The Dan Bongino Show - Ep. 691 Is the Tide Turning in Our Favor?

Episode Date: April 4, 2018

Summary: In this episode I address the reasons behind Trump’s improving approval ratings. I also address the breaking news about the Mueller investigation. Finally, I address the budget problems, so...me interesting economic news, and what they mean for you.    News Picks: Australian gun control will not work here.   Why is President Trump more popular than ever?   Is Congress considering cutting some of its out-of-control spending?   The Left insists that more guns equal more homicide. But the data says otherwise.   The suspicious timing of this Rod Rosenstein memo should raise eyebrows.    1 in 6 people would raise taxes on the rich even if they knew it would hurt the poor.   Here are two major problems with the Bob Mueller witch hunt.    How much would we have to cut from the federal budget to fix our debt problem?    Copyright CRTV. All rights reserved.     Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 get ready to hear the truth about america on a show that's not immune to the facts with your host dan bongino welcome to the dan bongino show producer joseph how are you today i am doing well dan very good to be here thank you folks joe there's a lot of dancing going on out there your dancing's mattering by the way way. It's mattering big time. I'm going to cover this in the beginning of the show, but this disastrous omnibus bill, this gross overspending budget bill that was signed into law, what is it, last Friday? No, the Friday before last Friday. I remember being in the gym and I ranted on it. And I said, listen, it was a bad deal. Trump shouldn't have signed it. I appreciate the fact that I think he understands now it was a mistake.
Starting point is 00:00:52 I was really upset at the GOP Senate and the House for abandoning their principles once again. But you guys are speaking out and ladies out there and it matters. I'm going to put a story at the show notes today, Yahoo News, that members are going home to their districts. Members, members, that's such a swamp term. Sorry, I just read it all the time, and I shouldn't be using ridiculous jargon like that. Congressmen and women are going back to their districts, and people are up in their grills in a nice way. We don't do violence like the left, but they're up in the grills, Joe, in the grill, and saying, Dude, lady, what's the deal?
Starting point is 00:01:30 I thought we were the party of fiscal responsibility. You're spending us into oblivion. And the message is getting out there. This is why I tell you all the time, you know, that quote, the enemy is not vanquished until he considers himself so. We're not vanquished. Keep speaking out. The dancing matters. They are paying. I'm getting it from people left and right.
Starting point is 00:01:48 I talked to a guy the other day. I'm not going to say who or even hint, but someone of influence who said the same thing. That back in their district, people are like, what the mm happened with that spending bill? Yeah, I'm getting the tweets too, man, of people doing the dancing, giving you the examples. Go, go, go!
Starting point is 00:02:04 Yeah, and we're getting great emails, man, of people dancing, giving you the examples. Go, go, go! Yeah, and we're getting great emails, and the contest is fully underway. It's the dance contest. You sent us your story of how you danced, and my wife has already narrowed down a couple. We got a few. We keep sending them in, though. It was a great story I heard the other day of a guy who does a carpool. You know who you are.
Starting point is 00:02:25 I'm not going to mention your name, but he does a carpool, Joe. So I think he picks up randos on the way, like random people to get in the carpool lane. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. And got lipstick on. My wife kissed me before she left. She left some lipstick remnants on me here. Taking a quick trip.
Starting point is 00:02:41 But he said in the car, he puts on my show. So if you're listening now in that carpool, thank you for doing that. Apparently somebody in the carpool complained and found it offensive and he was like, my car, daddy-o. You can walk if you'd like.
Starting point is 00:02:55 We hold your car, you put on what you want. So I love it. Your stories are great. Another great one, I get an email from a person said every time they go in a Verizon store with the phones
Starting point is 00:03:07 they switch all of the phones to go to the Drudge Report for their homepage. Greatest story ever. So good job. Send them in. We're going to pick six winners and I may continue this contest for a long time. I got a lot of books. I only have six
Starting point is 00:03:23 of Kilmeade's books, but I have a whole lot of my books. I'll sign them for you. I may continue this for a long time. I got a lot of books. I only have six of Kilmeade's books, but I have a whole lot of my books. I'll sign them for you. I may continue this for a long time. I'm having so much fun with these emails about you all. I'm telling you, folks, if you want to act big, you want to run for office, go big. You want to go small and switch all the phones and Verizon to the Drudge Report? Either one. I think they're all great, and they all make me laugh.
Starting point is 00:03:44 My wife and I get a kick out of them. Either one. I think they're all great, and they all make me laugh. My wife and I get a kick out of them. She's helping me read through the hundreds and hundreds of emails of people making small gestures and dancing each day. So good job. All right. Today's show brought to you by iTarget. We love iTarget, folks. Anybody can shoot a firearm.
Starting point is 00:04:02 The question is, can you shoot it proficiently and accurately? That's the real demarcation point. That's what matters, okay? Now, dry firing is one of the best ways to practice your firearms proficiency and accuracy, your trigger control, trigger pressure, sight alignment, sight picture. But dry firing, you know, it's a great way to do it, but you want to take your dry fire practice to the next level. What is dry firing? Dry firing is depressing the trigger on a safely unloaded weapon. Check it. Check it twice. Check it three times.
Starting point is 00:04:30 When you unload a weapon, you rack the slide to the rear. You open the cylinder. You want to look. Make sure it's unloaded. You want to look away and then look back again and then do it a third time. And then take your pinky finger, probe those cylinders or the chamber and make sure it is unloaded. You then dry fire a safely unloaded weapon and you practice your trigger control
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Starting point is 00:05:06 the hammer will fall on the laser round and it emits a laser onto a target they send you. And you can see where the round would have gone, which is great because now you know if you're accurate or not. I've got friends of mine, my co-writer on the book, whose husband, I tell the story all the time, cannot put the system down. She's still mad at me for it. It is the greatest system ever for practicing your dry fire. Go give it a shot. It's available at itargetpro.com. That is the letter, itargetpro.com. That's itargetpro.com. Promo code Dan, my first name, D-A-N, for a really nice 10% off. Go check it out. You're going to love this. All right. So that Yahoo news piece is terrific. It'll be at Bongino.com today. And the gist of it is just that, that you speaking out
Starting point is 00:05:50 is making a serious difference. These Republicans now are terrified. They're terrified because they want to get reelected in the 2018 midterms, a third of the Senate and the entire House of Representatives, which is up every two years. They're terrified that they're losing political support amongst their base because of your emails, because of your phone calls. Folks, this matters. It makes a difference. When you speak up, people know it. Now, let me give you a piece of advice from a candidate who has run for office before about the inside baseball of politics. If you are a, let's call you a prolific voter, you vote in primaries, you vote in school board elections, you vote in city council primaries, city council elections. In other words, you don't miss an election no matter what.
Starting point is 00:06:35 That's me and my wife. I don't think I've missed an election in, gosh, 10 years. I vote a lot. This is important. You will have a voter score. Now, I know, forgive me, Joe, I know we've talked about this before in the audience, but some of you are new listeners,
Starting point is 00:06:52 and this is very important you understand this. Those voter scores are public information. Everybody on the planet knows you voted. I don't know if you know this. They don't know who you voted for. It is a secret ballot. Nobody knows that but you. That is not public information. I know Joe's a conservative. I assume Joe voted for Trump, but honest to God, I have no idea. I mean, we could ask him and Joe, I'm sure, would tell us he voted for Trump, but I don't know that. I can't
Starting point is 00:07:19 categorically prove that and I can't search the internet for who Joe Armacost voted for. But I can search the internet to for who Joe Armacost voted for. But I can search the internet to make sure Joe Armacost voted. Now, what does that do? There are companies out there that use this data and sell it to candidates. They sell it to other people too who are interested in voting behavior for market reasons. People who vote may also buy pet rocks. So pet rock companies would want to know if Joe, you get what I'm saying, Joe? It's not, you know, it's not just available to candidates. It's available to anyone. But obviously political candidates are interested in this information. Why would that be? Because if you're running in a competitive primary on the Republican side amongst 10 candidates,
Starting point is 00:08:01 primaries only Republicans can vote in in most states right and you're out there knocking on doors and you're sending mail and you're targeting people on facebook you want to make sure you target people who vote in primaries yes right so they sell you a voter score now as one of the systems i used was voter gravity or true. I forget. We used a few different systems. Voter gravity was very good. I think they were scored 1 through 16. And 16 meant like a nuclear explosion wouldn't keep you away from voting.
Starting point is 00:08:39 A 16 voter, if that was the system, it may. I forget. It doesn't really matter whether it was 10 or 16. It's irrelevant. But the highest number was 16 if you were a 16 Joe you hadn't missed a primary election or a general in probably 5 or 6 election cycles I wasn't a 16 though yeah yeah very I mean listen to be candid
Starting point is 00:08:54 very few people or somebody misses for various reasons you know and that's understandable I get it I'm you know I'm in this business so you know I just enjoy the whole practice of engaging in the civic discourse there. But most people do miss one. But those 16, Joe, are super valuable.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Why? Because they are going to vote no matter what. No matter what. A lot of them happen to be older folks. It's why people who are 55 and older have really outsized political power they do which is just the fact that that they vote good for you good for you for staying involved matter of fact one of the reasons younger folks you know the the 20 to 55 crowd don't have the political power of older folks there's a lot of people 20 to 30 30 to 40 as they go up they vote more but as they go
Starting point is 00:09:44 down in age they they vote less. I bring all this up in context of the rescission debate, which I discussed last week, and the fact that you're speaking out and members are worried. Because if you are one of those 16 score voters that votes all the time, please, I'm begging you, call or email your congressman's office about the spending bill the budget bill please i i can't please dance with me on this one your voice if you are a 16 or 100 or whatever you vote all the time they will check you out your congressman's office not in a creepy metadata jim clapper kind of way or john brennan spying obamagpper kind of way or John Brennan spying Obamagate kind of way.
Starting point is 00:10:27 They will check you out in a standard database typically. They get emails and they'll look you up. Again, they don't know who you voted for, but they'll know your party affiliation. That's public record. They'll know you're a registered Republican and they'll know you vote all the time.
Starting point is 00:10:44 Folks, you are gold to them. Gold. Now, I'm not saying just to be careful. I'm going to be very careful. I'm not saying that. Let's say this is the first time you're going to vote. You're 18 or you've been out of the political process for a while. You listen to my podcast and right now you've decided to become re-engaged. Yes, your voice is valuable to send that email. Caught spending, big caps, or you're losing my vote. Your email's valuable too, but I'm just being candid with you. It's not as valuable as the people who voted for the last 20 years and never missed an election. Those people are gold. Gold. That's you. I shouldn't say those people. It's some of you listening. You are gold.
Starting point is 00:11:23 You have to stay on them because that rescission bill, that impoundment act we talked about last week, and not to redo the show, but just so we're clear on this, the 1974 impoundment act allows Donald Trump, the president of the United States, within 45 days of the passing of this awful omnibus bill, this overspending orgy they engaged in, it allows him to suggest cuts to Congress that they can, I shouldn't say cuts, it allows him to impound money, in other words, not spend it, which is just as good as cutting it, with simple majorities of both houses. But we got to push, we got to push, we got to push, and we got to push.
Starting point is 00:12:00 This will be the first time this has been used significantly since Reagan. We got to do it, folks. We have to turn the freedom train back, even in small little steps. This is our opportunity to dance with them. But it's going to require you to send an email, to call the office. Be cool about it. You know the drill. I mean, you don't need any lectures from me. You know how to handle it. But I just want to throw that caveat in there. If you are a four by four voter, someone who's voted in the last four primaries and last four generals, you probably have a super high voter score. They are going to look you up. And when they look you up, your word is going to carry
Starting point is 00:12:37 the weight of 10 or 15 others. Please reach out. And by the way, some people have asked me whenever I cover the voter score, how do I get my voter score? The answer is you don't. It's not like a credit score. You can if you want to go open up an account with whatever voter gravity or whatever. It's up to you. But it's not like a credit score
Starting point is 00:12:56 where you're entitled to three free copies of your voter score. And remember, a lot of these entities score you differently. So, you know, whatever. One's on one to 100. One's one to 10. One's one to 16. It doesn't really matter entities score you differently. So, you know, whatever. One's on 1 to 100. One's 1 to 10. One's 1 to 16.
Starting point is 00:13:07 It doesn't really matter. But you could get it, but you'd have to probably pay for it. So just know this. You don't need your voter score. I'm telling you, having run for office, if you voted in the last four primaries and the last four general elections, you have a high voter score. That's all you need to know. And people know it. That's why, did you notice you get all the robocalls?
Starting point is 00:13:30 Why do you think that is, folks? You think that's random? Why do you think during election time, everybody's knocking on your door? Why do you think at election time you're getting 500 mailers in your mailbox? Because they bought your information and they know you vote.
Starting point is 00:13:45 Now, you may find it annoying that people are knocking on your door and sending you mailers. But my humble opinion, you should consider it a badge of honor. Because I listen again, being frank here, your voice matters more than other people because you vote. And that's why these congressmen and these local state senators and state representatives are knocking on your door they know you're gonna vote that's just the hard facts we live in a constitutional republic everybody has the opportunity to vote as long as you're a citizen and you're not a felon in a lot of states but if you choose not to then again just being frank about it most politicians choose not to knock on your door because you're not going to vote. I get it that you think it's annoying, but it really does matter.
Starting point is 00:14:29 Hey, one more note on this topic of rescission and impounding funds. Gosh, we're in a really bad spending situation right now, folks. That's why I was so bothered by this omnibus bill. The level of spending cuts. Let me take a note on this, Cato, because I don't want to forget. Once in a blue moon, I forget to put things in the show notes. There's a longer version of a story from Cato today, but it matters, about the level of spending cuts we're going to need to get back to some level of fiscal sanity. Right now, we're at the point where we owe in debt, accumulated debt, the entire amount of our economy produces in a year, our GDP. Folks, that's a danger zone.
Starting point is 00:15:15 There's a lot of good, strong research that once countries reach that 90% point with debt, in other words, they owe 90% of what the country produces in a year that you start to reach a dangerous and uncontrollable tipping point because interest gets out of control. I mean, think about that in terms of microeconomics. It's simply narrowing it down to your house, Joe. If you make $50,000 a year and you owe $50,000 a year, soon the interest payments on that alone start to overwhelm your daily expenses. Once you start getting owe $50,000 a year, soon the interest payments on that alone start to overwhelm your daily expenses. Once you start getting to $100,000, where it's double what you make in a year, the interest
Starting point is 00:15:51 payments alone start to become, you can't even meet the interest payments. So now you have that death spiral of interest and you never get to the principle at all. We're getting to that point, folks. Now, one of the takeaways from this report, the amount of spending cuts we're going to have to start to engage in right now. Okay. This is dramatic. It's about $500 to $700 billion a year if we're going to get on track. Folks, we spend $4 trillion now. Those are massive cuts. But the longer we wait, this is the takeaway, the worse it gets. If we wait five years, they're going to be 800 billion and 900 billion. Soon it's going
Starting point is 00:16:31 to have to be a trillion a year in cuts. Bottom line, reach out, email your congressman, call them. They have to start somewhere. And this impoundment act and the rescission of funds is a place to start. Please, I'm imploring you to dance a little bit with me on this one because it's important. Okay. Let's see. So much going on. Hey, I have a great piece at Bongino.com today. We're producing original content by my resident debunker in chief, Matt Palumbo. So I'll put a piece in the show notes today, again, about the Australian gun control and their confiscation program. It's a new piece up there at the debunk
Starting point is 00:17:10 this section of Bongino.com about why Australian gun control would completely entirely blow it here. It would not work. It would be disastrous, folks. Australia is one basically big island. Australia is one basically big island. They do not have borders on land. Guns are smuggled into this country from foreign countries all the time. It is not that the demographics are different. It would be a disaster. And Matt covers this in a piece.
Starting point is 00:17:36 I'll put in the show notes today, but it is available at Bongino.com. I encourage you to read it. He does a good job. I asked him to write the pieces short and sweet, you know, four, 500, 600 words, just, you know, bottom line up front. He does a good job. I asked him to write the pieces short and sweet, four, 500, 600 words, just bottom line up front. He does that. So check this piece out. It's really good. On that note, there's another great piece at the Federalist today. I took a screenshot of it.
Starting point is 00:18:03 Some of you who follow me on Twitter may have caught this interaction. This is funny, Joe. So the other day, I'm on Twitter and I don't know what I tweeted out, but a woman tweeted back to me that, you know, we were buffoons at the NRA, that I was a buffoon and we were, you know, really dopey and whatever. And so she challenged me to a debate on the second amendment. She is a law professor. Now, ordinarily, I'm really, really desperately trying to avoid Twitter wars back and forth these days. Because they go on all day. And seriously, they take up a lot of energy. And a lot of times, nothing gets done.
Starting point is 00:18:37 And it turns into a slugfest. And I'm just not interested. But I forget her name. Miranda something. But she is a professor. So she challenged me to a Second Amendment debate. And I initially just gaffed it off. But then I thought, okay, I'll take that debate. So we're trying to schedule her to her credit.
Starting point is 00:18:55 She said, all right, I'll come on. She wants to come on. We're going to do it on my NRA TV show Friday, 5.30 p.m. Eastern Time, live at nratv.com. So I hope she shows. She said she would. So she's a woman of her word and she really wants this debate. We'll see what happens. So I'm looking forward to that. Now, on the gun control argument, there's a piece by Adam Mill in The Federalist today that will be up in the show notes, which is really terrific. And it shows some basic correlations on a point I've tried to make often.
Starting point is 00:19:27 And the point I've tried to make is that gun control, excuse me, gun ownership, the left's premise that gun ownership is going to lead to more gun violence and more crime is refuted by simple basic facts. Joe, if that's your premise, right?
Starting point is 00:19:41 More guns equal more crime, then you would think you'd be able to show in places where there are more guns that there was, in fact, more gun crime. Yeah, you'd think so. Yeah, the evidence is largely the opposite. Now, I've discussed this in the past, and I don't like to repeat shows. But what's interesting about Mill's piece is he takes it from another angle. He says, listen listen let's look at countries with the lowest gun ownership rates because if your assertion joe that more guns
Starting point is 00:20:13 equals more crime is in fact accurate then the inverse should be true as well that low gun ownership should equal low gun crime rates and low homicide rates and low crime rates, right? That would be correct. Well, let's look at this. So Mills, Peace and the Federalists, which will be up at the show notes at my website. Here are some of the states, some of the places with low gun ownership. El Salvador, Honduras, Venezuela, Jamaica, Lesotho, Belize, South Africa, Guatemala, Trinidad, Bahamas. He compares that with the rates of gun homicides and murder rates. And you find out that the places with the lowest
Starting point is 00:20:52 gun ownership rates have some of the highest murder rates or higher murder rates than other countries that have extremely high gun ownership. So, folks, the correlation doesn't make any sense. This is very simple. If you're trying to say that increased intake of aspirin is going to lead to fewer heart attacks, then you would look for people who take high doses of aspirin and you would look to see the heart attack rates. I'm not suggesting this is the case, but if increased dosages of aspirin led to more heart attacks, then you would throw out your premise that more aspirin leads to less heart attacks. Right?
Starting point is 00:21:26 Yeah. But the left who professes to believe in science throws all of that out the window when it comes to guns, because this is not a debate based on law. It's not a debate based on reason. It's a debate based on emotions. Low gun ownership rates, high murder rates. Countries with high gun ownership rates, Norway, some of the others, have very low gun homicide rates and homicide rates in general. So the correlation just doesn't fit.
Starting point is 00:21:52 You're trying to fit a square peg into a round hole, and it's not working. It's just, oh, man, is it frustrating. Gosh. You know, we do facts on the show, and then they try to fire back. Well, you know, look at Australia. That's why, by the way, I keep putting these, I have Matt do these pieces on Australian gun control. Because Australia, there are more guns now in Australia than there were before the gun confiscation program. So your premise that more guns is somehow going to equal more crime is nonsense.
Starting point is 00:22:27 There are more guns now in Australia than before they confiscated the guns. So if you're saying there's less crime now due to the gun confiscation program, you haven't accommodated your statistics for the fact that there are more guns. What part of this are you missing? All right. I got a lot more to get to today. Busy, busy, busy news day. So today's show also brought to you by our buddies at Brickhouse Nutrition. They're one of my original sponsors. You know I love them. They have one of the best products on the market out there in Field of Greens. What's Field of Greens? It's your fruit and vegetable insurance. We all should be eating fruits and vegetables. They're rich with vitamins and minerals. They're rich with vitamins and minerals.
Starting point is 00:23:06 These are the foods that are going to keep us alive, sustain our lives, sustain positive, you know, strong cognition and health into our old age. We know we should be doing it, but a lot of us don't. The excuses are everywhere, Joe. We don't have the time. It'd take too long to prepare. They spoil. Some of it's perishable. Oh, I get it.
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Starting point is 00:23:50 You could take one. You could take two. It's totally up to you. But it is a fruit and vegetable ground up food. This is not some crap garbage extract. This is the real thing. And you have no excuses for not eating your fruits and vegetables anymore. You know it's the secret to a long life, folks. Everybody knows that. Doctors will tell you,
Starting point is 00:24:08 eat your fruits and vegetables. Give it a shot. It's available at brickhousenutrition.com. That's brickhousenutrition.com. While you're at it, check out Dawn to Dust, their energy supplement. I know a lot of you live busy lives. Gives you 10 hours of energy, no peaks and valleys, high sustained mood elevation throughout the day. Give that a shot too. Go to BrickHouseNutrition.com slash Dan. That's BrickHouseNutrition.com slash Dan. Okay. Interesting piece in human progress that I will put up in the show notes today as well, while we're talking about economics and the budget. This is entirely unsurprising to me, but it goes to show you, Joe,
Starting point is 00:24:47 the pathology of the liberal ethos, the class warfare ethos, the rich people, fair share, how dangerous it is and how liberals, I've encouraged you often to not fall into the trap that liberals are stupid. Liberals know exactly what they're doing, the radical ones. They know how to prey on human emotion ones they know how to prey on human emotion and they know how to pray importantly in human envy envy this is one of those must
Starting point is 00:25:11 read articles it's a little wonky but it's really really interesting again to be at the show notes that it said human progress and it was a study done of people's attitudes towards taxation joe and what they found out which was not surprising to me, but I guess was to some of the researchers, Joe, one in six people would hike taxes on the rich, even if they knew in advance that it was going to hurt poor people. Now, that may not make sense to you, but it does. It entirely makes sense to me. Now, that may not make sense to you, but it does. It entirely makes sense to me.
Starting point is 00:25:54 And when you understand the evolution, and they address this a little bit in the piece of us from hunter-gatherer types and small packs of people. And what I spoke about yesterday, Joe, with Nassim Taleb and his how groups, the size of the group matters on how people think collectively. People don't think collectively in terms of the United States, but they can think collectively in terms of small groups, families, nuclear families, even in some senses, tribes in our pre-industrial era. But how when you start expanding the group out to this amorphous blob of people, people can't comprehend. What does that mean, the United States? Everybody? I mean, I don't get it. it like i'm supposed to care for a guy over here
Starting point is 00:26:28 i don't get it they don't understand and they start to think differently as the size of the group expands i found this interesting because it describes how in the hunter-gatherer days joe things were zero sub in other words if someone accumulated a lot of food when there was a small say pack of 10 or 15 people that that one person accumulating food given the local scarcity would likely accumulate that food at the expense of everyone else who then couldn't go out and pick a berry or kill a deer because you know the the resources were scarce so we evolved over time a sense of envy, a sense of like, well, Joe shouldn't have all that food. I should have some of it. But folks, as the economy expanded, as we've imported and how global resources have expanded and productivity has expanded dramatically,
Starting point is 00:27:20 envy has become quite counterproductive because with the rich accumulate In a capitalist economy That's very productive Does not necessarily, as a matter of fact Does not most of the time come at the expense of anyone The rich generally accumulate In a capitalist economy things Because they produce things and find Holes for products that weren't there before
Starting point is 00:27:40 The reason Bill Gates is rich Is because he came up with a computer design no one thought of before of him. Or they'd be Bill Gates themselves. They'd be Donny Gates or Joey Botts or Joey Bag of Donuts Gates. But Bill Gates thought of it first. The guy who thought about putting
Starting point is 00:27:58 music into a phone in the first iPhone thought of it before anyone else. Or at least got it to market before anyone else is probably a more precise way of saying it how do I know that because there was no product out before that produced on a mass scale but the Democrats understand that vestigial relic of our personality where do you see what I'm saying Joe how envy served a purpose back then because we were hunter-gatherers like I said if you had all the deer meat and all the berries in
Starting point is 00:28:27 your tent someone else was probably starving we have never quite shaken that and liberals understand that radical liberals understand that one in six people would hide taxes on the rich even if it hurts the poor because they're taking advantage of this vestigial envy remnant left in our brain that makes no sense in today's economy at all. None. But liberals get it. And that's why I always caution you on the show to not underestimate these cats. They know exactly what they're doing.
Starting point is 00:29:00 People like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, who rail against the rich while being rich themselves. Note the hint of absurd irony there. Bernie, what did he buy? Three homes or something like that? These people are rich themselves. They rail against the rich
Starting point is 00:29:19 because they know people. One in six is a pretty big number, by the way. They know people will, oh, yeah, yeah, we got to get what they've got. One in six is a pretty big number, by the way. Yeah. They know people will, oh, yeah, yeah, we got to get what they've got. Well, what they have right now was built because they produced the product other people needed. That's not necessarily the case in a zero-sum limited resource environment that's local only. Scale down to local. That make sense, Joe? Yeah. some limited resource environment that's local only scale down to local that makes sense joe yeah how liberals they don't you know they that was a very meek yes no that was quite yeah yeah no i got it all right that's when you're in a local uh environment and again you know the deer
Starting point is 00:29:58 population is limited and the fruits and berries locally limited you know yes envy may benefit you because you're like hey why is is Joe taking all the food? But when you expand that to a bigger collective global economy in a world where we constantly dig up new resources every day and have the benefit of technology and productivity enhancements, it doesn't necessarily make sense. But liberals never forgot that. Do not underestimate these people. But read the report in Human Progress. It's interesting, and it'll give you some keen insight into how liberals do what they do. All right, let's see. Oh, on the car report yesterday, Joe, about the EPA mileage guidelines. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:40 Hey, by the way, with regards to yesterday's show, I just want you to know I really do deeply appreciate all the feedback. I know the topic yesterday we brought up, tariffs, can always be controversial with the audience, but I read your stuff. Even you who ferociously disagree. Some of you make very, very good arguments, and I'm not a liberal. I'm always open to hearing it. Some of them are very persuasive, and hopefully we'll readdress the topic you know someday maybe you know in a next week or so and i'll bring up some of the countervailing points too that some of you brought up because they're interesting but i do appreciate your feedback and i don't want you to think for a second i ignore it like i said i only asked yesterday and i hope we don't lose you uh i really do that you just hear my points out too and you don't have to agree and i'm listening to yours and uh you know some of you make some very convincing arguments and I'll bring up some of the other stuff, hopefully in a later show. But I do appreciate the feedback on the show.
Starting point is 00:31:30 My wife and I read all of it all the time. It matters. The show is for you. We do it for you. It's not for me. But in regards to yesterday's show, I had discussed those EPA mileage guidelines and what a genius maneuver it was for Scott Pruitt,
Starting point is 00:31:46 EPA administrator, to attempt to scrap these Obama mileage guidelines because they were destroying the U.S. car market. And one of the interesting points about it I neglected to bring up yesterday, Joe, was that the irony of these mileage guidelines. Obama instituted a 54 miles per gallon guideline by 2025 for the fleet, the average across the fleet, which, as I said yesterday, makes it impossible for American car companies to successfully compete because they build SUVs and they build trucks. They build them well. They're popular. People buy them and they don't get 54 miles a gallon. So they got to build a bunch of crap small cars nobody wants
Starting point is 00:32:30 to average across the fleet this 54 miles a gallon. Now, I neglected to include one of the whys. One of the whys in this show, why the Obama administration did this is because what kind of car do you, let's say you have a truck like i have
Starting point is 00:32:46 a raptor and it gets like 18 20 miles a gallon you sell a lot of raptors that means you're gonna have to sell joe to get your average corporate fleet to get it up to 54 just by doing simple math you're gonna have to sell a whole lot of cars that get like 70, 80 miles a gallon, right? Now, do you know any fuel-only car that does that? That's in mass production. No, not that. No. But what does that?
Starting point is 00:33:13 Electric and hybrid cars. This has been a push by the Obama administration for a long time to get us onto this electric car nonsense. Which, listen, if you want electric cars, that's terrific. Do your thing but another thing here joe this is one of the whys i missed yesterday i'm going to test you on this i'm sorry i put you on the spot all right then but joe you when you drive around and you see people driving priuses and things like that are they this is i'm not tricking you but i'm do you think they're more like florida
Starting point is 00:33:48 panhandle conservatives or do you think the people driving priuses are like bowtie wearing foie gras eating uh new york city liberals what do you think i think they're like uh wow god eating liberals yes yes they've got the dead giveaway on it civility bumper stickers now listen i am not stereotyping please don't take this the wrong way i'm trying to make a point here yeah but if we were to take the average income of say someone in my uncle lives in dothan alabama and the average income of someone who rents an apartment in Manhattan who drives a Prius, who do you think would be higher? The person who drives the Prius. Yeah, Manhattan, right. So folks, not only does this benefit the electric car industry, because as I just said to you, Joe, these fleets will have to produce a bunch of electric cars to offset the Raptor and the Tahoe and the Dodge Ram, which, by the way,
Starting point is 00:34:47 a lot of people just don't want. I know people down here in Florida where I live in, you know, Palm City, they don't want them. But a lot of city dwellers who have trouble parking their cars and who are, in fact, liberal will go out and buy the Prius and other cars like that. But what winds up happening? The car companies, Joe, lose a fortune on these small cars. These small cars that these American car companies are producing that nobody wants, they are losing a fortune. Matter of fact, in a Wall Street Journal piece today, they talk about this Fiat model, Joe. I couldn't believe this. I had to double check to make sure I didn't get this wrong it says they lose fourteen thousand dollars for every sale are you that's is that incredible i
Starting point is 00:35:30 don't know if i mean really i read it i was like is this right now let's say it's a thousand dollars they're not making money on every car they're losing money on these cars now what does that mean in order to sell these cars they have to sell them at this serious discount meaning that the people who are paying elevated prices now for the raptor and the tahoe and the suburban and the ram are paying those elevated prices to offset the losses of the rich people buying the prius so this cafe standard these corporate fleet standards which i applaud the trump administration, and I certainly applaud Scott Pruitt, the EPA administrator, for doing this,
Starting point is 00:36:08 are wiping out a subsidy from basically lower income, the middle income folks who drive trucks and SUVs, to really rich, wealthy city dwellers who drive these Prius-y type non-gas guzzling cars. Oh, isn't that interesting? Yeah, it is. I mean, we're paying for them to drive these little crap mobiles around. And you know what? This is one of the reasons I, you know, despite my disagreements on isolated policies here and there, this is one of the reasons I really, on a very serious note, I really appreciate
Starting point is 00:36:42 what the Trump team is doing. You know, I know there are a lot of anti-Trump conservatives out there, but let's be honest. There are other, you know, they knew the media was going to go nuts with this show because the media loves this pseudo environmental policy. The media loves their rich friends Prius, the price of it being subsidized by Raptors and Tahoe buyers in poorer states poorer states they love that they knew there was going to be significant backlash to this and you know what they said joe and they did it anyway i just gave joe the yeah joe i gave joe the universal sign of we don't care but it was a little more vulgar than that i'm sorry but that's what the trump team was like nah we don't care but But thanks. Have a nice day. Now, that ties in neatly to the next topic I wanted to bring up, which is related to this.
Starting point is 00:37:36 I'm going to put another article up at the show notes today. There's a lot of show notes today from The Week, which is not a far-right conservative outlet, by the way. far-right conservative outlet, by the way. And in this article, the author does a decent job, Joe, of explaining why Trump's popularity, despite, you know, stormy and all this other garbage, continues to go up. He's actually approaching 50%. Yes, he is. And he makes a couple great points,
Starting point is 00:38:01 and I wanted to bring these points up in light of yesterday's show and today's show and the EPA thing. Trump doesn't care, folks, about the politics. He doesn't. Now, sometimes that works against me in some cases. You know, I disagree with some things. But let's be honest, Joe.
Starting point is 00:38:19 He does not lie. Trump ran on a couple things that he's still pushing for. He ran on a sensible immigration policy. He ran on a wall. He ran on a couple things that he's still pushing for he ran on a sensible immigration policy ran on a wall he ran on china he ran on tax cuts and that's exactly what he's doing he's not kidding around i mean i can say whatever i want about the terrorists but it's not like it was a surprise trump ran on all of this and you know you got to appreciate the man's honesty i mean we've been lied to for politicians for for what you know since the inception of the republic i mean this guy actually does what he
Starting point is 00:38:56 says he does not care about the political backlash other presidents have now what's interesting about the piece is he touches on something the writer about why trump's popularity is high that i think is an imperative for anyone looking to run for office or influence the political debate in the future this is important he addresses in the beginning of the piece all these potentially damaging political narratives that came out joe uh you know the the stormy story and all this other uh junk yeah but he brings up something you and i've talked about before how the only real damaging political narratives show are those that change a pre-existing perception about who that person is
Starting point is 00:39:40 think about it why did the the Monica Walensky impeachment? I can't believe I just said that. I said that as a joke one night to my wife, and now it's in my head. Lewinsky! One night I joked around. I'm like, what if they refer to it like Walensky? It was a stupid joke. My wife's probably laughing right now. But now it's in my head. The Monica Lewinsky impeachment trial of Bill clinton why did he leave office with nearly 60 approval because folks the lewinsky trial and the incident i'm not justifying it don't i'm not morally justifying anything i'm simply stating to you it did nothing to change the pre-existing perception of who bill clinton. Nothing. Zero.
Starting point is 00:40:27 Everybody understood what, you know, old Bill was up to. And when news stories started coming out, they just were like, okay, we don't like it, but... Now, the premise of the article here about Trump is similar, that everybody understood he was brash,
Starting point is 00:40:44 so his tweets, people have just become used to it. The tweets aren't really bothering. Folks, his approval's going up. If the tweets were bothering people, his approval would be going down. It's not. Numbers do matter.
Starting point is 00:40:56 Facts matter, okay? Yeah, it's just Trump being Trump. Trump being Trump. I mean, Trump never hid his proclivities for eccentric behavior on the Howard Stern show when he was out there. None of this changes any pre-existing political now. None.
Starting point is 00:41:11 Now, to give you an example of how it would, imagine a story like that came out about George W. Bush, who is known as a deeply, you know, I worked for the man. I can tell you that's not an act. He is sincerely a deeply religious guy. I don't appreciate a lot of his politics. He spent a lot of money. But besides the point, I worked for him and his wife. And I can tell you from firsthand experience that that is not an act at all.
Starting point is 00:41:39 George W. is a deeply spiritual and religious guy. That is not some kind of farcical, let me play this up for the camera routine. I don't think that's going to surprise any of you, but that's my point. If a story, God forbid, not that I'm saying this would happen, it wouldn't, but if it came out about George W. Bush,
Starting point is 00:41:58 it'd be a little different, Joe. It would significantly change the existing political narrative that that's who this guy was. But that's not who trump was trump ran as a big brash bold queens businessman who had been out in the forefront of the public and had led a you know an eccentric life before none of this changes any pre-existing narratives now combine that with the fact you know i hope you like today's show because I put a lot of work into tying all this together, folks. Seriously, today's show took like two and a half hours, which for me is a long time. Combine that with the fact that I'll put another article in the show notes today from CNBC.
Starting point is 00:42:37 That job growth is through the roof. March payrolls, folks, 241,000 jobs. Estimates were for 205 almost 40 000 more jobs and even high estimates in march alone combine that with that that people are like well okay so what uh we got this lady on 60 minutes talking about some kind of thing with trump and i got a raise, right? Yeah. My company's hiring. Job market's hot. I mean, we're generally at peace. Obviously, we have the threat of the North Koreans.
Starting point is 00:43:14 The Iranians don't want to be hyperbolic. But there's not an, at least now, not a Cold War type World War II event going on. There's always the threat of terror. Of course, we have Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria. But Trump's, I think, success is also on the world stage. The North Koreans getting him to back down a bit. Some people, you know, like the way he's confronted China. And I think you're starting to see what is a narrative of,
Starting point is 00:43:43 hey, Donald Trump, he's big, he's bold, he's brash, he tweets. You know, sometimes it puts people on the uncomfortable side of what they would consider presidential or not, but he's the president, therefore it's presidential. The job market's moving, my job is better. And you know what? I don't mind it so much. Nothing has been done yet to change the political narrative. And I say that because it's a model for the future. If you're thinking about running, if you have a whole bunch of skeletons and stuff,
Starting point is 00:44:13 you better get them out there because once the narrative said about who you are, you'll be fine. But if you lie about it and something comes out later, it makes you look foolish. You're going to have some explaining to do. Yeah. So interesting piece.
Starting point is 00:44:26 B of F has a lot of content in the show notes today. I strongly encourage you to check them out. All right, a couple more things I want to get to because there was more breaking news yesterday. Before I get to that, today's show also brought to you by our buddies at Filter By. We love Filter By. This is maybe the greatest read in human history.
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Starting point is 00:46:27 and this has really surprised me because I think they're revealing the whole game here, is that Trump, Joe, let me just read to you directly from the piece, make it easy. Special counsel Bob Mueller informed President Donald Trump's attorneys last month that he is continuing to invest, read, listen, listen, listen, this is important,
Starting point is 00:46:43 that he, Mueller that is, is continuing to investigate the president but does not consider him a criminal at this point, according to three people familiar with the discussions. Let's skip something here. Mueller described Trump as a subject of his investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 elections. Prosecutors view someone as a subject. Again, this is important. elections. Prosecutors view someone as a subject, again, this is important, when that person has engaged in conduct that is under investigation, but there is not sufficient evidence to bring charges. What have I told you over and over and over again about this case? They are not
Starting point is 00:47:19 investigating a crime. They're investigating donald trump they basically admitted these three sources he's a subject well what does that mean that means we're investigating him but we have no evidence he committed a crime you're what are you investigating him for then i don't understand do you understand how devastating that statement lenny and costa having their pieces think about that joe no yeahops show up at your house. Joe, you're a subject of an investigation. What did I do? Oh, nothing. Do we have any evidence of a crime? No, none.
Starting point is 00:47:52 But you're still the subject. Well, what am I the subject of? An investigation. Into what? We don't know. Well, did I commit a crime? We have no evidence of that. Well, why am I a subject? Because you are. I've... I'm just taking a note here because I don't want
Starting point is 00:48:09 to miss this. One more thing I want to get to. But this is frustrating. Frustrating beyond belief. Byron York has a piece in the Washington Examiner. It's another one of those must-read pieces. It'll be in the show notes today.
Starting point is 00:48:29 Byron York, who is a very level-headed, I get very passionate about this stuff. No one's ever going to accuse Byron York of being in any way a hothead in regards to these issues. I get it. I get very passionate. This stuff matters to me. It matters to him too,
Starting point is 00:48:43 but he is a not uninterested, but disinterested observer. He has a piece in the examiner about how dangerous what's going on now is, folks. The reason I've covered this, and sometimes it's been five minutes of the show, sometimes it's been a whole hour, but the reason I continue, and the reason that we're wrapping up the book now, I know I keep telling it's but we're just big news on that coming soon. The reason this is so dangerous. York makes two points show. Number one, they use the Logan Act. The Logan Act, a crime never successfully charged in the history of the Republic to charge Mike Flynn.
Starting point is 00:49:24 In other words folks they had no evidence of serious criminality so they invented a crime now the logan act is real real in the sense that it's on the books but not real in the sense that it's never ever been used to successfully prosecute anyone so what did they do they pulled it out of their hat and they used it to prosecute Mike Flint. You may say, oh, well, he didn't plead guilty to the Logan Act. That was the reason for the interview they claimed he lied in when they later claimed he didn't lie. He was charged with false statements despite the fact that the FBI said he didn't lie.
Starting point is 00:50:00 But they were there to interview him for violations of the Logan Act, which nobody has ever been successfully prosecuted on ever it's essentially a fabricated crime so york's piece of the examiner's like that's part number one if we're going to start doing that now because we are joe creating subjects we are not creating criminal investigations we're making people subjects of crimes that don't investigations we're making people subjects of crimes that don't that we're fabricating crimes to fit people we're not investigating crimes finding people later we're finding people and finding crimes later do you understand the
Starting point is 00:50:35 difference the way crimes are investigated in the united states people report crimes investigations happen they find the people who commit the crimes they are arrested prosecuted potentially jailed we do not target people and then go look for crimes later that's york's premise about why this is so dangerous and also why i read to you that carol lenning and bob costa piece about oh trump's not a criminal target oh but he is a subject is there any evidence no there's no evidence they are not investigating a crime they're investigating trump you all could be targets next point number two the takeaway from york's piece which is critical is that the dossier obviously was debunked or at a minimum not verified, that we are now using bought and paid for political dirt and opposition to prosecute our political opponents.
Starting point is 00:51:38 Folks, this is really a troubling, troubling development. Two big takeaways. We're inventing crimes because we're going after people, and then we're sticking those crimes on them. And secondly, we're now using political opposition to stick it to the court system to prosecute people? No, no. No, no, no. This isn't right. Now,
Starting point is 00:51:56 because I had a ton of stuff to get to. Another piece in the show notes today. From legal insurrection. As you know, I told you to take it east with Sessions. I know some of you disagree, but I think there's a lot going on behind the scenes there, especially with Huber,
Starting point is 00:52:10 the new United States attorney looking into this, a prosecutor signed by the government assistant United States attorney. I think he was the US attorney for Utah. But I am no fan of Rosenstein at all. There is some shady, shady stuff going on with Rosenstein. Did you see this development yesterday, Joe? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:30 I think I know what you're talking about. Yeah. Gosh, what did I do with this? Oh, here we go. Rosenstein writes a memo to Mueller on August 2nd of 2017. to muller on august 2nd of 2017 expanding the scope of muller's special counsel investigation into maniforts dealing with ukraine now this is important because when you are assigned as a special counsel you are limited to the appointment and the appointment is very specific if you read the legal insurrection piece you can read muller's basically scope of duties and it says the russian collusion into the investigation and other crimes resulting from it so it was broad but it wasn't overly broad or i
Starting point is 00:53:19 in many people's opinions it wasn't broad enough to include an investigation into Manafort money laundering into Ukraine now that may have been a crime but that should not have been the result of the special counsel investigation based on its limited authority does that make sense Joe yep in other words Mueller was investigating Manafort in Ukraine when he shouldn't have been he was not charged to do that fascinating that Manafort goes to courts, basically sues Mueller over this, and in memos produced on August 2nd of 2017, a Rosenstein memo,
Starting point is 00:53:55 giving Manafort basically permission to go, I mean, excuse me, giving Mueller permission to go and look at Manafort's business dealings with Ukraine. Why should that matter? Because Manafort's house, folks, was raided a month earlier, on July 26th of 2017. Right. So if Manafort's house in an early morning raid was raided on July 26th of 2017, in relation to his business dealings with Ukraine, how the hell is a memo drafted up on August 2nd, 2017, giving Mueller authority to do that. Let me do the pen on desk thing. Does that make sense to you?
Starting point is 00:54:47 Does this sound like a ex post facto basically butt covering technique that Mueller may have said, oh, we just raided this guy's house and my legal team is telling me
Starting point is 00:55:01 that we may have not had prosecutorial investigative authority to in fact target him. Hey, Rosenstein, can we get that memo? Guys, did you raid the house already? Yeah. Yeah, we did that last. What do you mean you did it last week?
Starting point is 00:55:16 All right, let's drop this memo. This is why I don't trust Rosenstein at all. Rosenstein, of course, was also the United States attorney in charge of the 10X prosecution related to the Uranium One case. I don't trust Rosenstein one bit. I think this was a butt covering technique later on. I think someone on the legal team for Mueller went back after the raid and said, hey, Bob, I'm not quite sure we have the authority to do this. Oh, let's go to Rosenstein for a memo. Read the legal insurrection piece.
Starting point is 00:55:48 It's awesome. It lays it all out for you. How, again, this thing, and this is why I get a little disturbed at some of the emails. Cool, send them, but don't mistake for a second my support of what's going on behind the scenes, I think with Sessions' approval to investigate Pfizergate, Flingate, and Obamagate with support for Mueller or Rosenstein. Those two are a disaster. The Mueller investigation should be shut down and Rosenstein's
Starting point is 00:56:14 approval of it is pathetic. Don't mistake. Those are two completely separate things. I know they seem related, but they're not. There is stuff going on behind the scenes. I know it. I'm sure of it. I've already bet my reputation on it. This show matters to me.
Starting point is 00:56:29 But the Mueller investigation and Rosenstein's memo on August 2nd to expand an investigation where a raid occurred on July 26th, to me, see Dr. Phil. This stinks to high heaven. Sure does. Sure does, Dr. Phil. This stinks to high heaven. Sure does.
Starting point is 00:56:47 Sure does, daddy-o. There's something wrong there, folks. All right. I really appreciate you tuning in today. Read that article. Show Notes is packed with great material today. Matt Palumbo's article debunking that Australia thing is there. So please check us out, Bongino.com.
Starting point is 00:57:02 If you subscribe to my email list, of course, we'll get it right to you. And check out my NRA TV show tonight, 5.30 PM Eastern time, available at NRATV.com, Roku, Amazon Fire, and Apple TV. Thanks again for tuning in, folks. I will be announcing winners soon. The dance contest, keep sending them my way. Me and my wife are really getting a kick out of them. We'll see you all soon. You just heard the Dan Bongino Show. Get more of Dan online anytime at conservativereview.com. You can also get Dan's podcasts on iTunes or SoundCloud. And follow Dan on Twitter 24-7
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