The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Hour 2: The D.C. Plane Crash Tragedy (feat. Jeff Wise)
Episode Date: January 30, 2025Aviation journalist, Jeff Wise, joins us to discuss last night's tragic plane crash in Washington D.C. He shares his expertise on what led to the crash and just how rare an event like this is. Plus, a...fter the FAA director was forced out and more than 3,000 air-traffic controllers were fired, how responsible is the United State government? Plus, we discuss the impact on the entertainment industry that YouTube influencers such as Speed, Druski and Mr. Beast have had, and marvel at some of Speed's athletic achievements. Then, we continue our discussion about the plane crash and what kind of concerns this raises about the effectiveness of the United States government. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is the Don LeBattor Show with the StuGuts Podcast.
I have been telling you recently among my many fears that it seems like some basic American
systems are just failing.
Things are failing and getting worse.
And overnight, many of you woke up this morning to a crash that it seems confirmed now that
there aren't going to be any survivors.
It's very close to confirm that 64 people on board an American
Airlines flight and three service members in the Army chopper that crashed
into it. There will be no survivors. Jeff Wise is a longtime aviation
journalist. He's the host of the podcast Finding MH370 and we have had recently
400 senior FAA officials,
plus the head of the TSA
and 3,000 air traffic controllers were fired
as recently as a week ago.
Jeff, without making this about politics,
can you just tell me how rare this is
and what kind of leadership breaches might cause it?
Well, that's a great question.
It's rare and it's not rare in the sense
that there hasn't been a collision,
a mid-air collision between a US commercial airliner
and another aircraft in flight.
The most recent one I could find was in the 80s.
And so in that sense, it's really rare.
But there have been all of these near misses reported in recent years, and there's been
a lot of concern.
You know, if you go into the pilot forums, a lot of foreign pilots think that we're crazy,
that we're just cowboys and we're just very reckless with aircraft separation.
So it's been a longstanding issue
and people have been calling out for changes
for a number of years now.
And so in that sense, it's not unexpected in a sense.
So can you tell me though,
when things like this happen and people get helpless
and they get angry, they want to assign blame
and they want to blame people in charge
and hold them accountable.
What happened here?
Well, safety is really boring.
It's all about being meticulous, crossing your T's
and dotting your I's and going through checklists
and like meticulously recording where every part
of every aircraft comes from.
And what you get at the end of all that hard work
is nothing, you know, nothing happens.
And so people will just take for granted
that I'm gonna get on the plane,
I'm gonna get to where I'm going.
And it's so easy when you take things for granted
to say, well, maybe I'll save a little bit of money.
Maybe I'll cut a corner here.
Maybe I'll like, you know, push the boundaries
a little bit there.
And you can whittle away and whittle away at a system
until it just, it breaks.
So you go from complacency to sheer terror very quickly,
as we've seen here.
So who to blame?
Who should we get angry at?
Well, you know, I'll just make one observation.
It's really easy to say that the US government
doesn't do anything for me.
I give you all my tax money and I don't get anything and you just take for granted that there's roads under the wheels of your
Car and you take for granted that you're safe
one of the things that the US government is to provide air traffic control and the main
Original purpose for air traffic control was to prevent aircraft from running into each other
The whole system was was spawned by this actually mid-air collision
that took place in 1956 over the Grand Canyon. And people started to think, well, maybe we
should find a way to have planes not run into each other. That happens, as I said, through
a result of really boring hard work. And so maybe this idea that regulation is bad, government
is bad, we can just, I'll just cowboy it myself. I'll just get on that plane and, you know,
just through my own hard work, you know, and cowboy-ness, I will make this plane get to
where it's going, you know, on its own. That's not how it works. And we all have to play
together nicely. And you basically have to pay somebody that knows what they're doing
to tell you how these planes can go their separate ways. Jeff, the director of the FAA resigned
on the day of the inauguration.
How, what kind of impact does that have
on a situation like this?
You know, nothing.
I mean, frankly, really, I mean, listen,
I'm not happy about it.
I think, I don't think the government
should be run this way by just sort of
throwing people out the window as it were.
But safety takes time.
And it's years of accumulation, years of experience.
And I'll tell you this, it's always tempting
to get rid of the expensive people first.
And who are the expensive people?
People with seniority.
The people who've been doing it for a year
and then year after are really good.
You talk about false economy, right?
The idea that maybe you're saving a penny here and there,
but what's it costing you?
And so getting rid of the FAA,
the head of the FAA a couple of days ago,
did that have a direct impact on what happened last night?
No, but it's an example of the kind of decision-making
But it's an example of the kind of decision making that accumulated causes people to die. People to die.
There's this old saying that regulations are written in blood, and it sounds kind of dramatic,
but it's really true.
We've seen something recently that this from all reminds me of, which is that for years, decades, Boeing worked really hard
to make really good safe aircraft.
And it cost them a lot of money.
They paid a top dollar for their engineers
and they kept people on and it was a real culture.
And then some bean counters came in
and this has been meticulously documented elsewhere,
but they wanted to save money.
They wanted to give more money.
There's this kind of dogma in American business, especially,
but the whole culture really,
which is that the shareholder value
is the most important thing.
Shareholder value means that the price of our stock
is the only thing that actually matters.
Everything else is secondary,
including customer satisfaction, passenger safety,
all that stuff.
It's communist, actually. If you, you know, look, go back stuff. It's communist actually.
If you, you know, look, go back to Milton Friedman in 1970.
It's communist to be concerned about anything other than share price.
And what happens is you start, you know, Boeing had owned the aircraft manufacturing business.
They said to share it with Airbus eventually, but they had, they had the goose that laid
the golden egg.
They were safe. They were safe. They were safe.
They were known as safe, period.
Yeah. And you start to trim a little bit here, cut a little bit there.
You move your work, you outsource your production, you outsource your engineering,
and you lose track of what the hell's happening,
and all of a sudden you've got windows flying out, doors flying out.
And it's really hard
to put the toothpaste back in the tube
once you've gotten away from that culture.
And these guys eventually lose their jobs,
but they get millions of dollars of payouts and everything,
so they're fine.
Okay, great, wonderful.
So let's do this in a different way.
Jeff, how long have you been an aviation journalist?
Well, I got my pilot's license in 2002.
And so I started to write about crashes.
I wrote about the 2009 Air France 447.
And then that kind of led to when MS-
So about 20 years.
About 20 years you've been doing this.
Yeah, a little over 23 years.
Okay, and you do it why?
Your care or your passion come from where where I'm a nerd, you know
Okay, all right
So the reason I asked the question though the state of the industry that results in this crash
Is this a one-off or is this something that sets alarm bells off for your expertise on?
No, we're doing stuff here where we're freezing air traffic control hires last week,
and this is emblematic of something.
Well, they say that if you see a cockroach,
you don't have a cockroach, you have a thousand cockroaches.
And again, we've seen near misses.
You know, the warning signs have been there,
and now we're finally, the bill is coming due,
and the entire system, accidents don't happen
just by bad luck.
They're a result of systemic flaws.
And so the system is flawed right now.
And we need to, it takes money, I'm sorry,
but if you want to get from A to B safely,
you can do it cheaply and crazily and haphazardly,
or you can spend the money that needs to be spent.
Government is necessary here.
But more flawed than it's been in your experience
over 20 years, or is there no way to quantify that
even with your expertise?
Like, I'm just curious if there's something in the system
that you've noted beyond the crash
that spending or investigation documents
that we're in a greater state of disrepair here
than we have been in your experience doing this.
Well, in my direct experience, no.
I mean, I fly little planes.
I fly like Cessnas and things.
And when I talk to Todd, I'm incredibly, you know, my experience of the US aviation system
is that it is full of extremely competent people who take their job very seriously and
really are doing the best
and have achieved incredible things.
I mean, it's a miracle.
I mean, if you go back 100 years
and you said to your great grandfather,
oh, we're gonna be flying from New York to LA
for a couple hundred bucks
and you're like gonna be almost guaranteed safety,
you wouldn't believe it.
So overall, I have enormous faith in the system,
but there's always, there are risks that occur.
It's always tempting to cut corners.
Because you don't see the danger until, you know,
you've got people pulling dead bodies out of the river.
His podcast is called Finding MH370. An
investigation by the New York Times in 2023 found 300 close calls near airports
nationwide and they were the result of human error. 300 of those. Is the average
passenger in more danger today on takeoff and landing than he or she was before?
So if I had been on that plane coming into land last night,
I would have said to myself,
I am essentially completely safe.
Like they always say, like you're more likely to die
on the road, the drive to the airport than in the plane,
but I would have been wrong.
We thought we were safer than we turned out to be.
Is there a problem specifically with the traffic
at Reagan International?
This airport is a small airport.
It's very close to the city center.
The FAA has been complaining for a long time
that it has more traffic than it can really bear.
And yet it is under constant pressure from lawmakers
to add more flights because they wanna get back
to where they came from for holidays and whatnot.
In fact, this particular plane that crashed last night
was flying a route that was only added last year
because of pressure from a congressman from Kansas.
And this is kind of an inherently flawed dynamic, right?
Where you have an airport that is being used
by the lawmakers who make the,
they're responsible for all the laws
covering the entire country,
including the aviation system.
And they have reason to like, fudge it, you know, including the aviation system. And they have reason to like fudge it,
you know, push the boundaries.
Like, let's just add a little,
let's go a little bit beyond safe,
a little bit beyond safe.
You know, once you go past that red line,
there's nothing to pull you back.
We appreciate the expertise.
Your genuine natural reaction
when you heard that the new transportation secretary
was a former cast member of the real world. Um, yeah, it's like, it's insane.
I mean, we live in an insane world,
and I just, I don't, I don't, I don't,
I don't understand anything anymore, actually.
You know what?
That's a perfect dismount.
Like, I thought you had dismounted perfectly
right before that, but your general confusion
as a nerd expert on these things
just stumbling your way
to you know what, yeah it's crazy.
It's all crazy, their planes crashing in the sky.
Yeah it's crazy, it's crazy.
Everything's gone crazy.
Thank you Jeff, appreciate the time sir.
Guys it's my pleasure, thank you.
That is some expertise at the end.
I'm not even kidding you, he speaks for all of us
when he's just looking up at the sky
and things are falling out of the sky
and he's like yeah this crazy, right? It's what
we're doing. It's crazy. Yes. Like everything that we're participating in is, is just nuts.
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Don LeBretard. Greg, how's your birthday going so far?
I invented it.
It's going fantastic.
My wife and I are staying home tonight.
We're watching the debate on TV.
We're going to do something special for dinner.
It's a nice day for me so far.
Stugats.
That sounds like not a super nice night.
The debate?
Old people love that shit.
Yeah.
That's exactly right
yeah that's exactly right old people do love that shit
and I'm old now I can't deny it anymore
now this is the Don LeVatar show with his two gods
When I get left behind, one of the places that I get left behind is when Amin and Mike are talking excitedly about an influencer named Speed who has now replaced Mr. Beast
as the biggest of all the influencers.
I don't know what they're talking
about, but their enthusiasm makes me jealous. It makes me want to know what they're talking
about.
Well, I think it's a really interesting day and age. I recently saw the Tom Green documentary
and it's weird when someone does their own documentary because they're usually self-involved
anyways. This one really shapes it, but Tom Green being at the forefront of kind of podcasting
and anyone can be a star, it really was eye opening.
And I think we're at another cross section here
where you're starting to see people of legitimate influence.
I don't think there's a new Mr. Beast.
Mr. Beast is still chugging along.
He's still Mr. Beast for a reason.
But there are legitimate stars,
Kaisenet, Druski, Speed, all of which,
I actually think, for the most part,
not maybe every single one that I outlined,
but for the most part, are supremely talented
and would have probably broken through
in a day with more traditional methods,
which I actually think Drusky's probably one of those.
I think that guy could have been a star in any era.
Yeah, no, Drusky definitely, he's talented.
He's talented, and I think the thing that old people
like me might get to when we see these influencers
or these people exist in this space is like, what do you actually do?
Because a lot of them, and it's crazy,
you said Tom Green, Tom Green is one of those people
I think of, it was like, the first of like,
all he does is act weird in public,
and that's supposed to be, that's the whole bit.
There's gotta be something more to it.
There's gotta be something more to it.
Drusky, there's something more to it.
He is absolutely funny, and there's thought behind
what he's trying to create around it.
Kyson, that I think is the same thing.
He is naturally a funny guy.
He's got writers, right?
Drusky, I think, has writers for some of these bits,
like the B.B. Hell thing.
Or is he that funny?
Well, he does a lot of great improv stuff,
but there seems, like, he does also produce bits.
You know, you see him on Theo Vonn's podcast,
you see him on Tom Segura's podcast. Like he's a funny guy, right?
Kaisenat maybe I think more likely to have writers, um,
and guys that are fleshing out stuff. But again,
there is some sort of infrastructure behind it as opposed to,
I won't name any names, but some other, uh, influences are just like,
I'm going to be weird. And it's like, that's it,
that's all the kids want, someone acting weird on camera.
What do you think about Speed,
because when he goes to places,
he's essentially been doing a world tour,
and he's been going to South America,
and he gets welcomeings like he's The Beatles,
like he's Michael Jackson at parts,
like he has 36 viewers at a given moment on his livestreams.
There's video here of him showing up.
I think this was in Peru over here.
Yeah, he is.
And also this is a dude that a lot of people have doubted.
Let me just stop you right here.
That is not neither Beatles or Michael Jackson level.
Ladies and for the younger viewers,
if you want to know what Beatles Michael Jackson level was,
imagine the entirety of the screen. You couldn't see trees. You couldn't see buildings. There are hundreds of people though out here.
There are a lot of people. That's very impressive though. It's very impressive.
Very impressive turnout. Also not Michael Jackson.
Understood. That's Peru. And this guy is still very early in his career.
I was like anyone.
I was hating on this guy initially not getting it. And then
I saw his stuff wildly entertaining. And he's like legit. He barely lost to Noah Lyles in a race.
That's the part I'm not sure of.
You're not buying that? Noah didn't want a rematch.
I'm not. Because again, it's like it's whatever these things are playing.
That was like two days after doing all those consecutive backflips.
This dude's like an athletic specimen.
He is definitely athletic.
The part where it's like, this guy might be one of the fastest
human beings in the world, no, I don't.
Because again, I understand what I'm watching.
I'm watching something that is curated, that's created, right?
And it's like, hey, Noah, it would be fun if this is.
Don't worry, you'll still win.
But we'll make it seem like I almost, like, that is 100% within the realm of the content that they
create I think it I'm not saying Dan feels this way I know that certain
people in our audience feel this way that just don't mess at all with with
streamers and some people may feel like from afar they just see isolated clips
that that world isn't a true meritocracy it is it absolutely is. Like, they're at the top of the chain
because they are that much better than everybody else.
They don't have, yeah, now they have agents,
but to get to that level, they were self-made,
and I totally mess with it.
Yeah, the merit is in content creation.
It's not in racing people.
That's my point, right?
No, but the fact that he can offshoot
and still back himself up, like, he jumped over a car, this was stuff that he can offshoot and so back Himself up like he jumped over a car
This was stuff that existed in a fake Kobe commercial like his dad was driving a sports car right at him
And he jumped over him like he is wildly
Yeah, what are you laughing? Yes, what are you laughing?
Going over my head. I've never heard of bruski. I've never heard of speed
It's not bruski. okay. The beast. Thank you.
We are trying to stay,
we're trying to keep up in a young man's game.
We're doing it with my father grazing
in the kitchen right now.
He is hitting the cashews.
He's destroying it.
Yes, he's been hitting the cashews here for a while.
I will tell you that while Poppy is here
and a source of great radiant entertainment,
my mother complains that at home,
she doesn't get to, you know, have Boppy.
She's got Gonzalo, he's not as fun.
She went to the Heat Game with him last night.
Here is my father at the Heat Game.
She sent a photograph.
Please show everybody.
Please show everybody first, not my father.
Please show everybody in the photo
so you can see how happy the others are.
That's my mother saying, look the joy that your father has Please show everybody in the photo so you can see how happy the others are.
That's my mother saying, look the joy that your father has watching Tyler Hero in the
heat lose by 20 to the Cavs.
There's my father.
He is not exactly radiant, Poppy there.
It was a bad game to his credit other than the third quarter.
No, he's awake.
He's awake.
He's upset.
That's anger right there.
Poppy, get in here for the post game.
I want to talk to you.
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Don LeBretard, you are a fool. You're nobody. You are an infant. You have no fixed skin. You are a fool!
You're nobody!
You are an infant!
You have no thick skin!
I literally put together a freaking stage for your toenail!
I am your career right now pal!
Look at me!
I am your career!
Stugats!
You have messed with me David and now you're messing with me and I'm more dangerous pal.
This is the Don Lebatar Show with the Stugats.
Dan, the other thing I was thinking about the other day was how government is like a restaurant, right?
One party or one person owns the restaurant.
We serve sushi here.
That's what it is.
It's a sushi restaurant.
You come here, you have sushi.
And then new management comes in and says,
you know what, don't want to serve sushi.
We're going to do it Italian.
We're going to be an Italian restaurant.
And I think that is what is typical in this country
of how it should be.
The new owners should be able to dictate
what's on the menu.
You know, it's your restaurant now, right?
What can't be up for question is,
we're not gonna pay the power bill.
You can't do that, right?
There are certain things, there are certain systems
that regardless of what kind of menu
we serve at this restaurant,
this gotta get taken care of.
Whether it's the power bill, whether it's taken care of, whether it's the power bill,
whether it's the water bill, whether it's paying your taxes.
You can't just say, hey, I'm an Italian restaurant also.
I don't do none of that other stuff. You can't do that.
And that's the feeling I get when I see a lot of the appointees,
when I see a lot of what's happening in the last week or so
in government, in federal government. It's a lot of like, and by the way,
we're not gonna do this anymore.
Hey CDC, no communication with the outside world.
Right, these are all kind of things that are like,
this has nothing to do with your politics
or the menu that you wanna serve.
This is like bare bones foundational stuff
that you're stopping.
And this is stuff that Americans totally take for granted
and they don't know what they don't know.
These are American institutions that you can't exactly hit pause on to kind of figure out where are my loyalists.
And unfortunately your mind travels almost immediately when you hear the news like
wait does this have a top-down effect? Did something over the last few days cause this?
You can only help when you see all these things that you never really thought twice about in a given week kind of be front and center
now in the headlines. And to continue a means metaphor, the new owner of the
restaurant is also firing all of his best chefs. That's what I think of when I
read that they're firing 3,000 air traffic controllers coincidental with
this kind of a thing happening. Well let me if I if I can though because I have railed for a
while now right because I can't think of many greater horrors than us being
generally okay with somebody walking into a school and then and shooting kids
and slaughtering them and you can't be safe in America that you are putting
your kids in the hands of someone else and trusting that the system will return your child alive
because you live in America
and you're trusting America that way.
And I've gotten very frustrated when that happens,
when it immediately after that,
like the blood has not been mopped up from our schools
and it's happening so daily that we're numb
to some of this stuff when the shootings happen,
it becomes immediately a political conversation.
So I don't actually wanna make this horror in the sky and then on the floor about, and
where is the leadership or, you know what, Biden's to blame for the fires, but Trump's
to blame here.
I don't actually want to do that.
I simply want to rest in the horror of we're presently living in a country where you trust things to work
less than you did, whether it's customer service or my house isn't going to catch fire or I
can be driving like I do every morning and not see plane parts on the ground because
people, 64 people have died.
But then it's all inherent, right?
Like none of these things happen in a vacuum.
A plane crash doesn't happen in a vacuum.
People's homes don't get destroyed
and not have the funding to rebuild in a vacuum.
They all happen as a result of decisions that precede them.
If you fire 3,000 air traffic controllers
and 400 senior officials and the head of the whole thing
regardless of who you know i got a guy
there's no god i can come in there and replace that much turnover
right if we
did away with the touch of a good in a broad new people here
there's no other show of the smooth running the next day
it's just the it's it's common sense and these are the
things and there's a reason why in government there are positions that are political appointees.
We know the Secretary of Defense, guess what? Every time we have a new president, we got
a new Secretary of Defense. We got a new Secretary of the Treasury, et cetera. Those stuff, yes.
But then there's a ton of positions within each one of these departments
that are not political parties because we understand the need for continuity, the need
for the government, for this whole system, what Jeff Wise was talking about, this thing
that we put all this trust in, and of course it's safe.
The reason why we've done that is because for however many decades, that's how we've
done it.
And so I don't know how you can separate
some of the decision making that's happened
in the last 10 days from a tragedy like this.
Accidents happen, and I would say,
I understand in helpless times,
the thing we do is, who's to blame?
Like, I don't want my anger.
You do have a disconnect, and I hope you see it.
Like, you're speaking about things
that are relatively subjective. When you make the a disconnect, and I hope you see it. You're speaking about things that are relatively subjective.
When you make the restaurant analogy, more than half of the country thinks that the restaurant
sucks.
More than half the country thinks that these institutions that we may or may not take for
granted are not actually working well, and they need sweeping change, and they want loyalists
to who they voted for.
But in that is the ignorance of not understanding, right?
There are things like Jeff Weiss said,
that you take for granted.
You take for granted, like you said.
Everyone's like, oh man, I pay all these taxes,
where do my taxes go?
It's like, yeah, like you are benefiting from it all the time.
Could it be better?
Absolutely.
But again, the answer, more often than not,
for a lot of these things, cannot be,
everybody gone, and I'll figure it out later.
Or the way I figure it out is bringing people
who aren't qualified in the sense that
they don't have any experience to how to handle
something this large.
This isn't like, I fired my head chef
and I hired new chefs, chefs are chefs.
This is something much larger than that.
It is, but again, like I could only get so mad
because like this is a promise made and a promise kept.
This is what draining the swamp to a certain base
looks like sweeping change.
I'm just, I don't want to turn that into the conversation
even though I understand why it is that we're doing it
because sometimes horrific things happen. that into the conversation, even though I understand why it is that we're doing it,
because sometimes horrific things happen.
I'm not even saying, like this, I don't know whether this is an innocent accident or not
that can't be tied to any of this other stuff that we're talking about.
There seems to be some flaming debris that is more than circumstantial evidence that
would suggest there's an obvious correlation between these things.
But if they're not, I would just ask the audience to notice
that there are an assortment of American systems
all over the place that are failing,
that are making things feel unsafe,
and they are a byproduct of whatever an absence
of leadership is on both sides.
Dan, all I'm saying to you is,
I appreciate the point you're making. All I'm saying to you is, I appreciate the point you're making.
All I'm saying to you is, we had, in essence,
an air traffic accident last night, right?
We fired 3,000 air traffic controllers
10 days earlier, a week earlier.
Like, I get the point you're making,
and it's a salient point,
and it's a good conversation to have.
I'm saying, in this particular tragedy,
I find it very difficult to say that's called completely unrelated
completely understudy i think it was an accident i have to let you know what i
i i i i understand what you're saying i'm saying this is the first ten days of
this administration and the fires were just before that and there are all sorts
of apocalypses that lack the proper governance all over the place because things
are burning and we are devoid of leadership, all of it, leadership that protects us before
the crisis and after the crisis.
Like I'm not, we can do this today.
There's still chars on the ground.
There are still human bodies on the ground.
I understand that's the reason that they were doing,
somebody's gotta be blamed for that,
but to descend into politics at every turn
when there's still human remains,
there's still people learning about this at this moment.
That's what we do with gun violence though, and rightfully so.
When there are people who are in charge and can do things to prevent our most
horrific moments, no matter what side of the aisle they're on, we should be
criticizing them.
I mean, yesterday morning, there was a political science professor who said that
an FAA employee that they knew said that we were severely lacking on air traffic controllers and specifically
went out of their way to say, like, remember when there are flight delays or even potentially
crashes that don't let them blame DEI and Biden for that.
This is what happened over the last 10 days.
And then later that day day there's a crash.
And that's not to say that it is specifically blood
on the hands of the administration,
but it would be false to look at anything that happens,
particularly when we're slashing regulation
or slashing rules and say it's not political.
It's all, everything that happens is political.
It just, to me it's simple.
It's like, hey, if someone makes a decision to say,
you know what, I'm gonna turn off a bunch of traffic lights
in the city and not put a traffic cop there.
And then we have some collisions in the intersection
to say, well, it could have been any number of reasons.
Like that's disingenuous and it's not a political thing.
That is, I'm not criticizing politics.
I'm criticizing a decision. I know that you make a decision but here here is it the and i'll get off
of this in a in just a second but if everyone's choosing their own
information sources and if i can see every single dumb thing turned into
politics and be mesmerized by how quickly the arguments form on the other side for whatever.
Here's why Elon Musk was actually doing this with his hand.
But we can make it about any single thing that is making anyone feel anything.
Why are you putting your head in your hands, Jeremy?
Well, there are facts and there are fictions, right?
Elon Musk did do a Nazi salute.
We saw it with our own eyes.
But Jeremy, what is happening is there there another group of people getting another set of information
sources that create all the arguments on the other side of that that doesn't receive that as
Absolutely as you do and it's it seems to be more than half the voting country.
Jeremy, this is what I would say to in Dan's defense
There is like there in some way it can be looked at as a matter of opinion.
Some people say, oh no, he was just saying from my heart to you.
That's what he was doing.
I'm not saying that.
I agree with you, but I'm just saying there is a logical, or not a logical, there is a
logic that can be formed for the opposing viewpoint.
My point against you dan is firing three
thousand air traffic controllers isn't a matter of opinion that isn't a source
of information that is something that happened and we had a air traffic
accident not long thereafter the that's not up for debate or who did i vote for
anything that is just about what i say you criticize the actions rather than
the pollock the politics behind it.
Yeah, for me it's a nonpartisan issue.
And as Jeff Wise intimated,
there are going to be more air traffic problems
related to firing 3,000 air traffic controllers.
It's just axiomatic.
The only issue that I have with looking at
specifically the Elon Musk example or things like it,
is like, oh, well half of the population
says that's not the case, okay?
They're wrong.
And there are facts and there are fictions
and there are things that we can look at differently,
but when you then have people following you,
you have a pastor yesterday doing the same salute when talking about these things.
We are going down a very dangerous path and have been for the last decade now of letting
people who have skin in the game tell us that what we're seeing is not what we're seeing.
And that is literally how democracy dies. And I know
I sound now hyperbolic and I said to Chris five minutes ago, I always sound like an asshole
when I talk about this stuff, which is why I'm not talking. But this is such a problem
and we're just going to go, well, let's not make it political. It's all, all of this is
happening and we can't run away from it.
Former priest, he got fired.
I think, I think Jeremy, one of the things
that I've kind of resolved myself to doing
is trying to figure out, cause it can't just be,
well it's this and then the other side,
well it's that and that's it.
You gotta hit it at a point where it is undeniable, right?
Where I'm not even saying, hey, you gotta switch
whatever team you root for.
You just gotta say, yeah, that was a bad move by Coach.
Which is, we're at a point now, right?
If we're gonna use the analogy that one side is Team Blue
and this team is Team Red, that whatever Coach chooses,
he said, go for it on fourth and 35.
That was a good move, good move.
Right, like, no, no, I just, my dream for this country
is not even like, hey, people wait until election time
to pick the best candidate.
Stick with your teams.
I'm just saying, can we get to a place at least
where you're like, yeah, coach kinda dropped the ball.
Yeah, I'm constantly criticizing Democrats, dude.
I'm just saying, I'm just saying.
Okay, this is where I'm gonna stop everything here
and it's just for this reason, okay?
I understand that you said that that was you not talking.
I understand that, but I will just say
that you not talking, but however, while I'm talking,
putting your head in your hands with such disgust
that it distracts what I'm saying, that's like talking.
Can we agree that that's like talking?
It's communicating.
It's nonverbal communication.
But to be producing me, to be helping produce me
in this juggernaut of a show, and while I'm talking,
for me to palpably feel through a soundproof glass
your disgust and be distracted while I'm talking
because you're hiding your disgust in your hands,
that's like talking, no?
Well maybe don't say things that disgust me, Dan.
Nobody's more critical of Democrats than Jeremy.
Put it on the poll at Levitard Show,
is anyone more critical of Democrats than Jeremy?
I want them to destroy the party, so yeah.
All right, all right, we'll see, we'll find out.
The American public will speak on that clean and unbiased X. Billy Corbyn. It is plenty unnerving to say the
least and what Amin referenced and the moves along the chain of command these
are all data points as we all try to collectively figure out like wait a
second this is bad this didn't happen for a long time did it happen at all
because of this chain of events that kick started 11 days ago these are natural questions
I sincerely hope not because if so then the messaging from the Democrats around the election
is these are things that you take for granted these are things that that are fundamental to your American
experience that help you get from point A to point B every day and it's a
failure in communication like a lot of things were people you ask most people
they think the economy is bad when the economy was good the stock market is bad
when the stock market is good there was just a failure of communication from one
side over the election cycle and that's all Jeremy was trying to do, Dan. He was trying to communicate.
Everything is partisan now, right?
Everything is partisan.
You said 10 minutes ago, this is a nonpartisan issue for me.
He did say that.
He did say that.
It should, no, what I said was this should be a nonpartisan issue, but it isn't.
Okay?
Why aren't Republicans standing up and going, wait a minute, we fly planes too.
Republicans fly planes too?
Taking responsibility?
What?
Republican?
Is it smart that we're firing 3,000 air traffic controllers?
That should be a bipartisan issue.
Look, it is fair to ask all of your questions in the horror of seeing something like that.
If it happened to any of you, there would be no flippant around this and you wouldn't care about anybody's
politics if it was somebody you cared about. And something this nonsensical, this unsafe
just happens you wake up to and it's just human error and then you read people who have
been investigating this stuff and you're like, yeah, this could have happened 300 other times
in the last couple of years.
I just never used to ask myself, I wonder if the air traffic controllers, a Republican or a Democrat,
and if you read things in the news about buying out federal government workers rather than really
put them through these loyalty tests as a means to kind of fast track to see where they stand on
their loyalty, as things that were outlined in Project 25 that seem to be coming to fruition.
Now you're gonna start asking yourself that question,
is this person politically aligned or they're on merit?
It's a different day and age.
That's the part where I'm like,
look, I don't give a shit what they vote for.
I give a shit that there's someone there
who knows what they're doing,
who it's not their first week on the job
Like that's what it comes down to and that's implying that they replace 3,000 air traffic controls with 3,000 new ones
They didn't do that. They didn't do that. And to me that that's all this comes down to this is a failure of infrastructure
Regardless of any political reasoning why it happened it happened. That's the part that cannot be argued or justified or whatever.
Three thousand people whose job it is to make sure that the planes don't bump into each
other in the sky, were no longer employed.
Hey, howdy listener.
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Let's have a fireside conversation in the winter.
This is all theater of the mind anyways.
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