The Dan Bongino Show - Ep. 694 Did You Miss What Trump Did Last Week?
Episode Date: April 9, 2018Summary: In this episode I address Trump’s bold move on sanctions last week and why it should reassure you. I also discuss Twitter and Facebook’s ongoing war on conservatives and why they believe ...they’ll win. Finally, I discuss an economic mystery that’s befuddling “experts.” News Picks: Facebook is targeting Trump supporters again, and the reasons they gave are ridiculous. Is Ted Cruz being targeted by Twitter? President Trump has targeted 7 Russian billionaires, and regular listeners of the show will “remember the names.” This mental health counselor tweeted that he was “excited” about the fire in Trump Tower. Who conducted a cyber-attack on Iran? Why is the Twitter’s CEO tweeting an anti-GOP article? A terrific piece about persistently low inflation. Copyright CRTV. All rights reserved. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Dan Bongino Show. Get ready to hear the truth about America with your host, Dan Bongino.
All right, welcome to the Dan Bongino Show. Producer Joe, how are you on this fine Monday?
I'm as mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore!
One of my favorite lines ever. I have got a stack show today. Please do not move from the radio, the car radio,
the whatever you're playing us over your TV, on i not move from the radio, the car radio,
the whatever you're playing us over your TV,
on iHeartRadio app, whatever it is, Spotify.
There is so much stuff to cover.
So we're going to motor through it.
Let's get right to it. But I just want to say before I get to it,
I keep telling you, take it easy on the Trump Sessions thing
and more evidence has come out that Sessions and Trump know exactly what's going on.
I'm going to get to that.
I don't tell Joe any of this stuff before the show because I like to see a genuine reaction.
So I told you to take it easy.
And I don't know if you missed it, but big stuff happened this past week.
We'll get to that in a second.
All right.
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Okay, I had to title this section of the show is,
Are You Still Sure That Trump Doesn't Know What's Going On?
Or Sessions.
Now, what happened last week?
What are we talking about, right?
Last week, in a story that got a
little bit of attention, but not a lot, Joe, it wasn't exactly like major league breaking news
anywhere. You know, people covered it, but it wasn't all over the place. And I think one of
the reasons it wasn't all over the place is because the left wing media may realize what I'm about to
tell you, that Trump and Sessions know exactly what's going on with the Obama Spygate scandal, the Clinton email scandal, the Clinton Foundation scandal and all the nonsense that went on with the DOJ.
What do I mean?
Trump's Department of Treasury issued some significant sanctions against Russian, a couple of Russian billionaires.
Actually, I think it was seven of them.
A couple of them that are very interesting.
Russian billionaires and oligarchs who are connected to Putin.
Now, you may say, okay, great.
Why is that story significant and why does it matter?
Because the question is, who did he sanction?
Who are these Russian billionaires?
Well, if you're a regular listener to my show, what do I always tell you, folks?
Memorize and remember the names because
these names will continue to creep up. And if you don't have them committed to your memory,
you will miss the crux of the story because the mainstream media will not explain it to you.
They will not. They will gloss right over it as if nothing happened, whistling past the graveyard.
They don't care. Name number one who was sanctioned by Trump.
And by the way, his company took a massive nosedive after this.
Russian billionaire and oligarch Oleg Deripaska.
Oh, when did you hear that name before?
Trump puts major sanctions on a guy named Oleg Deripaska.
Yeah, media covers it.
I don't want to be dramatic.
But it certainly was not front page news everywhere,
but it should have been.
Major League front page news.
Should have been a headline.
Why?
Because, again, I've been told by a lot of people
who are upset with Jeff Sessions
and some of Trump,
what's going on?
Nothing's happening, Joe.
They're not doing anything.
They spied on the Trump team.
Hillary got off. Nothing's happening joe they're not doing anything they spied on the trump team hillary got off nothing's happening stuff is happening deripaska folks oleg deripaska is a
central figure in this scheme i had to draw a little flow chart here to make this make sense
for you quickly because i've got probably 10 stories to get good there's a major league i
put the show together last night figuring I'd cut myself a
couple hour break this morning and had to get up early
anyway to do the show over
because there's so much breaking news since last night.
So Deripaska
was connected to Manafort. They had
some business dealings together.
Matter of fact, Deripaska and Manafort had a
falling out. There's a lawsuit over
money owed to
one of those parties in a deal. Manafort was
one of Trump's campaign advisors. I had said to you in a prior show, and this is important,
who pushed Manafort on the Trump team? Follow me, folks. A Russian oligarch by the name of
Oleg Deripaska had significant business connections with Paul Manafort. Manafort was a GOP consultant
who, at least according to some sources, Roger Stone pushed on to the Trump team.
Who pushed Stone to get Manafort on the team? How did this happen? Why did they think this
was a good idea? Manafort was already under a democrat national
committee investigation by this Alexandra Chalupa for all of his connections into Ukraine and Russia
all right may I suggest to you that if you were going to set up a narrative in advance
that Trump colluded with Russia even when it didn't happen that Manafort would be the guy
you'd want to be your campaign manager.
He's also connected to Deripaska.
Folks, are you picking up what I'm putting down?
Yeah.
Trump doesn't know what's going on.
Sessions doesn't know what... Really?
Why'd they sanction Deripaska?
Here's another one.
Deripaska, who Trump just levied major league sanctions on here.
His aluminum company is taking a bath.
It's dropped.
What did I see this morning?
There's an article in Reuters.
It's lost tremendous value this weekend.
This guy, Deripaska.
So he's connected to Manafort.
I've said to you over and over,
who kept pushing Manafort on the Trump team?
I've heard Stone.
I'm not so sure that's the whole story.
We're working on it in the book right now
because if you were going to
set up a story in advance
that Trump had colluded
with the Russians
when he didn't,
you would want Manafort
to be your campaign manager.
Hey, take this guy, Joe.
Wink, wink, nod, nod.
You know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Deripaska is also connected
to Christopher Steele,
the spy who produced
the dossier for Hillary Clinton
and Fusion GPS.
Yeah.
How?
Deripaska hires a lobbyist to work for him in the United States,
this guy Waldman.
This is the exact same lobbyist who was trying to connect Christopher Steele
with a bunch of Democrat senators after the fact to kind of clear the air.
They're all this, you see what I'm saying?
Yeah.
The lobbyist connects Deripaska and Steele.
It's the same guy.
He's working for Steele and Deripaska.
And Trump sanctions them.
Again, are you absolutely sure?
Through the Department of Treasury,
those are where the sanctions are actually from.
But are you sure Sessions and Trump
have no idea what's going on?
Who's person number two?
Victor Vexelberg
now again if you're a regular listener to the show
this name may ring a bell
I'm sure we brought it up
Victor Vexelberg
was a major sponsor
had a significant business interest
in a project in Russia
which was going to be a Russian Silicon Valley
type project.
Skolkovo.
Yeah, yeah.
Vekselberg was the guy.
He was the Russian kind of like really central to this project.
The Skolkovo project, which was designed to be, again, some Russian Silicon Valley project.
It turned out later, based on American intelligence, was a major Russian
espionage effort to
take and steal our technology.
Oh, shocker there.
Well, why is that interesting?
Well, it's interesting because
it is. They're trying to steal our stuff
and we were suckers, but
17 of the
28 companies, Joe, involved in
Skolkovo, which Vexelberg was intimately involved with,
donated to who?
Oh, the Clinton Foundation.
Oh, how does that?
Crazy, crazy how that works out.
Crazy.
So you got Trump sanctioning Deripaska,
who's connected to a lobbyist who's connected to Steele,
who's also connected to Manafort,
who also had business dealings in
Ukraine. You got Trump sanctioning another guy through his Treasury Department, Vekselberg,
who was intimately involved in a Russian espionage effort at Skolkovo to steal our technology.
By the way, there's been some allegations that the Skolkovo project and the theft of technology
may have had something to do with Russia's recent development
of a hypersonic missile designed to defeat our missile defenses.
Oh, and by the way, the same companies involved in Skolkovo and the theft of our technology
donated to the Clinton Foundation.
Oh, and by the way, doubling down again, Vexelberg's firm Renova, what they donated to the Clinton Foundation,
$50,000 to $100,000?
Folks, again, are we absolutely sure?
I have provided to you.
I have done my best because I love you to death.
I tweeted.
You pushed us to, what were we, Joe, six?
Six overall.
Six overall in news and politics.
I mean, we were we were
beating some heavy hitters this weekend in our podcast thank you for some the subscriptions
matter not just the listens and for those of you subscribe thank you but we have been telling you
over and over and over again these connections are deep they are layered they are there and that
Sessions and Trump are aware trump's not aware of the whole
thing sessions has to protect him from some of the stuff that implicates him for obvious reasons
but i'm telling you give it some time i have provided you mounds and mounds of evidence
now in case you're still doubting me which is fine now listen i am i'm not uh one of the
stygian witches from clash of the titans
i'm not to give give me the eye give me remember that the clash of the titans with harry hamlin
give me the eye give me the eye i'm not trying to be a some sage or predictor of the future you
know a karnak from the johnny carson show here but he puts a little index card to his head right joe
yeah i'm really not trying to do that i'm just trying to as a former investigator interested in facts trying to explain to you that i have good folks
and really quality sources who are telling me give it a minute they know what's happening
this is taking a very long time to do and to do correctly now one more piece of
information so again just to reiterate what i told you this is important the russian sanctions
against these billionaire oligarchs levied by trump trump and his department of treasury
targeted two people intimately involved in the spying on of trump
operation not spying on him personally, but I mean the whole
Obamagate scandal.
You see what I'm saying? Like, Deripaska
connected to Steele, to a
lobbyist. Deripaska connected
to Manafort. Vexelberg
connected to Skolkovo. Skolkovo,
the theft of U.S. technology
in this Russian Silicon Valley type
simulated project.
The stealing of technology,
possibly leading to the development of missiles
that could defeat our missile defense.
Oh, and the same companies involved in it
donated to the Clinton Foundation.
Why do you think they sanctioned these guys?
To make them feel good?
To give them a pass?
The guy's company, Deripaska, took a dump this weekend.
All right, one more thing.
They announced this weekend as well the appointment of uh was john lausch another united states attorney from the
northern district of illinois to supervise what the production of documents to the house
investigative committee on pfizer gate clinton gate mabe gate, Flynn gate, all of this stuff. Yes. It took a little time. I get it.
I understand, but I am, I'd be careful here,
but I'm confident. Let's say Trump knows exactly what's going on.
He's he more than likely has said to these, he, Trump is, uh, heads is, he is the head of the executive branch.
This is obvious.
Has probably put the squeeze on them and said, guys, it's time to comply with Congress and their demands for transparency here.
I don't know that, no one told me that personally, but it's obvious by his tweets that he's interested in the Department of Justice doing the right thing and complying with oversight.
This is, the Department of Justice and the FBI are not independent agencies.
They fall under the executive branch of our Constitution.
That's just a fact.
They are politically accountable like everyone else.
So the appointment of this United States attorney to supervise this process
says to me that they are darn serious about the public finding out what's going on.
I don't know how you could come to another conclusion from that.
It's important stuff.
Okay, I got a lot to get through.
But that story.
And by the way, I have a really good story in the show notes.
It's from Reuters, Bongino.com.
Check it out, please.
Folks, one quick note on that because it's going to segue nicely into my second story. Listen, I completely and entirely understand I can't say this objectively because anything I say about my content obviously benefits me and Joe and the show and CRTV and NRA. I get that. NRA TV where I have my 5.30 show at night at nratv.com.
I get that.
I understand that it can't possibly be objective.
But I was on Fox & Friends this morning.
I was making a very serious appeal to people, and I hope you saw it.
We are being selectively targeted by Twitter.
That's not hyperbolic.
It's not drama.
It's not me making a stink for PR. I don't need
it. Don't care about it. Matter of fact, Joe, how many interviews do we turn down a week from
15, 20 or so? I'm not kidding. I'm not interested anymore. I'm interested in my family, my kids,
and I have three jobs already. NRA TV. I do a lot of work doing analysis with Fox and I have this
show and CRTV.
I have too much going on.
I'm not interested in the free PR.
What I am interested in telling you is Twitter and Facebook are targeting conservatives.
They banned me from running ads.
They said it was due to inappropriate content.
I have no idea what they're talking about.
We scoured our Twitter account.
I've told you this multiple times.
I don't know what they were talking about.
They won't answer.
They won't answer what they were talking about. They won't answer. They won't
answer what the inappropriate content was. And frankly, I don't care anymore about this,
about the ads that is. I do care about targeting conservatives because I wouldn't give them a
dollar anymore anyway. So that's not going to happen. I also sold my stock in Twitter,
sold my stock in Facebook. I want nothing to do with these companies anymore. But I say that, folks, because I'm humbly requesting that you please go to my website, Bongino.com.
Subscribe to my email list if you wouldn't mind.
It's right there, the big subscribe button.
Follow us on Twitter while we're still there.
Follow us on Facebook while we're still there.
Spread the word on our podcast and please subscribe.
Subscribe because I won't i
don't know how much longer i'll be able to contact you via twitter i am seriously not confident that
i i won't be deplatformed soon uh from twitter and facebook now if you'd like to join me in a
i'm taking a bit of action this week i'm dancing a little bit for you regular listeners you know
what i mean so diamond and silk who i i know i
wouldn't call them personal friends but i know them quite well we've had a lot of conversations
we've been at uh events together are very nice um ladies they support president trump there
they have some they have some pretty good content out there people seem to like them
um they have a platform on facebook and some of you know them, some of you don't. You can look them up.
And they have been sanctioned by Facebook as well.
I will have this story up at the show notes again as well.
Please check it out.
For content that is, quote, unsafe for the community.
This is the equivalent of me on Twitter, inappropriate content.
Nobody knows what that means.
They told Diamond and Silk that their Facebook content is basically being thr throttled because they're being you know not being expanded to the audience it should because it's unsafe for
the community no one will tell them what that means exactly now in a protest against this because
it's it's a sham and i'm tired of social media and i'm imploring you humbly to join me in this. I'm taking a week off from Facebook. I am not posting. I posted
yesterday that that would be my last post for a week, that I'm going dark on Facebook.
It's up to you. I understand. I'm not trying to start some national trend or anything, but
I would encourage you today, if you can, to make a post in support of them.
Tell everyone this is going to be your last week. You'll see them again next Monday.
That you're going dark for a week.
If they want to silence you, then you know what?
That's fine.
We'll put the tape over our mouths for a week
and we'll show them what silence looks like.
Because let me tell you something.
Remember, folks, and you may say,
well, why would we de-platform ourselves for a week?
You know why, folks?
Facebook is selling you.
They're selling you and your information. Facebook is
worthless without people posting updates
because nobody would go to Facebook
to see updates that aren't there.
And I've had an epiphany
on this. I used to say
to Joe, oh, why would we get off there?
Getting off there is a big mistake. We could use their platform
against it. And we can.
If you want to cancel your account, fine. I'm not going to do that
yet. But I think a good week or two of letting them know what it looks like to not have any
content to move facebook is useless without you posting dog pictures and cat pictures and what
you did this weekend i'm serious it's useless what are people going on there for so i'm taking
a week off i posted please like my post to Facebook because it'll share that post and then people
will see it.
And I can't recommend enough that we do something and stand up.
All right.
Now, more on this because this is a big deal.
Facebook and Twitter, this is a win-win for them in banning conservative content, throttling
conservative content, shadow banning conservative content.
And what I mean by shadow banning is- Yeah, please, you heard this story? Yeah, but it needs to be explained
with shadow banning. Yeah, and I got a good one from PJ Media at the show notes today,
again, at my website, bungino.com, a good story about the shadow banning of Ted Cruz.
Here's what's happening on Twitter to prominent conservatives like Cruz and others. They don't
ban your account outright. With me,
they just banned our ads. I'm on Twitter, but they won't let us run ads. They banned us.
What happened with Ted Cruz is fascinating. Ted Cruz has something like three times the
followers or twice the number of followers as Kamala Harris, a Democratic senator and a liberal,
you know, the love interest of the liberals. I mean, they think she's the greatest thing ever.
She is a California senator.
Ted Cruz has, I think, more than twice as many followers as her.
But if you look at an analysis that they did,
I think it was Jim Garrity from National Review,
of the retweets and likes,
amazingly, Cruz only has a fraction of the retweets and likes
that Kamala Harris does,
despite a pretty engaged conservative base
and Ted Cruz being an extremely prominent and important conservative voice.
Why do you think that is?
That is not by accident, folks.
Twitter has been, they didn't, the James O'Keefe videos where they acknowledge some form of
shadow banning.
In those James O'Keefe videos, shadow banning, meaning Joe can post on his Joe Haas one,
follow Joe. He's J-O-E-H-o-z-1 on twitter once in a while i tweet yeah yeah he likes it follow joe but you say it was joe has one
they're shadow banning right joe's tweeting and he thinks his followers are seeing it but twitter
is only letting select people see it not as actual actual. That's what a shadow ban is.
You don't know it.
You're not told you're banned.
You're tweeting away, Joe.
You think everybody on the planet's seeing it, like Cruz.
But Twitter's selectively shadow banning people, putting them in this box, like, only let a
few people see that.
Now, why is this a win-win for social media?
Now, you may say, gosh, Dan, that sounds pretty macabre, win-win, so how do we win?
I'm going to get to that in a second.
For two reasons.
Twitter and Facebook will continue to attack conservatives because, number one, I had to
take some notes on this to make sure I got this straight with you.
They are appealing to the new socialists out there.
The new socialists, new socialism was a term I took from Kevin Williamson in one of his
books. The new socialists are not the type that want to take the government, want the government
to own the means of production, Joe. The new socialists are people who want the government
to tax and regulate business to death, but not directly own it like in the Soviet Union,
because then they can't be blamed when it collapses like they were in the Soviet Union.
The new socialists just want you to tax business and regulate it to death. Now,
who are the new socialists? They are largely liberals, people who run as Republicans in
general. I know we have some dogs, too, but in general, folks are conservative and of the limited
government type and don't want the government involved in Twitter or Facebook, no matter what.
I know I don't. I just want to be crystal clear on this. These are free market
companies. I don't support government involvement, even if it's on my behalf. I don't want it.
I am crystal clear on my principles on this, and you should be too where I stand. If you support
it, that's fine. I don't. But see how that leads? That's asymmetric warfare, folks.
Twitter and Facebook know guys like me, no matter how much they attack me and Joe, know we will never, ever advocate for the government to regulate them.
They know it.
Because we're limited.
We actually care about our principles.
Despite the fact that Twitter has personally targeted me.
I've sent out the pictures.
Twitter's thing.
You are hereby banned from Biff for inappropriate content.
You know how easy it would be for me to come on the air and go,
President Trump, please.
You got to go after Twitter, man.
They're not being fair.
They're not being fair.
But the free market isn't fair and the world stinks.
And I'm going to fight back my way.
I'm selling my stock.
I'm encouraging you to.
I use their own platform to go after them.
But I do not support government involvement.
But do you see how this is a win-win for Twitter?
They know, Joe, that by continuing to attack conservatives, nothing will happen.
Because they know I'll never advocate for government to go after them.
They know that the free market will take a really long time to hit them.
Just like it did the mainstream media.
The mainstream media, gosh, Joe Cronkite, Dan Rather, they had a monopoly on the media market your entire adult life.
And then one day they didn't.
And I'm telling you that's what's going to happen to Twitter too.
Remember MySpace?
Some of you are like, what's MySpace?
Exactly.
Twitter is, I'm telling you, their days are numbered.
They may be numbered slowly, but they are numbered if they keep this up.
Chucky.
But it is, I like that.
It is a win-win for Twitter because they know conservatives will not go after them.
They're appealing to the new socialists who love big business targeting conservatives
because anybody who aligns with their ideological cause,
an enemy of their enemy is their friend.
They don't care.
They know conservatives are the enemy.
If Twitter attacks them, then they're our friends.
They're the enemy of their enemy.
Second, I brought this up a couple weeks ago,
but in light of what happened at Diamond and Silk on Facebook
and what continues to happen on Twitter,
it's important to bring this up again.
First, they're appealing to new socialists.
Second, they're appealing to government regulators
because they want safe harbor.
They don't want to be sued for discriminating.
Now, listen, the cases would be weak
if you know
if seriously
it's a free market company
and me suing them
would probably be
highly highly
unlikely to win
anywhere
even with a
ideologically aligned judge
not that I would sue them
but you get the point
yeah
but
they do
want
safe harbor
from the government
so what are they looking for?
Twitter's going to figure on this, Joe.
Well, if we go after conservatives,
we'll cater to liberals, the new socialists, they'll love us.
And maybe they'll pass these laws that they have over in the UK,
these hate language laws.
You know what I'm saying?
You can't say this and you can't say that.
It's a crime to open your mouth. these laws they have in some other countries and that will allow twitter and
facebook to ban uh conservative accounts entirely with no fear of litigation at all in the future
none so it's a win-win first they appeal to liberals who hate conservatives by booting
conservatives off twitter and secondly once they boot conservatives off Twitter,
maybe some law will be passed in the future
that'll provide them safe harbor against lawsuits
because they can say, oh, it was hate language
and we just didn't like it.
This is a win-win-win for them.
Now, another thing happened this weekend.
Jack Dorsey, the head of Twitter,
shared an article and he said,
hey, great read. You see this, Joe? Great
read. Yeah, man. Great read. The
guy is the head of Twitter. The article
was a complete
pot shot, disingenuous
attack on conservatives
and a celebration of California
politics, despite the fact that California
was just rated, what, 50 out of
50 in cost
of living, quality of life?
California going bankrupt?
Do you mean the same California?
Okay, we had a surplus this year.
Yeah, you also have trillions in government liabilities you can't pay.
Listen, I love California, okay?
I just don't like the politicians that run it.
But Jack Dorsey, the head of Twitter, shared an article and he said, great read, an article
that just, I mean, attacks Republicans in some of the most grotesque ways. This is the head of Twitter. Now, what do we do? I told you what I'm doing this week and I encourage you to join me. Totally up to you. Again, I'm not trying to, you know, be the, start some national movement here, but it'd be nice if you'd help me out.
to start some national movement here,
but it'd be nice if you'd help me out.
Support Diamond and Silk,
whether you like them or not.
Some people do, some people don't.
I like them.
They're very nice.
I like them.
Yeah, their commentary's funny.
I don't think they're trying to be the William F. Buckley's of their time,
but they're funny,
and they support the president,
and I admire them for having the guts to stand up.
They are being hurt and impacted by Facebook. I encourage you today to fight back and go dark for a week. Facebook cannot sell you
and your content if it isn't there. Put up a post, tag Diamond and Silk, say,
thanks Facebook, we're out of here for a week. We'll see you all on Monday.
You're not sharing anything this week because it ain't going to be here.
Second, I sold my stocks.
You do what you want.
I'm not a financial advisor.
I'm not trying to tell you to put your financial health at risk.
I'm just telling you what I did.
I sold my Twitter stock.
Listen, I'm sure some liberal will pick it up. I'm sure it had a 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1,
what percentage point impact on the price of Twitter.
If that.
I'm just telling you that over time,
the cumulative effects of a number of people who get tired of this stuff and fight back
doing similar things will matter.
Finally, Twitter wants to shadow ban
and then outright ban
people like me
from running ads.
Don't advertise, folks.
Don't give these people a dime.
Don't give them a dime.
Now, I have a contract now,
so I still have some stuff
that I mean,
because listen,
disclosure matters to me
and I don't want to be,
I do have some ads running there
on Facebook
that I've already paid in advance and I kind of have to be, I do have some ads running there on Facebook that I've already paid
in advance and I kind of have a tough time getting out of them. Those will wrap up soon, but I'm done
with Twitter. I will not be giving them a dime again in the future, but do what I did after this.
I'm not, I can't, I just refuse. I'm not giving them a dime. Try them out. Don't give them a dime
of your money, folks.
All right.
I got a lot more to get to.
So stay tuned.
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Okay.
Some news stories of the day I got to get to, and then I want to get to this inflation puzzle story
because it's fascinating.
Let's see.
All right, China again.
So China's talking devaluation now, folks.
China is, this is interesting,
what's going on with the Trump team.
Now, you know, if you've listened to my show on tariffs,
you know where I stand on that.
We don't need to repeat those shows.
But it is fascinating what's happening and trump's skills as a negotiator we'll
see in the next uh coming days and coming weeks um how exactly his tactical negotiating skills
joseph play out if you know what i mean yeah he has threatened some significant sheriffs on china
of course what did china do china responded by saying, I know you are, but what am I?
You know, we're going to do it too, right?
Pretty much.
So now you have this threat of taxes and tariffs on products imported and exported.
Imported into China, exported out of China, and vice versa in the United States.
But here's an interesting little note I saw.
So China is now, and when I said to you last week, I meant, I'm not a fan of tariffs, but
China is really in between a rock and a hard place here.
Joe, China exports, what is it, five times as much stuff into the United States as they
buy, well, four times to be a little more precise, four times as much products inside
into the United States as we to them.
So if we were to impose tariffs on them, it would dramatically impact and affect the Chinese economy.
And it would still, don't get me wrong, it would still affect ours.
But we don't export as much to them as they send to us.
Now, it would impact us.
You know my stance on that if you've listened to the show.
So China is between a rock and a hard place for reason number one, they sell more to us than we
sell to them. Number two, their second retaliatory measure they're threatening is, oh, we're just
going to dump your treasuries, your bonds. We lent you guys money and we're just going to dump them.
And dumping them would effectively basically destroy the market for U.S. bonds and make it very difficult for the U.S. to
borrow money. Why? Because China's lending us the money. If China says we're not going to borrow
money anymore and they're a major lender to us, we're going to have to raise our interest rates
to find other people to take up our debt. So I talked about that last week. So number two,
you may say, well, how does that hurt China?
Because if they sell their U.S. debt, all the debt they have,
and they flood the market with it, all of a sudden what they're left holding,
because remember, they're different maturities, is going to lose value too.
So China's basically going to cut off their nose to spite their face.
Again, we talked about that last week.
It's the third one, their new threat, Joe.
Threat number three.
China's saying, well, we'll just devalue our currency
here we're gonna massively devalue our currency and what will that do that'll reduce the effect
of any tariffs you put on our products by devaluing the currency what do they mean they
mean exactly that making their money worth less and when you making their money worth less. And when you make their money worth less, their products are worth less because their
products are denominated in Chinese money.
So if you got, say, a thousand Chinese widgets, you bought them for a thousand U.S. dollars
and they devalue their currency, your thousand U.S. dollars buys more widgets then.
Why?
Because the Chinese currency they're denominated in
is worth less so if you got a thousand say dollars and then you got a thousand chinese renminbi
and now you get two thousand that's dramatic you know but they even now you get two thousand of
them because their currency is worth less so you get more for your u.s dollars you can now buy more
chinese widgets now china's like look that'll work for us. We'll devalue it.
Devalue our currency.
We'll make our products basically cheaper, and therefore it'll offset any of your tariffs.
So, you know, they do the Nelson Muntz.
Eh-heh.
But I said eh-heh.
Right?
Now, you may say, Dan, I thought you were saying Chinese are over a rock here.
They are.
Because if they do that, they tried that in 2015, folks.
And what happened?
By devaluing their currency.
We talked about this on a show, I think, two years ago.
By devaluing their Chinese currency, what do they do?
They devalue all the assets in China people have that are denominated in Chinese currency.
So what happened in 2015?
Big time Chinese
money flooded out of the
country because they're like, wait,
you're going to devalue my assets? I'm converting
everything to US dollars tomorrow.
So it's
called capital outflows.
What are they going to do?
They are,
again, you know my stance on tariffs.
I'm not a fan. You've heard the show.
But I'm just telling you, in defense of Trump's negotiating position,
if he can in turn get the Chinese to stop stealing our intellectual property and to work on government procurement, excuse me, that's more fair and reasonable,
and reduce their own trade barriers, if he can get them to do this,
it would be a genius move because there's nothing
the Chinese can do that's going to impact us, Joe, that won't impact them worse. We're going to
devalue our currency. Yeah, good luck with that. Money's going to flood out of your country in
droves and go where? Into the United States. Good luck. Good luck with that. We're going to sell
your bonds. Good luck. You have trillions of dollars in in assets it both in foreign direct investment here and in bonds
you're going to devalue your own stuff that you have left right right right they are in
they are up the creek folks and i think trump understands so we'll see and again i'm not
trying to play both sides this you know crystal clear I stand. I'm just saying it's a negotiating position. If he can get them to fold
before these tariffs are implemented and open up their markets, stop stealing our stuff,
our intellectual property, open up their government procurement and stop making a,
you know, a buy China only policy there. It will have been a very significant move, folks, a significant one.
And I'm not so concerned so much about the trade deficit. I am so I am concerned, though,
about unfair trade practices and their subsidizing of government industries and things like that as
well. It just makes for a globally inefficient market. But I thought that was interesting in
light of the conversations we've had with China. Remember, those three ways, they're over a rock. They're really screwed right now. All right. I got a lot more to get to. Don't go anywhere.
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Okay.
Man, I'm sorry, folks, if I'm motoring along.
But it's Monday, and I need to get you the news you need to hear about.
All right.
Have you seen uh i have
okay on my notes today i have a little arrow pointing to the side stories which make liberals
appear nuts uh which is true for this for this week here's a good one here so have you noticed
this uptick in teacher strikes lately we've seen this in west virginia uh we've seen across the
states now teachers have been striking i think it happened in kentucky recently folks this is all in response
to a case going on in the supreme court right now i discussed uh a couple of weeks ago the janice
case right now liberals are in a panic why liberals have been largely funded their movements their
cause whether it's the minimum
wage cause, whether it's forced unionization. As unions have moved farther and farther to the left,
public sector unions, and in many cases, private sector unions, have sponsored legislation that
basically helped the Democrat Party. They donate pretty much overwhelmingly to Democrat candidates
and public union coffers and things. And they also provided door knockers and things
like that. Unions have been a source of Democrat support. Listen, I've said to you repeatedly,
I'll say it again. I'm not anti-union. I'm anti-monopoly and I'm anti-force. Being forced
to join a union that has a monopoly over your freedom of association is not my idea of a good
time. I'm sorry. There's a case in the Supreme Court now which is going to be absolutely devastating to unions if
they lose, and it doesn't look good for them. It's the Janus case. It involves these security
clauses. Security clauses are, in essence, forced payments from an employee to a union,
whether he basically wants to join or not. And the reasoning behind them has been,
well, the union's bargaining on behalf of everyone and these employees,
you know, should be forced to pay for that bargaining because they benefit from it.
It looks like these security clauses are going to be thrown out.
Now, what's happening?
Of course, far left states, Washington and others,
are now responding in advance.
Keep in mind, the Supreme Court ruling hasn't even come out yet.
A lot of these teacher strikes have been organized as kind of a warning sign, Joe,
to look, if we don't win this case,
this is what's in store for you.
Remember with the left, folks, nothing is by
accident. Look at what's happening. You want to do this? We'll strike teachers. We'll strike
everybody. All right. They're in a panic. Liberals hate freedom of association, folks.
And the fact that you will not be forced to join and finance a union,
the fact that you won't is driving them crazy.
So states are passing laws that are,
what they're meant to preemptively do, Joe,
is create just a small window for you to get out.
So if you don't have to pay anymore,
you're only going to get a 10-day window,
I think was one of the rules.
One of them was you have to respond in writing,
but you're automatically enrolled in a union
unless you respond in writing.
Otherwise, this is a scam, folks. This is a scam. Again, I have nothing against unions,
but I do have a whole lot against unions forcing people to join who don't want to join. I'm sorry.
It is unfair. And it just puts unions in a very, very bad light. And what's interesting, Joe,
is unions will tell you that, oh, this is necessary and we're benefiting the workers.
But what's fascinating is if you,
if you read some of the studies on this,
only about a half to a third of people in the actual union.
Now,
if given the choice to pay union dues would actually pay them.
In other words,
if they're so popular,
how come only half to a third of the people in the union would agree to keep
paying the union?
It doesn't make any
sense all right okay i want to get to this one too this is another great story um it'll be in
the show notes and i strongly encourage you to read this one this isn't so much a story but some
research i saw this weekend which i thought would be fascinating to talk about on the show um
the inflation puzzle you know there's an there's a piece out by the
st louis fed it's short it's not one of these overly wonky pieces which is surprising because
sometimes i read these things and uh if you don't have a good background in economics and
you know understand the the elasticities and opportunity costs and stuff like that the
articles are almost impossible to read you're lost yeah yeah you're lost this one's very readable
short sweet it's more like a kind of a synopsis,
but it talks about this inflation puzzle.
I know that's it,
but this matters, folks.
This matters a lot.
There's a perplexing kind of phenomenon
going on right now
that a lot of economists
are having a tough time figuring out.
It's why the federal government,
through the Federal Reserve, you know, it's supposed to be independent. We all And it's why the federal government, through the Federal Reserve,
you know, it's supposed to be independent.
We all know it's subject to political influence
like anyone else,
but why they've been printing the heck out of money
through quantitative easing and other type programs,
but why inflation has stayed relatively subdued.
Now, when you print a lot of money,
there'd be more money chasing the same amount of goods,
the price would go up. If there's $100 in an economy chasing 100 widgets, hypothetically,
each widget could fetch a dollar. If you print another 100, therefore, there are $200 in an
economy chasing 100 widgets, then hypothetically, each widget could fetch $2, even though there's
still 100 widgets. So, either monetarists and others, there's been a lot of theories
about what exactly causes inflation.
I'm of the belief that the quantity of money
does in fact is a primary driver.
I don't think that's a particularly
controversial assertion to make.
But what's puzzling now is again,
that we've been printing the heck out of money
and inflation has stayed relatively subdued.
A lot of people can't find out why.
Now, when productivity goes up, when productivity is high, inflation is typically low.
Productivity meaning we're producing more stuff.
Think about why that would be.
Because if there's $100 chasing 100 widgets and now you're producing 200 widgets, then
now the cost should go down because there's more widgets, but they're roughly the same amount of money.
Right.
So one of the theories, well, maybe just productivity is enhanced.
It's that we're just producing more stuff.
But productivity has been kind of stagnant lately.
And inflation is still relatively subdued.
So there's a couple of theories this piece puts out there.
And it's short.
I'll go through them quick here.
One of them, which is fascinating, Joe, remember, we're talking about why prices aren't going up.
In essence, we're going to keep this very simple.
And I don't want prices to go.
I'm not a fan of inflation.
This is just a good report, right?
And it explains a couple of things.
One, I think, may have to do with the development of technology.
And one of the good examples they give here that makes a lot of sense is smartphones, Joe.
Smartphones
have reduced the demand for other
products. A lot of
other products. Oh, yeah. You have
healthcare apps now, Joe.
You have healthcare apps on your phone. So if
you had a blood pressure monitor in your
house that cost $500, $600,
now you download an
app on your phone, you put your fingers
on a little board it
attaches to your phone have you seen these things it'll measure your blood pressure your your pulse
rate whatever you want yeah yeah well probably won't do you need blood pressure cut for that
but your pulse rate whatever it may be uh you know you have uh all kinds of apps uh health care apps
that are coming out now you have uh pedometers that you can detect on your
phone how many steps you're taking. All of the smartphone apps have reduced demand for other
products. When you reduce demand for products, obviously the price comes down because there's
not that many people trying to buy them. Now, smartphones, one example, it's not the only one,
but it was a good one. Yeah, it is a good one. Reduce the demand for Walkmans.
There are 18 and 19-year-olds like, what the heck is a Walkman?
Exactly.
When Joe and I grew up, that was the thing, man.
You had the tape deck Walkman.
You were the man.
You had those goofy-looking headphones.
Look at Joe bopping around.
I remember that.
You don't even know what Walkmans are anymore.
There's not even a reduced demand.
There's no demand.
So you have other music players and things like that, MP3 players.
All of this stuff has gone the way of the woolly mammoth because of the development of the smartphone.
As I said, pedometers, other things here as well.
Computers, standalone computers.
Most people are doing their email now by smartphone.
So the reduction in demand due to some form of a productivity enhancement.
Now you say, well, I thought you said productivity is stagnant.
Maybe not.
Maybe we're just measuring it the wrong way.
That's where I'm going with this.
Smartphones have eliminated the demand for a bevy of other products.
Again, keeping prices low because with no demand, you're not going to have a price hike.
Nobody wants them.
Number two here, the sharing economy.
This is brilliant and something I talked about on prior shows before.
Maybe the sharing economy is hiding a lot of these productivity enhancements.
In other words, how we're really getting more efficient as a society, smartphones, the sharing economy, but we're not really seeing it in the numbers.
The sharing economy, folks, Uber, Airbnb, things like this, we're not producing any new assets
in essence, but the same assets are just being used better. What do I mean by that?
You have an apartment, Joe, in Manhattan. Me and you, say, you know,
after this weekend, who knows? We may
really blew up this weekend.
Say we and you
get some big apartment in Manhattan we only use
three, four times a year.
Those assets are unused, say,
if we're there a week. For, you know, 48,
49 weeks out of the year,
nobody's there. So Joe
may say, hey, Dan, I i'm gonna just rent mine out to
airbnb so now people go up there and they use what was a it's not new it's joe's apartment
but it's a previously inefficiently used asset joe was only using it for two weeks out of the year
now it's being used efficiently for 50 49 weeks out of the year as well. And what does that do?
Reduces the demand for what, Joe? Hotels. So when you don't have as much demand for hotel room,
prices stay down. So again, maybe we're just not measuring productivity right. And that's why some
of these prices are subdued. Same thing with cars. All day you had your car sitting around,
you go to the gym.
You got nothing to do.
But say you work a four or five-hour workday or an eight-hour workday in your sport at night.
All of a sudden, you had a car sitting in your driveway.
Now you go out, you're an Uber guy.
What is that drive-down demand for?
Taxis, limos, and cars.
But we didn't build that.
I mean, we are building new cars.
But I'm just saying the productivity enhancements don't show up in new cars right it's the cars we have now being used better
keeping the prices down because people aren't bidding up the prices of taxis and cans anymore
interesting one more uh theory about this was demographic changes and this was a research they
did in japan which i thought was really interesting that older workers in Japan who've been with companies their entire life.
Now, as Joe remembers, just decades ago, this was the theory of the day. When you started with a
company like an IBM, remember, Joe, you stayed there forever. You worked with Pan Am before
they went out of business, whatever it may be, and you got your pension from there. I say that
because my father-in-law, he worked for Pan Am am and that's what you did you didn't move around now the problem they're having
with japan with this lifetime stability that came in with the job market show is now some of these
companies are closing people been there 40 years and their skills joe are firm specific they're
not specific i mean even joe even we got in the podcast you remember you were like hey dan some
of this stuff is new to me.
SoundCloud and all this stuff.
And now, I mean, now he's three years in.
Joe's like the man on this.
But it was new.
We and him had to kind of learn some stuff together.
Even Paul, my wife, who's a web genius, we had to figure a lot of it out.
Now Joe remodeled his and basically he's in his second career now.
But the point they're making is some of the studies from Japan is a lot lot of older workers can't do that they have skills specific to that firm the firm
closes so what are they doing taking entry-level jobs in other places not commensurate with their
former skills and pushing out younger workers and of course these older workers are saving more not
spending as much as those younger workers would have so they're not bidding bidding up the prices for things. And I just thought that was another interesting
thing that's happening there. And it may have something to do with demographic changes.
So interesting stuff. I love economics. I've always been passionate about it.
And I thought you might find some of that interesting. All right. One last story under
the liberals are nuts category. I mean, i literally have an arrow pointing to this dude you know liberals are nuts yes they are i am so disorganized here today it's
crazy i was up at a regatta this weekend for my daughter she wrote oh yeah yeah i saw some big
supporters in orlando so if you one of them said he listens to my show every day so you know who
you are i ran into him in a restaurant. I was eating in with my family there.
So he was cool.
He wanted to take a selfie.
Everybody in the restaurant started looking around like,
is this guy somebody famous?
I have no idea who this dude is.
I'm serious.
It was the funniest thing.
Cool.
So shout out to you.
The Farm Bill.
Farm Bill's up for reauthorization.
Why does this matter to you?
Because again, it points to how crazy liberals liberals are the first story about the unions was fascinating because they want to force you to
join a union no matter what and even if the supreme court overrules it they're going to force you to
continue to paying because that's what liberals do they don't believe in freedom of association
but on the farm bill there's uh negotiating going on because the farm bill joe is the bill largely
responsible for food stamp spending and there is an entirely reasonable proposal being put in the food stamp bill
that if you are an able-bodied adult that is capable of working,
you should be able to put in 20 hours of work to pay for the amount of food
that they're providing, the money and resources they're providing you with.
Remember, this is able-bodied people. We're not talking
about kids, people who are disabled, people who can't work. We're talking about able-bodied people
who you are working to feed, but don't want to work to feed themselves. So they're talking about
a portion of the bill that would put a 20-hour, and here's the deal. There's a 20-hour work
requirement, but states are given waivers.
They're going to start pulling these waivers.
Remember, this is able-bodied.
We're not talking about people who can't work,
who are incapable of working, children, older folks.
We're talking about people who are able-bodied.
And the Democrats are saying, no way, it's a non-starter.
So you're supposed to work to feed yourself
and someone else who doesn't want to work
potentially to feed them it's just bizarre but this again goes into the category of liberals
losing their minds and this is why they lose working class america because this is hard to
justify to even the most compassionate sympathetic person to say to them, let me get this straight. You're 25 years old.
You have no physical ailments that prevent you from working.
They made this very simple for you.
20-hour requirement or job training.
And job training is a very broad category.
You don't want to do any of that,
but you want to continue to take money from people who are working
to feed themselves and you at the same time.
And that makes sense to you? And then you wonder why the left is losing America, folks.
It's precisely because of things like this. This is in the liberals are nuts category.
Should I have a category and show up? I have that in my NRA TV show. I have all these little
categories I put together. I have liberals versus liberals, dopey things liberals say,
debunking liberals, the kanky awards, which went over great. I have liberals versus liberals, dopey things liberals say, debunking liberals,
the Kanky Awards,
which went over great.
I appreciated that one.
Yeah, that was great.
Appreciate all the support on that.
All right, folks,
that's the show for today.
I really appreciate all your support.
Go check me out tonight,
nratv.com.
I'm on at 5.30 p.m.,
nratv.com.
Roku, Amazon, Fire, Apple TV.
Check us out on Google Chromecast too.
Thanks for all the feedback on the show.
It's been great.
I really appreciate it.
Go to Bongino.com.
Check out the show notes.
Really good stories on there.
Take care.
See you tomorrow.
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