 2X. It starts with this genuinely concerned rant about Trump's health and he's begging his staff to let him get enough sleep and all this shit. And it's like, we all know that Donald Trump is like, he goes to the golf course and he dicks around and he watches Fox News all day. But the guy does seem to never sleep, right? Like he's tweeting at 3 a.m. He's doing Fox phoneers on the way back from Alaska.
Starting point is 01:08:45 It's like it's not terrible advice. Then it goes into, but it's all predicated off this Fox and Friends interview where Trump makes a joke about how he wants to get into heaven. He wants to stop the war in Ukraine to save some lives to get into heaven. And then Alex Jones makes this in super intense call for Trump to submit himself to Christ. Did you get to this part? Really? It's crazy, man. It gets really, really intense.
Starting point is 01:09:08 Then he goes. a barrel parking lot together. They should go. Yes, Byron, you're there. And then at the end, it's like, he plays this clip of Trump calling Netanyahu and himself a war hero. And he starts yelling at Trump and Netanyahu saying neither of them are war heroes. It is like, this is just, to your point about Alex being a talented broadcaster, this is a ranging
Starting point is 01:09:26 segment that starts with cancels and ends in Netanyahu. Oh, boy. Well, those cancels are getting thicker and thicker. Let's zoom in on those bad boys for the. the YouTube crowd. Tommy, Vitor. What a show. Thank you for doing this with me. And I hope that your ankles stay thin and that your heart stays healthy, my friend. They're good. They're good. And please, let's keep George Conway out of the clink. Everybody have a wonderful weekend. We'll see you back here on Monday with Bill Crystal. Peace.
Starting point is 01:10:08 ancient feats playing with your scissors again how lucky are we to have so much to lose now don't move when I tell you what to do pull me by the ankles
Starting point is 01:10:36 to the edge of the bed and take me like you're doing your dreams i'm not gonna stop you i'm not gonna stop you this time baby i want you to show me what you mean and help me with the crossword in the morning you are gonna make me tea gonna ask me how did i sleep The Bullock podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.

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