The Dan Bongino Show - Ep. 520 Unbelievable Examples of Far-Left Hypocrisy!
Episode Date: August 8, 2017SPONSOR LINKS: www.BrickhouseNutrition.com/Dan www.PrepareWithDan.com  Show Notes: In this episode I address:  Why are liberal Democrats fighting a corporate tax rate cut that will benefit America...n workers? https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-08-08/gop-is-said-to-discuss-a-mix-of-temporary-permanent-tax-changes  Liberals are losing their minds over a leaked Google memo about "diversity." http://thefederalist.com/2017/08/07/google-engineer-writes-common-sense-memo-workplace-diversity-pc-mob-erupts/  Why are Obamacare supporters still advocating for insurance company bailouts, despite their record revenues? https://www.conservativereview.com/articles/insurance-cartel-making-record-profit-why-more-illegal-bailouts  An interesting piece about both sides of the immigration debate. https://www.wsj.com/articles/immigration-anxieties-then-and-now-1502144233   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Dan Bongino.
All the Sanders supporters love throwing bombs at me, and I throw them right back.
I'm not here to pull any punches, right?
The Dan Bongino Show.
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even though the cost and quality of what they buy, quote, for you doesn't even matter to them?
On a show that's not immune to the facts with your host, Dan Bongino.
All right, welcome to the Renegade Republican with Dan Bongino.
Producer Joe, how are you today?
I'm doing well, Dan. I'm doing well.
Yeah, another big news day.
Listen, the tax debate is heating up, as I predicted yesterday,
with our show about that ridiculous liberal piece.
And thanks for the feedback.
Yesterday's show did phenomenal.
Very big numbers for us on a Monday.
I really appreciate it.
We deconstructed liberal ideology on yesterday's show.
If you missed it, go back and check it out.
This really stupid article that tried to point out how conservatives just don't care about people. So we're not even worthy of being spoken to.
We should be put in a corner with a dunce cap on,
and people should throw darts at us.
So, yeah, just annihilated that piece yesterday.
So thanks again for all the feedback.
I appreciate it.
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slash dan all right so the tax argument on fire art laffer was on fox news this morning right um
did you see that no i was working yeah yeah you're always working i know joe the uh so art laffer who
the uh founder of the eponymously named laffer curveve, L-A-F-F-E-R, was on Fox.
And there's a big to-do going on about taxes, Joe, because here's the politics.
I'll give you the politics first, the strategy, and we'll talk about the economics in a second.
But the politics of it are very simple.
The GOP, the heat is on.
They blew it on health care.
Everybody knows it.
People are really upset about what happened on Obamacare.
People are really upset that they elected these people, Joe, that they knocked on doors,
that they donated money, that they supported them, that they advanced what they thought
were GOP candidates backing them up on the repeal of Obamacare, and they flopped.
So the political pressure is on due to the upcoming midterm 2018 elections where every
member of Congress is up and one third of the Senate, as happens every two years.
And the political pressure is on to get something done because they're starting to see the polling.
And Joe, what matters more than anything to elected officials?
Re-election.
Yep.
That's it.
Everything else is secondary, folks.
Make absolutely no mistake.
They're seeing the polls.
They're seeing the generic
polls who do you want in charge democrats or republicans and democrats are leading it is a
frightening scenario now some good news for you is even if the democrats clean up uh with every seat
that trump won by three points or less in every congressional district the republicans will likely
still hold the House majority.
Now, again, given the fecklessness of the Republicans, I don't even know what a House majority means anymore. But as I've always said, although the Republicans are terrible,
the Democrats would be far worse. So don't ever mistake my show for advocating for voting for
Democrats. The Republicans can't get anything done. The Democrats will get something done,
which is the immediate destruction of the country. So the tax argument is heating up. And I was reading a piece in the Wall Street Journal today
in a follow-up piece in Bloomberg about the proposal to cut the corporate tax rate, which you
think would have universal support, folks. I mean, this is the kind of idea that even if you're a
diehard tax and spend big government, monopolistic government ruled Democrat, that you would say,
okay, our corporate tax rate is the
highest in the world. A lot of Democrats who are not diehard, dyed-in-the-wool liberals have even
admitted that this is really hurting business development in the United States. We have to
look at doing something with the corporate tax code. Our business tax is the highest in the
world at 35%. Our corporate tax rate, it's just too much, Joe. We don't need to be the gold medal
winner of corporate taxation across the entire known universe
and alternate universes as well
if you're one of those M-string theory guys
or whatever they call that stuff.
All right.
So what I found interesting about the journal piece,
which I'll put in the show notes today
and I'll email to your email
if you want to join my email list at Bongino.com.
Thank you for all the new subscribers, by the way.
The email list is blowing up, so I'm getting a lot of good feedback on it.
I will send the stories to your inbox every day.
It's just fascinating.
The Democrats have seemingly come to the conclusion, Joe, based on some economic data on the corporate tax.
And this is how I wrote it out.
I said, well, you may benefit, but we really have to screw over the businesses and the rich guys, so we don't care.
I mean, that's the only way to sum up their opposition.
They don't have any opposition right here.
They don't.
They have nothing.
So I'm just going to quickly cover this, move on to a couple other stories, because it is
a very busy news day.
There's other things I want to talk about.
But the joint committee, this is a quote, by the way, from this piece that discusses
the potential cut in the corporate tax rate and how the Democrats are really reluctant
to do this
because, you know, corporate taxes, we got to hammer those businesses. We got to get those
evil rich people. We got to get them. We need them. We need to get them like pirates on the
open seas. We need to go and hijack those boats. So here's a quote from the piece about a study,
which I found interesting
and after the quote you may say well what's your point you you what are you making the case that
democrats are making this is going to benefit big business hold on so listen to the quote first and
i'll explain this is from the journal piece the joint committee on taxation which will evaluate
any tax bill that moves through congress estimated that capital bears 75% of the long run corporate
tax burden with labor paying the rest.
What does that mean?
It basically says the corporate tax rate, according to the joint committee on taxation,
corporate taxes are paid basically by holders of capital.
The evil rich people are terrible rich people.
holders of capital, the evil rich people are terrible rich people. And that labor employees, the rest of us, the middle class, pays about 25% of the corporate
tax rate.
Now, that's a study in the Joint Committee of Taxation.
You may say, well, wow, what's the problem, Dan?
That fits perfectly into the left's narrative that evil rich people should pay all the taxes
and that workers shouldn't pay much of it.
Folks, that is one limited study.
There is a foundation, a library of other studies showing the exact opposite.
Some models, Joe, show the exact opposite number, that 70% of it is born by labor and
30% is born the other way, is born by capital.
is borne by labor, and 30% is borne the other way, is borne by capital.
Now, the fact that the evil rich people and the holders of capital, stocks and bonds and business owners are paying the tax doesn't make the tax good.
I'm not even making that case.
I'm just trying to give you two different scenarios about what's going on.
And I'm trying to show to you, and I will do some other quotes here, that the Democrats'
case is essentially this.
We don't care about the economy.
We just want to hammer rich people. Now now here's another quote from the piece it and this is now that defying
that 75 25 breakdown and saying that hey this may not be right you know the holders of capital may
not be bearing the entire corporate tax burden it may be more on labor than we think here's the
quote it says the nature of a global economy
complicates the situation
as corporations are taxed differently
depending on their locations
as capital flows easily across the border.
Here's another quote.
The Treasury Department under Mr. Mnuchin
pointed to a 2015 study
by Asimar and Hubbard
that estimated that a $1 increase
in the corporate tax rate
leads to a $0.60 decline in wages. So here's my increase in the corporate tax rate leads to a 60 cent
decline in wages. So here's my point, the point I'm trying to make, and I'm going to make use
another quote. I don't like to go too quote heavy on the show because I don't want to bore you to
death, but it's important you understand the economics of this. Point number one, we have
the highest corporate tax rate in the world. Nobody disagrees with that. Point number two,
corporations are exiting the United States for more corporate tax-friendly
environments like Ireland and other places in the world where the corporate taxes are
lower because they don't have the money to compete on a global stage while paying 35%
of that money to the United States government.
Right.
Third, yes, the effective tax rate is a little lower because there are some corporate tax
deductions, okay? I get that. But that's still not an argument for keeping effective tax rate is a little lower because there are some corporate tax deductions.
I get that.
But that's still not an argument for keeping the tax rate high.
That's just an argument for crony carve-outs.
Third, fourth, the data models and the studies go both ways.
One model shows that labor, you, the middle class, most of the listeners out there, based on just the percentage of the population,
some studies show you're paying about 25% of the corporate tax.
So yes, you're getting screwed.
The fact that you're getting screwed a little less in one study doesn't matter to me.
Other studies show you're paying up to 70% of the corporate tax.
So the corporate tax, although, Joe, it's a tax on business, there are studies out there
that show you're paying up to 70% of it.
Here's a quote from a Bloomberg piece.
And again, I'll put in the show notes.
A separate study from the Tax Foundation found that lowering the corporate rate to 15% for
just 10 years would initially boost growth, but it then would be slower in the seventh
year if there hadn't been a cut at all as companies brace for a higher rate of return.
A temporary cut.
This is the line.
Folks, remember this one, and I'll explain it in a second.
cut this is the this is the line this folks remember this one and i'll explain it in a second a temporary cut would be more likely to benefit shareholders according to that june report while
a permanent cut benefits a permanent cuts benefits would trickle down to workers gosh i hate that
term because someone's going to say trickle down economics which is no such thing what's the point
of that again showing how democrats even though the data goes in both directions and the common sense data would dictate that you pay the corporate tax,
most of the corporate tax, because a corporate tax, corporations, Joe, are just tax collectors
for the government. You pass a tax on a corporation, it doesn't invent new money.
It just adds that into the price of the product. That's all it does. So the data goes both ways,
showing that either way,
labor and middle-class workers
are paying a good portion, Joe,
of the corporate tax rate.
If you work,
if you're an employee for a company
and the corporate taxes go up in that company,
nobody disputes you're paying a good chunk of that.
The only thing in question
is how much of it you're actually paying.
The irony of the second quote I just gave you is the democrats want any tax cut to sunset after 10 years even though the data as evidenced
by that quote i just told you from the tax foundation is that if it sunsets it will not
benefit labor as much as it would benefit businesses because after seven years joe
businesses would start to anticipate a tax hike again. So let's say that, does that
make sense? The Democrats are fighting for a 10-year sunset. In other words, corporate tax
cut and it'll disappear after 10 years. The Republicans want it to be permanent. Even though
the data shows that if you sunset the tax cut and make it go away after 10 years, it will not
benefit workers. It'll benefit the companies more because they'll start to stockpile after about seven years
to store up money for the increase in taxes after 10 years that's going to come after
it sunsets.
So basically, a permanent tax cut helps workers and Democrats still don't want it because,
again, as I opened up with, you may benefit, but we really have to screw over the businesses.
This is just so upsetting, folks.
It's just amazing what Democrats will do to advance this sick, deranged ideology, that they just have to hurt
people no matter what, despite the fact that all of the data points in the opposite direction.
All right, I'll put those stories in the show notes today. I just found them fascinating.
Another example of how we just can't get things done in D.C. because the Democrats are committed to class warfare and really deranged income inequality arguments.
All right.
Did you see the I don't even know how to describe it.
The hullabaloo developing over this Google email.
You heard about this.
I don't know if you guys covered this morning.
No.
Yeah. Yeah, so a memo, an internal memo that was sent out by a Google engineer,
internally in Google, has blown up and become, I kid you not, Joseph,
an international, what do you call it, storefront page story.
So here's what happened.
An employee, he works for Google.
He's an engineer.
He wrote this memo.
He sent it around.
It leaked to the press.
And in the memo, he talks about Google's efforts to, and this is the lefty buzz term, Google's diversity, Joe, efforts, how they're actually hurting the company and hurting people within the company because they're incentivizing specifically. He mentions things like, uh, uh,
not things he mentions diversity efforts,
such as having more female engineers,
how they're pushing women into fields.
They may not be comfortable with and how it's hurting men who would
otherwise get jobs in the engineering field and how that's,
you know,
this is hurting Google's overall efforts.
Oh my gosh.
I have a piece by the Federalist.
In the Federalist, I always pronounce his name right.
David Hersonia, I think it is.
But I'll put it in the show notes.
It's a really good piece.
And the left is melting down over this memo
because the case the guy makes is apparently...
How do you describe this after yesterday's show?
Remember we discussed in yesterday's show how the left, they have to characterize people as evil,
therefore not worthy of a conversation in order to shut down facts and data.
I think the problem the left is having with this piece is the guy who wrote the memo inside of Google
makes a pretty clear cut case that this isn't helping anyone, their so-called
diversity efforts. And the left, of course, Joe, doesn't want to have a debate about this. Now,
here's a great quote from this. This is the author of the internal memo in Google. He writes in his
update to the memo, because he's now been fired and it's causing this big, big stink. He says,
psychological safety is built on mutual respect and acceptance.
But unfortunately, our culture of shaming and misrepresentation is disrespectful and
unaccepting of anyone outside its echo chamber. Now, if that doesn't hammer home what we were
talking about yesterday, how you're not even allowed to bring certain topics up, and if you
do, you will be, quote, shamed and misrepresented.
Then I don't know what else does.
It's the left's effort to control the dialogue by stopping it.
They don't want a dialogue about this.
Now, a couple of points I wanted to bring up on this piece.
Guys, ladies, this is a big deal.
My wife is brilliant.
She's the smartest woman I know.
Guys, ladies, this is a big deal. My wife is brilliant. She's the smartest woman I know. And my wife has computer capabilities, to do a statistical analysis for a project I was working on
with one of the professors in the psychology department.
And the statistical analysis
used kind of an outdated statistical program,
you know, on a disc that,
I mean, it was even hard to find anything
that could run this program.
But my wife, I remember coming home and saying,
can you help me out with this?
She figured it out in like two minutes,
even though she had almost zero experience with the statistics and i
was so impressed so my wife is is brilliant when it comes to this kind of information now she's not
an engineer per se but the interesting part of what of the memo the internal google memo is the
guy is not saying in the in the piece that women are stupid and can't be engineers. He's simply making the point,
and let me read you a quote. This is from his actual memo. He says,
I'm not saying that we should restrict people to certain gender roles. I'm advocating for quite
the opposite. Treat people as individuals, not just another member of their, quote, group.
Folks, what's controversial about
that? I don't understand. He's simply saying that if women don't want to be engineers and don't have
a skill set to become engineers, that's probably not because they're, you know, they're women.
Maybe they just didn't like it. Why are we pushing people into the careers they're not,
they don't want or aren't suited for? It's kind of like conservative values, isn't it?
Well, you would think, but this is causing a
big uproar with the left because the left is convinced that we should have equal outcomes
no matter what. Now, I wanted to bring this up because this is important. If you read Hayek and
The Road to Serfdom and a lot of Hayek's work, Friedrich Hayek, which is a great book, by the
way, Road to Serfdom. I mean, you have to read it. It's a
quick read. It's a brilliant book. It's just an amazing piece. He writes, and I'm not quoting him
exactly, but in the book, he writes about how the only way to enforce equal outcomes on a society,
Joe, is to treat people unequally. There is no other way. Now, I'll use a simpler example rather
than the Google engineer example that we're supposed to force women into engineering careers.
So in other words, Joe, Google's diversification efforts, this isn't their exact number or anything, but we need 50% women and 50% men.
Well, what if 50% of the women don't want to be engineers?
So the only way to enforce these equal outcomes is to treat people unequally.
Now, I'll give you a simpler example.
And Hayek kind of alludes to this in the book.
If you were to enforce equal outcomes in income, in other words, income equality,
kind of hark back to what I just said, the Democrats focus on income equality when it
comes to corporate taxation.
They're convinced they have to hurt businesses to help the middle class,
even though what they're doing
is actually hurting the middle class too.
The only argument is what percentage of the middle class
and how much extra money they're going to pay.
That's the only argument.
Nobody disagrees a corporate tax hike
hurts the middle class worker.
It's just a matter of how much.
But the Dems are so committed to hurting businesses,
they want to hurt the middle class too.
They're just arguing over the degree of hurt,
the degree of ass whooping they're going to give them.
That's the only argument.
You tracking me here?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're all with you.
Their income equality arguments require,
so income, everybody should have income
that's equal or relatively equal.
The whole basis of income equality and their argument against income inequality is that people should have equal income.
But the only way to do that is to treat people unequally, Joe.
What do I mean by that?
There is going to be different levels of output, different levels of commitment to work, different levels of work in general.
There are some people who just refuse to work.
Sure.
Do you deny that? I mean, even if you're a diehard, dyed-in-the-wool, radical,
Antifa, black scarf over your face, beating up conservatives, Bernie Sanders, liberal,
do you argue the basic premise that different people will work at different levels of intensity or at all. So what you're saying then is,
if you're arguing for income equality,
is that even though there are different levels of output
and commitment to work,
that if, say, Joey Bag of Donuts works 10 hours a week
and could work 40 but just chooses not to
and makes, say, $200 a week for his 10 hours,
you know, that Johnny Rottenapples,
who works 40 hours a week and makes $500,
what you're essentially saying, Joe,
is you should take money from Johnny Rottenapples,
even though he works 40 hours a week
and puts out more of an effort.
You should take money and transfer that money
to Joey Bag of Donuts because, why?
Because they should have equal outcomes and income.
Yeah.
But what's,
I don't understand what your premise is for that.
I actually do understand the prem,
the liberals premise for the entire thing is that,
Oh,
Joey bag of donuts just isn't working on because society and capitalism
failed them,
which is absolutely asinine,
but that's their anti anti-communist approach.
So what they're saying is that you should treat people unequally.
In other words, Johnny Rotten's 40 hours of output
should be treated differently than Joey Bagadona's 10 hours of output
simply because Johnny Rotten Apples works harder.
Now, folks, do you get how there's...
That can't possibly make sense.
Like, this was Hayek's larger point, was that your efforts to create an equal outcome requires
you to treat people unequally, so it's ideologically antithetical to what you're saying.
You're saying, Joe, that people should all be treated equally as you treat people unequally
to treat people equally.
Sure.
Now, that is what this memo was all about.
That's why the left is going wild.
Because in this memo to Google, he's basically saying that, wait, shouldn't we be treating
people as individuals?
And shouldn't Google be treating people for engineering positions based on the quality
of their work and their productivity?
And basically, Google's response is,
no, we should be meeting a quota first
and worry about the skill second.
Folks, do you understand how that actually hurts people?
The point I'm trying to make,
and I hope I'm clear on this, Joe.
Yeah.
If I'm not, you're always the audience on Budsman.
You're good.
Is that this is not a pain-free policy.
A commitment to, quote, buzzwords like income equality, equality and diversity are not pain-free.
They require you to absolutely treat people unequally.
When you give a job to someone in Google or something,
I'm not going to be a story in a second.
It's going to disturb you.
But when you give a job to Google and Facebook
and the Secret Service, the NYPD, the United Nations, whatever it may be, when you give a job
to someone based not on their skill sets, but on a commitment to their biological reproductive parts,
the color of their skin, their sexual orientation or something else,
parts, the color of their skin, their sexual orientation or something else.
The person with the skill set who worked to get that job is eliminated.
This is a zero sum game.
I don't mean eliminated like killed like Terminator style.
I mean, they were eliminated from the position.
This is not pain free.
Stop insisting that your commitment to diversity is painless and doesn't hurt anyone. Your commitment to diversity at its very basic level, Joe,
requires you to treat people unequally and to discriminate against others.
Your justification for the discrimination that,
oh, well, you know, white privilege and male patriarchal power structure
has gotten ahead for years,
does not justify further discrimination to battle discrimination.
Do you understand that that's why this memo, the left is going wild?
Because if people start to expose what's going on in companies and within the government
with commitments to quote diversity that are not pain free, that are hurting real people
in real time, the left is afraid their entire victim agenda will fall apart.
in real time, the left is afraid their entire victim agenda will fall apart.
Because, Joe, their entire agenda is based on the fact that the white patriarchal power structure, you know, remember critical theory we talked about?
Yeah.
How if you are a white man that the society's benefited you for so long that you need to
be kept out of the conversation?
Yeah.
Folks, that is not going to help advance a more prosperous, economically prosperous and more beneficial, more more cohesive society and enhancing a reverse discrimination to battle past discrimination.
That's not going to help. You have to get to the root of the problem.
The root of the problem, you know, why are certain people in certain ethnic groups
doing better than other people
in certain ethnic groups?
Well, Joe,
a common sense person
would say,
well,
what are people
in certain cultural,
racial,
and ethnic groups
doing to lead to that success?
What are they doing?
A, they're going to school.
B, there's stable families.
Maybe we should start
to look at policies
and incentivizing people
to follow that path.
That's not what
they're doing. And this is why the left is absolutely losing their minds over this.
Quick story about this, in case you think, again, that these commitments to, quote, diversity
are pain-free and income equality. They're not pain-free. They require the absolute unequal
treatment of other people. When I was a Secret Service agent, and I'm not... I know some people get upset when I
plug my stuff on my own podcast, which I understand. My book's coming out on September 19th,
and I've been very, very scarce with the promotion because I don't want to beat you guys up and
ladies out there. I'm not trying to get money from you all all the time. I always hated that.
It's kind of annoying, actually.
But I do have a book coming out September 19th.
I'd appreciate it if you'd go pick it up.
It's on Amazon now.
It's called Protecting the President. But there is a chapter in the book where I discuss the Secret Services commitment to diversity as well.
And I get it, folks.
I know that sounds great.
It's a buzzword.
But I talk about the real- world ramifications of what that commitment to
diversity over the equal treatment of people, because remember, a commitment to diversity
means you have to treat people unequally, what the real world ramifications of that were for
the Secret Service. I was there in the Secret Service. I was an instructor in the academy,
and I saw what happened. Folks, I saw some really disturbing things. I describe them in a chapter
of the book, and I think I'm really going to freak you out because you would think something with such
bipartisan unanimous agreement, Joe, such as protection of the president.
I mean, we can all agree, right?
The president of the United States, regardless of who he is or his ideological leanings,
excuse me, that he needs to be protected to conduct the business of the office.
We all agree, right?
That's something dramatic about that, right?
You would think with something like that, people would understand that the best people,
the best of the best of the best, the cream of the crop should be put around the president to
secure his life or maybe her life in the future. Folks, that's not what's happening.
What happened in the Secret Service is their commitment to diversity.
And again, it's just a buzzword. I watched this happen. They'll argue this till
kingdom come, but I'm telling you it's true. There would be quotas. We have to have a certain
amount of women on the detail. We have to have a certain amount of Hispanic agents, a certain
amount of black agents, a certain amount of Asian agents. We can't have this many white agents.
Folks, this is the kind of stuff that's destroying America right now.
When we don't have a system based on merit and you're putting people in front of the president of the United States or other protectees, some of which were not who were not qualified.
And I go over some examples in the book, people who are not qualified to do the job.
You are literally not figuratively putting the country at risk and other countries as
well as you put some of these people on foreign dignitary details who are protecting them who don't have the physical capability or the skill
set to actually do the job i hear you i think our listeners do too joe that is not only treating
qualified agents who deserve those positions who are locked out of them because it's zero sum
if there's one pin personnel identification identification number, one spot in the Secret
Service on the Presidential Protection Division, and you give it to a person unqualified based on
a diversity quota from a person who is qualified, you are now unfairly discriminating against a
qualified person and you're unfairly treating the country who is entitled to top tier protection for
the President of the United States and other protectees. I know that's going to be controversial.
I didn't write the book to be controversial.
Again, I don't need the money.
I don't say that in a pretentious, jerk kind of way.
I wrote the book because I think it's important.
I think it's important right now to discuss what's going on within the federal government
given the Trump administration's focus on cleaning out the swamp.
I think cleaning out the swamp also means cleaning out the old ways of doing things, Joe.
And if the old way of doing things
is enforced discrimination
using buzz terms like diversity,
which don't mean anything,
rather than a meritocracy,
which means employing
and promoting people
who actually have the skill set
to get the job done,
I think it's time,
despite the fact that the left
is going to lose their minds
and go wild,
to start to fight back
against that as well.
And this Google memo is an example of how viciously the left will fight back.
Remember, people get hurt when you commit to treating people unfairly. This is hysterical
as we're talking about this. Look, I have Fox on in the background. Google fires engineer who
vote viral memo. I'm telling you, this thing has gone nuclear. So I'll put this. There's a really
good piece by, again, I say his name wrong all the time,
David Hersonia.
It's in the Federalist.
I will put it up in the show notes today.
And if you want it, I can email it to you in box.
Just sign up for my email list.
All right, a couple more really good stories to get to today.
Really busy news day.
Before we get to that, today's show also brought to you by our buddies
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uh by our buddy dan horowitz at conservative review today this guy really brings it sometimes
when he writes his pieces on health care i know you do his podcast too over at Conservative View, so you guys can check that out too.
But he wrote a really fantastic piece at CR
about this just abomination,
this bailout we've been discussing repeatedly,
these cost-sharing subsidies,
the bailout of the health insurance industry
by the American taxpayer.
Folks, this is outrageous what's happening.
Now, just to be clear again,
for those of you who missed my last week's show, what this is, these are monthly payments,
monthly payments from the United States government being made to health insurance companies.
By the way, stipulated under Obamacare. I thought the left hated health insurance companies. Now
they want the government to pay them off. Monthly payments. And these monthly payments are being made to
health insurance companies to offset high deductibles for lower income folks who basically
can't afford deductibles and co-pays and things like that. So there's subsidy payments made to
the health insurance companies to cover some of those folks. Now, forgetting for a moment why
those deductibles are high, precisely because of Obamacare, why the cost of health care is high,
precisely because of government involvement.
I can't go over that again,
but the third-party payer effects have discussed it repeatedly.
Health care is expensive because of the government,
not in spite of it.
What's really amazing about these cost-sharing subsidies
is it fits in with the entire narrative of the show today.
The narrative of the show today
has been how liberals will hurt other people
just to advance a narrative that fits into their limited worldview.
First, I brought up the corporate tax.
How, again, nobody, no one disputes the fact that a business tax hurts employees.
The only question, Joe, is the degree.
Liberals don't care.
Secondly, the liberal commitment to diversity, the buzzword.
Again, no reasonable person disputes that other people are discriminated against and
treated unfairly when you commit to diversity over skills and merit.
Nobody disputes that.
Liberals don't care.
Third, liberals, oh, these health insurance companies are ruining american healthcare
there should be no profits in healthcare well why are you paying them off with our tax money
i don't what what am i missing here this is a liberal idea now to be fair and so critique here
against the trump administration to be fair here they're still paying these cost sharing subsidies.
And there are Republicans out there, feckless Republicans, who still support paying them.
Taxpayer money to health insurance companies.
Now, Dan Horowitz makes an unbelievable facts and database case as to how big of an economic abomination and how unfair this really is.
A couple of takeaways from the piece, which I'll put in the show notes again today.
Insurance companies are privy
to a $275 billion tax deduction.
Oh.
Joe, now that tax deduction,
you get health insurance from CBM, right?
Yes, I do, Dan.
So WCBM and Joe,
they get a tax deduction for the value of Joe's healthcare plan, meaning
that he gets to take that off his income.
Right.
That deduction, you all get it.
It's not just Joe.
It's not like some special CBM carve out.
Right.
But that deduction, believe it or not, Joe, is $275 billion is twice the value of the
mortgage interest deduction.
That is, that's a staggering number. Credit to Horowitz, I didn't have this number in
the back of my head. I knew it was worth a lot. I didn't know the number. Twice the value of the
mortgage interest deduction, or I should say more than the value of the mortgage interest deduction.
That is just staggering. So the health insurance companies that the liberals hate get a $275 billion tax deduction.
We should still pay them off monthly.
Here's another one.
This one is going to blow your mind.
I'm going to take a note on something quick.
I don't want to forget this.
The big six healthcare companies, Joe.
But remember, they need a payoff from the government.
Made $6 billion in combined revenue the last
quarter up 29 percent from the same quarter a year ago yeah all right listen folks i'm a capitalist
don't get me wrong and i'm a capitalist because i believe in freedom not because i believe in in
you know the unending accumulation of wealth and income inequality i just believe in freedom
that's it and freedom comes with a consequence And the consequence of freedom is you're free. And some people are free to work.
And some people are free not to. Okay. That's kind of the funny thing about freedom. You're
free to not do anything if you don't want to do anything. But what I'm not for is capitalism,
crony capitalism, and really crony socialism in this case. Because what we've done here, Joe,
is we've privatized the revenue and we've made public the risk.
What do I mean by that?
I mean the public, the taxpayers,
now monthly are paying off insurance companies
who, let me get this straight,
made $6 billion in combined revenue last quarter,
up 29% from the same quarter a year ago.
Again, these numbers are in Horowitz's piece.
You can check them out yourself.
What?
I mean, I'm asking a very serious question to liberals.
No screaming and yelling.
Very calmly, rationally, and reasonably.
Let's pretend we're in court for a second.
All right.
You know, we're in that few good men moment
before the, you can't handle the truth.
You're damn right I ordered the code red.
Ah!
I love that movie, even though it's like a big lib movie that loves
to, you know, they shamefully attack
the Marines. There's some good acting in the movie.
They do. The Marines are great. It's meant to
paint Marines in a bad light, but
Jack Nicholson was good in that movie. But what I find
amazing is a very serious question for liberals.
How do you justify
supporting Obamacare
knowing that Obamacare initiated these cost-sharing payments, which are taxpayers subsidized payouts to an insurance industry that at least in some cases is raking in unbelievable revenue right now?
How do you justify that?
Again, I'm a capitalist.
I'm not attacking.
I'm not attacking these health insurance companies they are simply working around the legislation that that some of
them lobbied to get to be fair but the government caused the problem the government is the one
making these rules not the insurance company now you could argue they're lobbying yes of course
definitely tilt to the playing field i'm not in any way suggesting otherwise. But even if that's your argument, Libs, right, Joe, say your comeback is, well, they lobbied us through Ob the democrat congress and senate to write into the
obamacare bill a subsidy paid by the taxpayers to insurance companies making near record revenue
and you're blaming the health insurance companies for what forcing you to eat your oatmeal
just don't eat the oatmeal just do you understand they have no argument, Joe? Yeah. And I read this and I'm like, I can't
get over. I cannot believe what's going on right now that we have the Democrat Party, which is
supposed to be in it, you know, for the quote little guy. The whole idea of the Democrat Party
was they were going to fight for the for the everyday working man has completely collapsed.
That's why you see the South, you see the West Virginia governor,
you see all of these people moving under the Republican tent
because they're starting to realize slowly but surely
that the Democrat Party's not in it for the little guy.
They're in it for big government and big business that supports big government.
There's a reason a lot of health care money and lobby money flows to democrat lawmakers because
democrat lawmakers ensure that money flows back to them this isn't complicated folks these are
devastating numbers all right read the horowitz piece i just i i mean it's a serious question
liberals and if i have um you know i get some emails from liberalists there's one particularly
angry one joe yesterday man he was it was all caps too and like exclamation points you know this is one of those i get that from uh remember this sylvester
stallone sharon stone movie where he's a bomb maker and uh they the father they killed the
father at the end those are his last words i always remember that this guy was pissed yesterday
he was really upset but it's a serious question for lips how do you justify that how do you justify taxpayer payoffs to health insurance companies you rail against
every day i'd like to know your answer because i'm i'm i'm really unsure as to how this fits in
with your worldview hey uh thanks to the one listener yesterday who emailed me about isdn
remember joe a week ago or so or two two weeks ago, we talked about how radio,
talk radio folks used to be done over ISDN lines. Remember those internet connections? All the time. You bet I do.
Yeah. I mean, a lot of talk radio hosts, by the way, still have ISDN hookups. A lot of the ones
you know, I'm not going to say who, but they still... And I said, well, ATMs are the only
ones left using ISDNs. I had a listener. It goes to show you, we have listeners who do everything.
Guys like, hey, Dan, love your show, but I service ATMs and they don't use ISDNs. I had a listener. It goes to show you, we have listeners who do everything. Guys like, hey, Dan, love your show,
but I service ATMs
and they don't use ISDN anymore either.
Oh, is that right?
Yeah, so you and I both were kind of,
I bet we're like, really?
Because I had heard that,
that that was the only other industry
that still used it.
So thank you to the listener
who corrected that.
I heard that from an engineer, yeah.
Yeah, so did I.
I heard it from a guy in a bank.
Yeah, I think we still use ISDNs.
But he said, no.
He said, even the ones in gas stations, the ATMs, go over either like a cellular network or the internet connection there. They don't use ISDNs. So thank you for the correction. And you know on the show, if we say something wrong, call us out, man. We will always correct it. I had heard that from someone and I should have fact-checked it before I put it out there, but I appreciate it nonetheless.
I should have fact-checked it before I put it out there, but I appreciate it nonetheless.
Hey, one last topic I wanted to bring up.
I read a piece in the journal today, a very fair piece on immigration policy in the United States.
And I am a realist on immigration.
I am not a restrictionist, but I am a realist.
I think having lived through immigration personally in my household, my wife is an immigrant to the country.
We went through the process. It's a tough, arduous, and sometimes ridiculous process. Maybe one day I'll discuss it
in more depth. But I get it. I see both sides of the equation. And my stance, just so we're clear
on where we're operating from, is I have no problem with this RAISE Act out right now. I
think it is time to maybe put a cap on legal immigration for a little while
for simply folks at this point for assimilation purposes. We can't endlessly take in millions of
new people each year and expect them to acclimate to our culture in the United States. It's just
very difficult. Ebbs and flows should be natural. We should allow people who are here to acclimate
to basically a different culture and a different lifestyle in the United States.
I get it.
I'm not one of these people who doesn't understand the economic consequences of that.
There are some damaging economic consequences to restricting and capping legal immigration.
I get that.
But I do think the assimilation effects and allowing people to assimilate into the United States and develop one cohesive country far outweigh some of
the economic effects. Now, I am absolutely against illegal immigration. Be a period, full stop.
There are laws in the country. You don't like them, change them. You don't get to pick what
laws you enforce. But there's a really good piece in the journal today. It is subscriber only, so
you know, I'll put it in the show notes, but you're on your own with that.
I didn't want to get into the piece too much, but he talks about how unskilled labor, how, listen,
you know, we have to be really careful though about unskilled labor. So he's given point counterpoint. He says, you know, immigration can be good because we can bring ideas and people and
new energy and new taxpayers of the country, but unskilled labor, you know, there's a problem here
as well. How much unskilled labor are we going to need?
And I thought, gosh, I got to bring this up in light of a conversation we've already had.
And I thought, again, it points out liberal hypocrisy fitting with our corporate tax argument,
our argument about the Google memo, our argument about taxpayer subsidies to healthcare companies
liberals say they hate.
Here's another one.
Liberals advocate, Joe, right?
I mean, the liberal position is basically open borders.
Can we all agree on that?
They won't say that, but you and I know it's true, right?
I'm not talking about the Democrat position.
To be clear, I'm not knocking Democrats.
There are a lot of Democrats, especially moderate Democrats,
who are absolutely for a border wall
and controlling the influx of people into the country.
But I don't think a reasonable person would argue
that the far left position,
the liberal position on immigration,
is essentially open borders.
Yeah, come on in.
Yeah, come on in.
Anybody, anytime, don't even worry about it.
That's their position.
If you're advocating for that,
but then you're also advocating,
which liberals also support, a good majority of them at least
this universal basic income idea how can those two mesh at the same time think about what i'm
telling you joe if your argument for a universal basic income is a liberal in other words the idea
that the government should give people literally a universal basic income the government should
give people let's say thirty thousand. The government should give people,
let's say $30,000 a year.
Taken from other people, obviously.
That's where the government gets its money.
But liberals like Mark Zuckerberg from Facebook and other people are arguing that yes,
that people aren't going to have anything to do
in the future.
See where I'm going with this?
The argument for the UBI,
the universal basic income,
is that automation, robotics, and technology are going to eliminate people from traditionally manual labor jobs that
didn't require a lot of skills. Robots will do them, Joe. People aren't going to have anything
to do. They're going to be bored. So therefore, the government should pay people a universal basic
income to compensate for the increase in technology because that lower level of skills
is not going to be necessary anymore
because a robot's going to do your job.
Well, where will these unskilled laborers work?
Thank you.
There you go.
You picked up what I was putting down.
You can't make the same case.
You cannot say on one hand, right?
This is why it was at one of Johnson's economic advisors, Lyndon Johnson
said once, go find me a one-armed economist, because they were always saying on one hand,
and on the other hand, just give me a hand. Give me one hand. On one hand, they're saying this.
They're saying, listen, we need open borders. Everybody has a right to come to the United
States. It's the land of the free, home of the brave. You had Jim Acosta at CNN. The Statue of
Liberty, saying a poem somehow on the Statue of Liberty was legislative or executive policy,
which is absurd. They give us everybody. But then on the other hand, Joe, they're arguing
that we should have a universal basic income because in the future, nobody's going to have
anything to do because unskilled laborers will have nothing to do. So I don't get it.
Bring in unskilled labor, even though unskilled labor is going to have nothing to do.
And therefore, we should pay the unskilled labor to come to the United States.
These arguments just don't correspond.
It takes a level of psychological disconnect only possible with liberals.
It really does.
You know, one quick thing on this topic, because I tweeted out something.
You should never say your own stuff is funny.
That's like the worst thing ever. You should never say your own stuff is funny. That's like the worst thing ever.
Never ever say your own stuff.
But I did tweet out something last night
I thought was a little bit funny.
There was a report on drudge
that if you sleep less than six hours a night,
it can cause brain damage.
So I tweeted out subsequently.
I said, and in other news,
breaking research reports,
liberals have a really tough time staying asleep at night.
I think liberals have, far left liberals must have, they're not
sleeping six hours a night. The brain damage
is kicking in. Bring in unskilled labor,
but they're not going to have anything to do when they
get here. Pay higher corporate tax
even though it screws the middle class. Yeah, but we're just
arguing how much we should screw them.
Obamacare subsidies. Health insurance companies
suck, but we should pay them off every single
month and add to their record profits.
The Google memo.
We got to have diversity,
but what if it screws other people?
Screw those other people.
Don't have to treat them fairly.
We're just talking about treating those people fairly.
Incredible.
All right, folks.
Thanks again for tuning in.
I really appreciate it.
I'll see you all.
You just heard the Dan Bongino Show.
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