The David Pakman Show - 11425 Maga Set To Lose Everything As Cbs Doctors Trump Interview
Episode Date: January 11, 2026-- On the Show: -- Aaron Parnas, lawyer-turned-TikTok creator and Substack writer, joins David for a Substack Live to discuss Election Day 2025 -- Donald Trump faces a devastating political collaps...e as Zohran Mamdani, Abigail Spanberger, and Mikie Sherrill each surge toward major election victories that reject his agenda -- Donald Trump threatens to withhold federal funds from New York City if Zohran Mamdani wins the mayoral race, saying the city will collapse under his leadership -- Donald Trump faces outrage as millions lose food assistance under his administration's government shutdown -- CBS edits out major moments from Donald Trump's 60 Minutes interview, including remarks about his payout from the network and his pardon of a convicted billionaire -- A Justice Department official confirms that anyone other than Donald Trump would have been jailed for mishandling classified documents found at Mar-a-Lago -- Polls show a collapse in Donald Trump's support as 61% of voters say he worsened the economy and independents abandon him in record numbers -- Mainstream media finally notices Donald Trump's recurring swollen eye, sparking public questions about his health and the White House's silence -- On the Bonus Show: Dick Cheney dies at 84, Dilbert creator enlists Trump's help for cancer treatment, Nancy Pelosi plans to retire from politics, and much more... 🐟 Wild Alaskan Company: Get $35 OFF at https://wildalaskan.com/pakman 🛌 Helix Sleep mattresses: Get 27% OFF sitewide at https://helixsleep.com/pakman ⚠️ Ground News: Get 40% OFF their unlimited access Vantage plan at https://ground.news/pakman -- Become a Member: https://davidpakman.com/membership -- Subscribe to our (FREE) Substack newsletter: https://davidpakman.substack.com -- Get David's Books: https://davidpakman.com/echo -- TDPS Subreddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/thedavidpakmanshow -- David on Bluesky: https://davidpakman.com/bluesky -- David on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/davidpakmanshow (00:00) Start (02:02) Trump political collapse surges (09:20) Trump threatens NYC funding (15:50) Millions lose food assistance (23:23) CBS edits Trump interview (28:02) DOJ: Trump gets special treatment (32:41) Aaron Parnas Substack Live (59:34) Trump support collapses in polls (1:05:36) Media notices Trump's swollen eye
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Donald Trump and Maga are staring down three elections today that they are almost certainly going to lose.
This includes the New York City mayoral race, Virginia gubernatorial and New Jersey gubernatorial.
These are not close.
We're also going to look at Prop 50 in California.
This could be a total rejection of Donald Trump's agenda.
Trump is so furious about the New York situation that he is now threatening to cripple New York
city if voters pick the wrong mayor, the president doing mob style threats geared towards American
cities.
We're also going to meet the people that Trump just kicked off of food assistance, millions
losing snap benefits as food prices go up and now partial benefits may be restored.
We are going to keep raising money for feeding America.
The need is real.
All of November, every new website membership and substableness.
Paid Membership's first payment will be donated to Feeding America. Day one, we got 33 new members.
We've raised $1,26 in donations for Feeding America. $1 funds 10 meals. So you all have just raised 14,000
meals for hungry people. Check out join pacman.com and substack.dap. David Pakman.com. We will also look at CBS
caught editing the Donald Trump's 60 Minutes interview to protect him. And the DOJ official is now admitting
Trump should have been put in jail when they found all of those classified documents at Mara Lago.
The mainstream media is finally talking about Donald Trump's swollen eye. What took them so long?
What a show today. Let's record this one. It might actually be worth keeping.
Today, November 4th, 2025 could go down as really one of the most crushing defeats for Donald
Trump and the MAGA movement, certainly since he won in 2024, but maybe even beyond that.
There are three major races across the country.
There's the New York City mayoral.
And all of this could really deliver what I don't think we can call it anything other than a
devastating rebuke to Trumpism and MAGAism.
And in a lot of these, the polling is not even close.
So let's go through it piece by piece.
We have proposition 50 in California spearheaded by Governor Gavin Newsom.
The idea here is to fight fire with fire.
Republicans are redrawing maps in Texas and in other places to try to win more seats in
2026, desperate to keep control of the House of Representatives.
Gavin Newsom had an idea.
We're going to fight fire with fire, but we will let the people vote.
And so Gavin Newsom putting similar partisan redistricting up to the vote of the people of California.
It is leading, although there are some who say it could end up closer.
The yes is winning in the polls, but it could end up closer than some believe.
So we have that in California.
We have the New York City mayoral election where socialist democratic candidate Zoran Mamdani
is almost certainly going to win.
I know that there is discussion of polls tightening, but as you can see here, these are the
Cali betting markets steadily having Mamdani around 90%.
Now, yes, he was a little higher previously and even got above 90 and is down, you know,
a fraction of a point, but overwhelmingly seeming like Mamdani is going to win based on the
Calci betting markets.
Polling also shows him leading by roughly 10 in an average of.
recent polls and his lead has been double digits for a long time.
In the 60 Minutes interview on Sunday, Donald Trump sort of softly endorsed Andrew Cuomo
saying he would take a bad Democrat over a communist any day.
So that will almost certainly be a loss for Trump and for MAGA.
We then go to Virginia where former Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger is likely to become
Virginia's first female governor.
She's doing it by crushing Trump's influence in a state that has really been trending Republican,
but is sort of a bellwether in a sense.
Spanberger is leading by 11 points.
Washington Post shows her up 12 points, multiple polls with a double digit advantage.
Now, Trump did hold the telephone rally for the Republican winsome Earl Sears.
He didn't formally endorse her, which is sort of weird.
And in that call, Trump did a lot of attacking of Abigail Spanberger, encouraged people to vote
Republican down ballot, but he didn't even mention winsome's Earl Sears by name, which is just,
it's just weird.
And this is sort of like how toxic the Trump brand has become, even for some of his own
parties candidates.
And then super important, again, Virginia does have this historical kind of bellwether status
where Virginia can signal how are voters feeling about the party controlling the White House?
And for decades, Virginia has elected governors from the opposite party of the sitting president.
And if you look at what Trump's federal workforce, what Trump's cuts to the federal workforce
have done in Virginia, it's terrible for Republicans.
Virginia has 320,000 federal workers that live there.
Many of them work in D.C. live in Virginia.
Trump's been doing these mass firings.
The government shutdown has devastated a lot of those workers and a lot of them are in Virginia.
So I expect Spanberger to win.
I expect her to win easily.
Voters are going to send a message, which is Trump's policies are bad for us.
We're not going to vote for Trump aligned people.
We then go to New Jersey.
A Navy veteran and former federal prosecutor, Mikey Cheryl, is on track to.
to become New Jersey's next governor.
And this would be another blow to Trump's political influence.
Trump has sort of as a as a New York adjacent state.
Trump has attempted to and to some degree successfully wielded influence in New Jersey, even before
he was a political figure.
And right now we see Cheryl leading by eight points in the final Quinnipiac poll 51 to 43.
Fox News has her up seven points.
She led all through October and now into November.
did formally endorse her opponent Jack Citter readily. Titterrelli. I never am sure is it Cittarelli
or Chittarelli. Did a telephone rally for him on last night and mocked Cheryl's name saying,
I've never heard of a woman named Mikey, but maybe she'll be the last. Classic Trump,
not exactly winning on the substance, not exactly winning on policy, but attacking a woman's
name. It's not working. I don't believe it is going to work. She leads, Cheryl leads on just about
every issue in New Jersey on cost of living by plus eight voters think she would be better on taxes
plus nine, energy costs plus 10, health care plus 16. It's just about every important issue.
Now, we have interviewed all three of these candidates, uh, Mikey, Cheryl, Abigail Spangberger and
Zoran, Mom Doni. We've also interviewed Governor Gavin Newsom.
about Prop 50.
So check out all of those videos on my YouTube channel to get more information about what's going
on, what they're offering, what they're going for.
These are elections that are not happening in a vacuum.
It really is a referendum on Trump's presidency.
The verdict is looking devastating.
And my expectation, now, we're not going to put the cart before the horse.
We're not going to count our chickens before they hatch.
I am not going to sign on the dotted line before the contract has been fully printed out.
I don't know what other metaphors I can come up with.
But we will be live tonight 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific with the results.
And if the results comport with the polling, my expectation is that tomorrow, maybe even at 2 a.m.
tonight, you are going to start to see a panic.
from the Republican Party because they all know the way the results are pointing would point
poorly for Republicans in terms of the House in 26.
And if Republicans lose the House in 26, Trump's presidency is dead.
Dead.
He will get nothing else done other than negative things.
He might be able to bomb people, but he's not going to be able to get any legislation
pass.
So expect Republicans to go into panic mode if the results tonight hold in relation.
to what the polling says so far. Donald Trump is so triggered by the possibility that Democratic nominee
Zoran Mamdani, who joined me yesterday, will win the mayoral election tonight in New York City,
that he is now threatening New York City, saying he will crush the city if Mamdani wins.
Nothing says make America great again. America first.
Patriot President, nothing says Patriot President more than threatening to deliberately hurt
the American city in which you grew up if they vote for the wrong person.
Here is Donald Trump's post to truth social.
Quote, if communist candidate Zoran Mamdani wins the election for mayor of New York City,
it is highly unlikely that I will be contributing federal funds other than the very minimum
as required to my beloved first home.
Because of the fact that as a communist, this once great city has zero chance of success or
even survival.
It can only get worse with a communist at the helm.
And I don't want to send as president good money after bat.
It is my obligation to run the nation.
And it is my strong conviction that New York City will be a complete and total economic
and social disaster should Mom Donnie win.
His principles have been tested for over a thousand years and never once have they been successful.
I would much rather see a Democrat who has a record of success win than a communist with no experience
in a record of complete and total failure.
He was nothing as an assemblyman ranked at the bottom of the class and as mayor of potentially
again the greatest city in the world, he has no chance to bring it back to its former glory.
We must also remember this, a vote for Curtis Sliwa, who looks much better without the
Beret is a vote for Mom Donnie.
Whether you personally like Andrew Cuomo or not, you really have no choice.
You must vote for him and hope he does a fantastic job.
He is capable of it.
Mamdani is not.
One thing New Yorkers don't like is being told you have no choice but to X.
New Yorkers don't like that.
And Trump is trying to come up with anything he can to affect the results.
Now, I would not be surprised if the mayoral ends up being closer, closer than some expect.
I wouldn't be shocked if rather than an 11 point margin of victory for Mamdani, it's fine.
That wouldn't come as a huge surprise.
But it really does look like he is simply going to win.
And what the president here is saying is if you vote for somebody,
don't like, I'm going to try to make your city collapse.
It is mob threat style behavior.
It is not leadership.
And he's not even pretending to be neutral.
He's not even saying vote Republican.
He's saying pick the candidate that I approve of or your city dies.
Now I know that there are many people in my audience.
Yesterday I did an interview with Zoran Mamdani.
Just about everybody hated the interview.
I had people write to me and say, David.
Why did you critique any aspect of his proposals?
Why were you doing that?
Well, because I'm asking him about his proposals.
What do you want me to do?
And others said, why did you platform him at all?
He's the wrong direction for the Democratic Party.
Well, he's the Democratic nominee and I interview candidates here.
I don't know why this is such a difficult thing for some to understand.
There are very strong feelings about Mom Donnie.
I've said before I'm not a social.
He's not a communist.
He's a socialist.
I'm not a socialist.
I don't expect if he enacts socialist policies for New York to improve.
I don't expect that.
But that's my view.
I am a social Democrat.
That's a form of capitalism.
He gets to try it if he wins.
If voters decide that's what they want, then they get to try it.
And then we evaluate.
It's like anybody else.
So I think that there are going to be a lot of people, honestly, no matter the results,
there are going to be some people who are thrilled and some people who are absolutely furious.
But voters get to decide and then you try stuff and then you evaluate.
But I will crush your city as president if you vote for the wrong guy.
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
That is a very dangerous direction for the country to go.
And I think Trump means it to be frank.
Let me know what you expect.
Make sure to like this video.
hit the subscribe button. I hope you'll join me tonight starting at 8 Eastern for election results.
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The David Packman Show remains an audience-funded program.
This month, we are donating every new member's first payment to Feeding America to try to do something
about the growing food insecurity in this country.
You can sign up on my website, join packman.com.
Whether you get a monthly or yearly membership, the first payment will be donated to
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We will also donate first payments from six.
Substack premium subscriptions at substack. David Pakman.com.
I will get you an update on our progress with the fundraiser a little bit later on in the
show.
All right.
Listen, I know that a couple hundred bucks a month for food is not a lot of money to Donald
Trump.
I know it's not a lot of money to a lot of his elite friends.
But those couple hundred bucks are the difference between eating and not eating for a lot
of people. We have examples from News Nation, from CNN and from other networks of people who receive
food stamp benefits explaining how this is going to crush them. Here is an individual whose 44-year-old
son has special needs, and this is absolutely crushing what is happening with food stamps.
Well, my son Bradley is a 44-year-old functions at about a two-year-old level.
requires around the clock medical attention.
So that lands on me.
I'm a single father in my 60s.
And I got him on SNAP about five years ago.
He has a SSI income and that qualified him for SNAP.
Snap initially gave him about $260 a month, which fed him.
That's dropped in the last year to about $120 and now,
course that's gone. The issue with it is less a matter of the money, how much it is and more a matter
of the security side of it. I could count on that because I have to make up any difference.
So now I've got to go out, find additional work to supplement the income because that's not,
that money really needs to be raised. Does that sound like?
someone who is leaching and defrauding the government. That's someone who depends on this money.
Here is another individual, a woman from Georgia speaking on CNN, explaining what the SNAP
benefits mean for her household. Well, Sarah, I'm very scared because I rely heavily on SNAP
benefits to feed myself. You know, prior years, I was able to do it myself. But, but
but living on a fixed income, the price of food is going sky high.
My SNAP benefits don't go as far as they used to.
And now that Congress has, and the government has delayed our, you know, snap benefits,
it scares me.
I don't know how much longer I can last.
I did stockpile some, but that's not going to go very far.
Yeah.
How much money were you receiving?
and SNAP benefits.
And what will you do to try to replace that, to supplement that?
Seniors only get $23 a month in SNAP benefits.
And to make that last as much as I can, I have to shop for bogos.
I have to shop for sales.
I never buy meat's full price.
I have to buy them, you know, reduced.
Not exactly the stories of people living large on the government dole, as many would have you believe.
We have endless examples of this.
Here's another one.
Go from having everything and it's having nothing.
Joseph Kribb recently fell on hard time, saying he applied for SNAP just for the first time two months ago.
And they did award be food stamps, which I was very grateful for.
But when benefits didn't arrive, he found help from his neighbors instead.
When you find yourself on the other end of that, I don't know.
We all need each other, yeah.
This is, this is heartbreaking stuff.
I just have one more.
And then I want to dig into the policy here.
What are you doing right now?
Well, I'm pretty stressed out.
And I have to decide whether to put gas in my car or buy something to eat today.
What does that like for you when you wake up in the morning and realize that?
Those are the choices you're making.
I mean, I just feel like no matter how hard I'm trying to come up in the world, it just doesn't matter.
Like, I just keep getting held down.
I just need a little leg up and, you know, I'm five years in recovery.
And I've gone to school.
I've done all these things.
And I'm trying to work and I'm trying to open a business.
And I just need a little more help and I can't get it.
All right.
So listen, I think we get it.
These are stories about people who are hungry right now.
And if there is going to be any respite, maybe it will come because now it seems as though
it's going to take a while, but the federal government is going to try to reinstate half
of the benefits.
So the elderly woman we helped, we heard from who gets $23 a month, I guess is going to get
$11.50, but it's going to take a little while.
This is the United States, folks.
This is the United States and this is what is going on.
And you know, we've done these stories about how being very wealthy changes your brain
on some level.
I don't.
I really don't think someone like Trump can understand or compute.
How could on average, $200 a month in benefits be the difference between eating and not eating?
That's never been Trump situation.
He's almost 80 and he was born into wealth.
And it is inconceivable that someone could be in that situation.
Now, a lot of you wrote in saying you want to help.
As I've said, the audience is the most powerful part of the show.
So once again, what we are doing this month, every new website membership and new
substack paid membership this month, we are donating the entire first payment to feeding America.
Since I announced this 24 hours ago, we're starting 33 new members, 14.
$1,226 will be going to feeding America.
$1 funds 10 meals.
So in the last 24 hours, you in my audience have funded 14,260 meals.
Now, some of you said, I'm already a member.
What can I do?
No problem.
We have a backlog of 3,800 people waiting for free memberships that they can't afford them.
If you go to, if you have a membership and you go to join Pacman.com as you check out,
There's a button that says this is a gift.
If you check that, the money will still count towards the feeding America donation and the,
the membership will be given to someone on the list.
Okay.
Why feeding America?
Really efficient charity.
98% of donations go to feeding people.
Two percent goes to overhead and $1 funds 10 meals.
So meanwhile, you know, Trump has the six billion he could use to feed 42 million Americans.
He doesn't want to do it.
Cours are saying it's illegal, you've got to do it.
And now it seems as though, seems as though they are going to be reinstating half of the benefits.
Let's see if that happens.
Last year, Donald Trump sued CBS for 20 billion claiming that they deceptively edited Kamala Harris's
interview to make her look better and that it hurt him and helped her in the campaign.
forward to today, November of 2025, and CBS just did the exact same thing, but this time they did it
for Trump.
CBS has now released the full transcript of Trump's 60 Minutes interview from Sunday.
And fascinatingly, there are blockbuster things that were filmed.
They're in the transcript, but a bunch of it was left out of the TV broadcast and the extended
online version. Some of the stuff was cut only from the TV broadcast. And it is in the online version.
Here is some of the stuff that was cut, which I believe is critical to understanding the truly
depraved nature of Trump in 2025. 60 minutes paid me a lot of money. And you don't have to put
this on because I don't want to embarrass you. And I'm sure you're not. But 60 minutes was forced to
pay me a lot of money because they took her answer out that was so bad it was election
two nights before the election,
and they put a new answer in.
And they paid me a lot of money for that.
You can't have fake news.
You've got to have legit news.
I think you have a great new leader, frankly.
Because the young woman that's leading your whole enterprise
is a great, from what I know,
I don't know her, but I hear she's a great person.
I think one of the best things that happen
is this show and new ownership, CBS and new ownership,
I think it's the greatest thing that's happened in a long time
to a free and open and good press.
Well, you tell me, how big a difference is D.C. now compared to what it was a year ago, right?
I mean, you have to be honest with me.
People in the White House, they walk up to me.
Young ladies, I've never seen him.
Sir, thank you very much.
I know, they don't even have to tell me what they're thanking me for.
One girl said, I'd get into Uber, and I felt dangerous even in Uber.
They'd attack the car, okay?
It wasn't even safe then.
sir, I now walk to work every
Sir?
I'm so safe
there's nothing going to happen
100% safe
and you know that too, Nora
I want to ask you about
You live here, you know that too
I want to ask you about
Do you see a difference?
American cities
In Washington, D.C.
I think I've been working too hard
I haven't been out and about that much.
Oh, that's not a fair answer.
You see a difference.
I get in my car and go to work
and I go home.
You don't have to use that one, don't worry.
What's your message to those
on the left and the right
who would seek to commit acts of violence?
I think primarily on the left, a little bit of both, but I think primarily on the left.
I think they have to tone it down.
I think they have to approve the shutdown, so it's not shut down.
I think it's very bad what they're doing.
Anyway, all of this stuff Trump just seems deranged.
It was all scrubbed, either from both or one version, okay?
Understand what is happening now at CBS.
Since the settlement and merger, CBS has totally overhauled.
They created this ombudsman role filled by a right-wing policy wonk named Kenneth Weinstein to evaluate bias complaints that was required as a merger condition.
They've appointed Bari Weiss, this right-leaning pundit, critical of woke culture as the network's new head.
They've done multiple rounds of layoffs.
And now they are helping Trump by scrubbing critical elements of the interview.
Now, Senate majority leader, Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer called it out on X.
He said, hey, maybe I should file a complaint with the FCC against the Trump White House for editing his unhinged 60 Minutes interview.
It's the same language Trump used when he sued vice president Harris.
Trump accused CBS of editing an interview to help his opponent look better.
He sued them for 20 billion and they paid him 16 million.
Their parent company needed his administration's approval for this merger.
he gave it. And now you've got CBS editing his interviews the way he wants them edited, removing
his own bragging about the payout, scrubbing controversial content about pardoning a convicted
criminal. He doesn't know anything about and doesn't even know who they are. He is now
the beneficiary of the same thing that he sued for when he when he believed Harris was the
beneficiary of the same. And is anyone going to say anything? No.
They are not.
We have an absolutely stunning but also obvious revelation.
When the classified documents were found at Donald Trump's house in Florida and justice department
officials and FBI went in there and gathered everything up.
And we now know that a justice department official said at the time, if we found this at anyone's
House but Trump's, the person would be immediately arrested and put in jail.
But that didn't happen because it was Trump.
And Trump did not get arrested and he did not get put in jail.
The Washington Post's Aaron Davis and former Washington Post reporter Carol Lenig wrote a piece for
MSNBC.com.
And they write about when the FBI found hundreds of top secret documents at Donald Trump's
house in his office.
They were in his bathroom.
They were in his shower.
And Julie Edelstein was the Justice Department's top expert on the mishandling of classified
records at the time.
And she said then, if it was anybody else, we would arrest him tomorrow.
Now Trump and Maga say it was all political.
It was nonsense.
It was just to attack Trump because they didn't like Trump.
Trump says, oh, the DOJ owes me $230 million for the investigation that as he says, you
never should have happened. And yet DOJ officials at the time said this is so serious and
so egregious and there are so many documents involved that if it were anyone other than this guy,
they would be arrested and jailed pending trial. Now, this is one of those funny media stories.
On the one hand, it's an explosive headline. Wow, president should be jailed according to a DOJ official.
That's incredible. On the other hand, it's so obvious to all of us that were it not for Trump's
position in society and the fact that he was a former president at the time, of course he would have
been jailed for what he did. He would have been immediately arrested as the FBI recovered those documents,
not allowed to be wherever Trump was. Trump was flying around. He was in, I don't remember where he was.
Was he in Bedminster playing golf or whatever? He wasn't at Marilago. It's obvious that that's what
would have happened to anybody else. And we say this all the time, but this is just more proof.
There are two justice systems. There is one for regular people. And then there's one for Donald
Trump. If you had a classified document or I had a classified document in my desk drawer down here,
we would be negotiating a plea deal from a holding cell. Or if not, it would have been because we put
up some serious bail money to get out of jail. Every time Trump gets caught, the story rarely is,
oh, he broke the rules. He breaks the rules all the time. That's not the news. It's the rules
don't seem to apply to Donald Trump. And the media treats it like a political spat. Well, both sides.
accuse each other of mishandling documents. Trump had his Mar-a-Lago documents. Joe Biden had some
documents in his garage. But of course, that's incredibly dishonest. Joe Biden had a few documents
he clearly didn't know about. And as soon as he found out about it, he didn't even go. He
directed his attorneys. Find the documents, return the documents, cooperate with the DOJ.
He didn't call it a witch hunt. Trump did the opposite. Trump directed documents be moved.
Trump insisted it was a witch hunt.
Trump tried not to give them back.
Trump tried to get them back after they were taken.
Different rules for elites and non-elites and different rules for Democrats and Republicans.
We need a change here.
The culture of corruption and cronyism has to change.
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Substack live with Aaron Parnas who has, I don't even know how many millions of followers at this point.
We're going to check it out now and remember that you can actually watch these live.
on my substack, which you can sign up for for free at substack. David Pakman.com.
It is great to be back on substack live with Aaron Parnas, who is rapidly building his followers
as quickly as his accolades. Is that fair to say these days, Aaron? I mean, maybe a little
bit. How's good to you? I always have so many things I want to talk to you about, but I want to
start with when you do the videos from the airplane. Yeah. Is that, is there a performative element
of that? Because I love the look of it. And like, is it, is it urgent to do it from the airplane?
Or to some degree, do you like being in the bathroom and recording the updates? No, I actually
hate being in the bathroom reporting updates. It really, I mean, there is an urgency sense to it because
oftentimes I'm on these flights because I travel cross country to see my wife's family in L.I. all the
time. And so these are like five, six hour flights. So if I go five, six hours without providing an
update, then people are going to be like, is he dead? Like, what happened? And then at the same time,
the news cycle does not stop. And so the option is either, A, record from my seat and bother people,
or B, get up and go use the bathroom and record from there. I will say I recently was on a
flight and recorded from my seat and then said like the word bomb and everyone looked at me.
And it was a bit of a problem. But. And you're using the airplane Wi-Fi to post
this stuff. Yeah, yeah, it works. I mean, it's slow, so like it'll take 20 minutes to post a video,
but it works. It does a trick. You know, one of the things that, speaking more seriously,
for my second book, I'm writing a lot about these algorithmically based platforms. And if you're
a creator, obviously, you're sort of beholden to these algorithms, but I also am going to make
the argument that even just users of social media in a sense are also beholden to them. People are
Yeah.
curating their vacation pictures and, okay, fine, but you and I are creators, so that's the
relevance to us.
There is this publisher parish thing that often you hear in academia, which it does apply to us.
And it's like, this isn't about like, oh, we're not pretending to be doing what the Trump
family does, which is like we're the biggest victims in the world and the most aggrieved people.
But there is a degree to which you kind of have to continue putting the content out.
and especially for one person's shops or small shops,
it does get to be a lot.
Oh, 100%.
I mean, I'm pumping out, what, 15, 20,
sometimes 25 pieces of content every single day.
I haven't taken a break.
And as long as I remember,
I mean, I guess the only break I took was Yom Kippoor,
but that wasn't even a break.
So it's not like I had a day off.
But I think that, like, for me, I've seen, like, if I take even like six hours away
and, like, I don't post, when I start posting it,
It takes a little bit to, like, start picking up again.
People are quick with their attention spans.
They'll go and, like, find someone else very quickly.
And so you always have to kind of keeping up with the algorithm, so to speak.
I'm curious your thoughts on we've got some critical elections this week.
Yeah.
And then really 2026 is going to get going.
Do you think the dynamics, last time we talked about 28 to a degree is going to be like
the creator presidential election?
I think it's going to be unprecedented involvement from independent creators as a presidential election.
100%.
But 26, I think, especially with, you know, members of the creator cohorts going to house town halls
and interviewing senators on site and all of these different things, I think 26 is going to be
a preview of 28 in a sense with regard to the role that creators are going to play.
Yeah, without a doubt, I mean, I wouldn't be surprised if there is a creator-led debate.
in 2028 especially. I'm really on both sides, honestly. I wouldn't be surprised if like the Daily
Wire hosted it on the right and then like, I don't know, might as touch hosted on the left or something.
Well, I don't know. We'll see. But I think that there will be creator-led debates. I think that
there will be a lot of folks, a lot of campaigns kind of reaching out to creators. I will say at what
point does the bubble burst, right? Because if everyone's like leaning into this space and doing more
and more digital work, at some point, it becomes kind of like TV or mailers, right?
It's just like you reach a point and then you can't really break through any further.
So it'll come a time.
If I had to guess, honestly, I actually think that it'll burst after 28.
I think that'll be kind of like the time where there will be something new and then people
will figure out, okay, maybe we don't just need to focus on creators in digital.
And I will say also, I think a lot of campaigns are going to realize that their candidates are not
necessarily digitally savvy and maybe shouldn't be focusing on creators. Not every candidate in my
opinion needs to be focusing on creators or working with creators. The ones that do, they need to do it
well. They don't just need to placate us if that makes sense. I think that's super interesting because
you know as well as I do that right now there's this huge spectrum of skill when it comes to skill and
knowledge when it comes to elected officials and candidates at working with creators. There are those
that are really good at getting us the sorts of updates
that we can actually use,
inviting people to events where we can actually do something of value
rather than just try to mimic legacy in corporate media,
but with fewer resources, which isn't so good.
There's people that are really doing it well.
On the other hand,
I've had interactions with some offices,
communications offices,
where they kind of seem to want to use us
almost like a PR tool.
Yes.
And aren't really engaging in any way that is dynamic.
They just want us to be like legacy media, but kind of at their beck and call.
And I just don't, maybe it's just not right for them.
Maybe it's the wrong fit.
Oh, I agree.
I mean, I've turned down multiple interviews where I kind of was talking to the member's office
or even like a governor.
And they were like, oh, we want to talk about X, Y, Z.
And I'm like, okay, great.
Like, we could talk about that.
But like, I'm not sending you my questions in advance.
And I want to talk about ABC as well while we're at it.
And they were like, no, we're not going to do that.
And I was like, okay, well, then no, you're not coming on my show.
Like, this is not a situation where you get.
get to curate your appearance.
You have to treat us like you would going on CNN.
No doubt about it.
And I think one of the things that sometimes is tough,
I think some of the younger comms people get what we do.
Yeah.
But some of the more traditional comms folks don't understand.
How can we take that position?
Isn't it obviously worth it for us to interview whoever it is?
And I think that they don't understand our audiences,
because my audience really isn't that interested in me talking to, you know, not that seniority
is everything, but a member of Congress 397 in seniority about an obscure issue relevant only to,
the audiences just don't care either.
It's not like we're giving up this incredibly valuable thing.
A hundred percent.
And that's why I was so upset to see the 60 minutes interview last night.
I thought that was just an example of like where mainstream media is dying and where
they're really failing.
and the network that was once the network of Kronkite.
And to me, it's just, I mean, it's gone.
And at the same time, what I am excited for,
when you talk about the elections tomorrow
and just generally,
I am excited for kind of this next generation coming up.
I'm excited to see Abigail's Vanberger
and Mikey Sherrill on the Democratic side.
These are like the next generation of Democrats in a way.
They came up in 2018.
They're newcomers, really, in the party.
Same with Mom Donnie in New York.
He is presenting a new vote.
vision for the Democratic Party, love him or hate him. He ran a campaign that a lot of people
would be jealous of and should be jealous of. It was a great campaign. And so I think that you're really
the old guards getting pushed out. And I'm excited to see that, truly. One of the funny things I
had Mom Donnie on today as a number of creators did, I think in this kind of like last push.
And I've been honest with my audience. Like, I'm not a socialist. He's a socialist. Cool. We have a
significant difference of opinion when it comes to what the economic system should be.
Yeah.
The globalized the intifada stuff.
It's just not for me.
Like it's just not my thing.
But voters get to decide what they want.
It's possible that there are Democrats that want that want that to be the vision, maybe outside of New York.
I don't know, right?
But it's going to be up for voters to decide that.
And certainly it's, I'm not the person.
It's not my views must be reflected in every single candidate.
it everywhere. Maybe in Tennessee, Democrats look one way and in New York City, they look another
way. But I think it's going to be very interesting to see whether any of these folks not only can
win. It seems that he can win. It's tightened a little, but it seems likely that it's going to be
fine for him. Can they get things done that they promised? And then how are voters going to
evaluate the job that they do? And I respect the will of the voters to decide what it is they want to
try. I mean, listen, I think the Democratic Party needs to get back to its big tent mentality. And
And I, it's unfortunate, honestly, to me, watching the way the kind of old guard of the party reacted to the mom-dani candidacy, in my opinion.
I really think that the failure to coalesce around mom-dani earlier is emblematic of where the party is kind of failing.
Because I think that you have a Democratic nominee.
This is what voters, this is who voters support it.
Whether or not you like him, that's your, that's your party's nominee.
It's time to get on board or yet.
That's like for me, if you had Jack Chittarelli become the Republican nominee in New Jersey and Donald Trump and Republicans just saying, yeah, he's too moderate for me.
We don't like him.
He's not far right enough for me.
They don't do that.
They don't do that.
And so, I mean, listen, I think at the end of the day, Democrats need to get back to this big tent mentality.
You can be a Democrat in rural Wisconsin.
And you could be a Democrat in West Virginia and win.
And you could be a Democrat in New York City and win.
And it doesn't matter.
You're a big TED party.
When it comes to what you see going forward as far as the intra, let's call it the intra-Republican situation, where, I mean, listen, I think for the most part, it's still deferential to Trump in most areas.
But you're starting to see these little dots.
You've got Marjorie Taylor Green taking very public issue with some of the things that are going on.
You had these 14 Republicans last week who signed on to the last week.
the letter saying, hey, this approach when it comes to farmers and ranchers, it's just not working.
It's bad.
Yeah.
It's bad to the country.
Do you think that this is a material change or that this is really just like exceptions to the rule?
And for the most part, this is a party that's still on board with Trump.
No, I think this is a material change.
I think that the Republican Party is really having kind of crisis of thought right now.
And I don't know where they're going to end up because it's happening in kind of these like microbursts, like you were talking about, Marjorie Taylor's.
the 14 Republicans, senators voting down tariffs, okay, fine. But then you have some kind of deeper divides,
the Heritage Foundation, fighting over Tucker Carlson and whether or not supporting Tucker Carlson is the vision of the party
or whether or not a more moderate version of the party is where the party's going to go forward.
And I think that's a bigger conversation. And then heading into 2028, if you asked me today as Vance the nominee,
I would say no. I don't know where the Republican Party is going. And that I think,
they're having they're having a bit of an issue right now. I don't know. I think that the cracks we're seeing
today are going to become fissures over the next several years. And especially if Republicans
lose in the midterms, those fissures are going to be wide open, wide open. And I think it'll
effectively cut Donald Trump's presidency in half. I saw, I want to get to Nick Fuentes, by the way,
which some people in the chat are talking about. I saw this, these rumors
about J.D. Vance and Erica Kirk,
and it's all very tabloidy and gossipy to me.
But the thing I do find interesting,
and I did a segment about this today,
is I don't know if you saw this video a few weeks ago
where some turning point had confronted the vague Ramoswami,
and they were like, we need Christians here.
Like, you're Hindu. You know the video I'm talking about?
I think I'm familiar with it. I probably saw parts of it, if I had to guess.
So the gist of it is they were like, hold on a second.
This is a Christian country, the whole Turning Point magazine.
thing is Christianity cool. I do think there is something interesting if J.D. Vance is going to be
the heir apparent to Magaism or Trumpism, that his wife who is American, but she has brown skin and
she's Hindu, I don't know that the turning point MAGA crowd that is sort of up and coming in
voting age. I don't know that they're going to allow that. And by allow, I mean, I don't know that
it's going to be like with Melania. You know, Melania is nominally. She's foreign, but she's nominally
Christian and she's white and whatever. I don't know that the mag of people are going to go for
Ushah Vance. Well, I mean, Vance did say that Ushah, yes, Ushah to convert. I will say this. A lot of people
don't know Ushah Vance. And I think that if I were running the Trump administration, I would give
her a more prominent role. She is a very impressive person, truthfully. I mean, she clerks on the
Supreme Court, one of the top litigators in America for her time. I mean, she's, she has, she's very
impressive and politics aside. And so I think it's been a failure of the administration not to have
her front and center. And I think that I do agree with you that I think that there are parts in the
turning point world that won't accept her. But that's just sad. Like I, we shouldn't be talking about
people's race and whether that matters electorally or their religion and whether that matters
electorally. It shouldn't matter who she preaches or what she looks like. And that is a problem.
do you think that there is any other natural person?
Like, I know that it's so early and things happen,
but J.D. Vance seems like it would be the natural direction
that Trump would try to push the party.
Is there anyone else?
Like, to me, it seems like DeSantis has sort of burned his public standing
with Republicans.
I don't know.
I think Marco Rubio is going to be the nominee.
I'll predict it now.
I actually think Marco Rubio will be the nominee.
And I think Vance, here's the thing with the VP.
VP's flame out a lot.
Being a vice president is not easy because you don't have your,
you can't actually put forth your policy positions.
And oftentimes everything that goes wrong in the administration is blamed on you.
Biden didn't run right after it took him a little while before he came in and ran.
Vice President Harris didn't win partly because she was attached at the hit to the Biden administration.
And historically, VPs don't always perform that well.
I think Rubio will run away with it.
I really do.
do you think that in order for Rubio to win the nomination,
it has to, or let me put it a different way.
If Rubio is going to ultimately come out on top,
does he need to be the only Trump administration alum in the running,
or do you think that he could actually beat out Vance?
I think he can beat out Vance.
I mean, Vance is more focused on podcasting than anything else right now.
Unless things change to me, I think Rubio can beat out Vance
because I think Rubio actually has a big boy job, right?
Like he's traveling the world.
He's doing work.
I don't know really what J.D. Vance is doing.
I would be curious to see the one wild card in all of this is Tucker.
If Tucker Carlson were to run for the Republican nomination,
then I think this upends everything.
That's the one that I'm kind of, we'll see what happens.
What did you make of what Tucker's been up to?
Because he's been doing this stuff where he, I mean, he had Nick Fuentes on,
and this maybe will serve as a,
as an entryway into what the role of Fuentes may be in a future,
a Republican movement, I guess, although maybe not party.
Tucker's kind of been doing some interesting and strange things to a degree.
He, I don't know if you saw that I'm using the term that Dinesh DeSuzza used.
He interviewed a nun with a mustache that Susa says was politically useful to him,
but it was sort of like an unusual thing for him to do.
What do you make of what he's up to?
I'd like to know who's funding him.
That's what I want to know
because the shift that Tucker Carlson has made over the...
I mean, he's always been radically to the right,
but like recently going to Moscow
and saying that Moscow grocery stores
are so much better than American grocery stores,
like, come on.
Like, you don't...
That complete flip.
I mean, you would think that, like,
I mean, I thought Tucker for all of his faults
was generally a smart guy.
Like, he knew what he was...
Like, he knew the vision he was espousing.
But lately, I don't know.
I don't know. I want to follow the money.
The grocery store thing is so interesting to me because it's a trope of friendly media people to authoritarian.
And like I'll give a couple of examples.
We've seen it, although they aren't many in number, we've seen it with the defenders of North Korea who love to go to North Korea and they go to the grocery store.
It's basically a movie set.
Like it's not really a grocery store.
It's a movie set.
Nobody can really afford to shop at these places.
is, you know, olive oil is the average monthly salary.
And that's like a sort of set that we've seen used.
I've seen it in Venezuela, where there will be people who go to Venezuela defenders of that regime.
And they go, look, we have everything.
We've got 10 types of olive oil.
The grocery store is empty because nobody who works a Venezuelan job can actually afford to shop in that grocery store.
Right.
We did that trope.
It was very unusual to see.
You think that it's just money that explains it.
I think money explains it.
I also, I mean, and I'm not saying, if Tucker, if you're watching, I'm not saying
you're funded by Russia.
That's not what I'm saying.
I'm just saying that there is enough money out there that I think money does a lot to a person.
But I also think that, like, Tucker, what he's trying to do is he's trying to change the minds
of Americans to kind of back away from this old, like, America hegemony.
And it's a very dangerous mentality.
I think he's a rogue actor in a lot of way.
and I think that he's trying to kind of corrupt the minds,
especially young people in America.
So maybe that's also part of it.
I don't know.
I don't know.
So then that gets to the Fuentes thing.
You know, over the last month,
Nick Fuentes has sort of been welcomed.
I don't know that I would say with open arms,
but certainly with, I don't know what to call it,
he's been welcomed to a degree.
Yes.
By figures that might be more associated with the left,
or the right of the political spectrum, at least historically.
And I don't know if all of those figures necessarily know what they're doing and why they're doing it,
or if there is some kind of concerned and effort to start kind of whitewashing his political views so that maybe they can play a larger role in right-wing politics.
What do you, what do you make of it?
I honestly think that Fuentes has a platform again because, I mean, it's all, truthfully, it all goes back to Elon Musk and Twitter.
I mean, that's really where it all goes to because I think once you give Nick Fuentes back his Twitter account, once you gave Laura Lumer back her Twitter account, these people with large followers became normalized again, right?
And so without their Twitter accounts, they really did not have that much of a voice and therefore people like Trump didn't need them.
But now they have that voice.
They have that platform and Republicans are using them for their advantage.
And Fuentes is building up his platform right now.
I think there is a void post the murder of Kirk of who is going to.
to take that kind of mantle, that debater bro on the right, whether it's Nick Fuentes,
whether it's, I don't know, Ben Shapiro, who knows, Megan Kelly, I don't know.
So they're trying to figure that out, but I think it all sums back to them being re-platform,
truly.
I want to talk a little bit about this kind of debate bro culture.
I just want to mention for everybody who's watching, I'm talking to Aaron Parnas.
If you're one of my substack followers, make sure you're following him.
If you're following Aaron, would love for you to follow my substack as well.
I'm curious whether you have some broader opinion about the rage bait type debate bro culture that has that has built.
As a little bullet point, I decided after the murder of Kirk not to go forward with a Jubilee surrounded thing that I had been talking about.
And just so my audience knows, I never signed anything.
Some people were like, David, you bailed on a contract.
I didn't have any contract signed.
We were having a conversation.
I decided I don't think the short-term publicity gain is worth it for me to participate in something that I actually don't really think furthers the movement or my ability to deeply discuss ideas.
I don't think people are bad for doing it. A lot of my friends have done it. Cool.
But then there's the whole broader cult, you know, these panel shows with seven people screaming at each other or whatever.
What do you think about that movement, that part of the political area that we exist in?
What are your thoughts?
you're going to get me in trouble because I'm friends with some of the ones on the left.
No, I mean, truthfully, I think that the debate bro culture is a cancer in our political system.
I really do think it is.
I don't think, unfortunately, many debate bros on both sides.
They've never knocked a door on their life.
They've never actually done something to help further a cause on the ground.
And I'm not, I mean, there are some who have, right?
But not I'm saying this as a more kind of generalization.
And I think that when you use your platform to bait others into political argument, you're dividing the country more than you're uniting them.
And I really think that right now, the American people really deserve kind of to be united.
The American people deserve people who will unite them.
And that whole culture does the complete opposite.
So I and yeah, I mean, like someone says, have they had a real job?
I don't know that they've had a real job in their life.
Some of them probably haven't.
And that is also a problem.
Like, I think that when we have big platforms, it's up to all of us to use them responsibly.
And rage baiting, using AI, spreading misinformation, using clickbait headlines, which sometimes you have to do.
I think it's all kind of part of the same problem of like you're just doing a disservice to the country as a whole.
For people who are familiar with Aaron, you may know he's a former Republican.
And you also may remember that I interviewed Aaron's dad Lev Parnas, who played a major role in the entire Trump Biden-Ukraine situation.
I'm curious, Aaron, the Republican Party you left, does what's going on today with MAGA even remotely resemble that?
Was it already starting to become MAGA-Ized or do you not even recognize your old party?
Oh, Lord.
I was a Republican when I was like 16 years old.
So that, I mean, that was 10 years ago now almost, more than 10 years ago.
It's been a long time.
I think for me, the party of then and the party of now, I mean, everything you're hearing publicly now, they were saying privately then.
I think that's the only difference, right?
I don't think things have changed radically.
But I will say, like, everything you hear publicly from people like Stephen Miller, they were saying things like that behind the scenes.
The racism, the homophobia.
the anti-immigrant bias.
I mean, all of that existed back then.
And I was a Republican not because I believed in it,
but because I grew up in a Republican household.
That's primarily the only reason why.
And so when I had my political awakening
and kind of changed parties and stuff,
I really realized that the party that I was once a part of,
in name only, I guess, I was a rhino, as you can say,
wasn't necessarily, I mean, it wasn't what I supported.
But, yeah, I will say,
I think everything you hear now is,
it's the same party. It's just they're more open and willing to talk about it.
Yeah, to kind of circle back on the effect of Trumpism, I've thought, and I think I still
believe this, although maybe the last few months have changed my view on this a little bit.
I've thought since Trump came on to the political scene, he didn't really create
racists and xenophobes and the entire thing. I think that he disinhibited them by creating
an environment where the stakes or the risk of publicly saying,
some of this stuff was diminished.
And to a degree, on platforms like Twitter, it's actually welcomed.
And so I've thought that that, I think that's a version of what you're saying, which is that
the effect of Trump was not necessarily changing some of these views, but allowing these people
to coalesce and to realize, hey, we're going to start saying this stuff.
A hundred percent.
I mean, that's what it was.
Like, he normalized this.
There's a reason why hate crimes shot up after Trump was elected because he, that ideology
was always around.
People were always racist, right?
racism was there, they just weren't, they didn't feel comfortable acting on it until he was
elected. That's the difference. All right. We've been speaking with Aaron Parnas. Follow him on any
platform. He is on any and all platforms. Subscribe to David's subsec as well. And go check out
David's YouTube because I'm a big fan. Aaron, always good to see you. Keep it up and we'll see you soon.
All right. Take care. I'll see you later this week. Okay, see you. Take care.
Court case could strip our Fourth Amendment rights and allow immigration agents to come
into our homes for any reason, no probable cause needed, all while Republicans try to twist things
so that you think this is all great for America.
This should be the biggest story in the U.S. right now, but it's almost impossible to keep up
with the millions of moves that Trump is making every single day.
That's why ground news exists.
Ground News is an app and website that exposes the blind spots and spin before it takes control
of our opinions.
Ground News is the smarter, more reliable way to stay informed when MAGA is banking on us
getting distracted.
I'm partnering up with Ground News to give you 40% off the same vantage plan that I use.
So you'll pay only $5 a month for all of their premium features.
Just go to ground.new slash Pacman or use the code Pacman.
In the app when you sign up, the link is in the description or scan the QR code.
MAGA and Donald Trump just got brutal news.
It's not from Democrats.
It's not from the deep state.
It's not from some shadowy group plotting against Trump.
The bad news that Trump and MAGA just got is from voters.
This is regular people.
Polling reveals 61% of voters believe that Trump has made the economy worse.
We are seeing it broken down based on education, based on race, based on income.
The numbers are terrible.
Here is a little report from CNN based on this new data.
This is broken down by key demographics.
Independence, 60 cents or two thirds of independence think that Trump has made the economy worse.
Those younger voters that David talked about, almost two thirds as well, people of color,
three quarters, non-college voters, which is a key part of his coalition, very high also.
And same with it when you look at people making less than $50,000 a year.
Look, it seems we've finally come upon something that most Americans agree upon.
And that is a central theme of Trump's winning message a year ago, I will bring cost down,
just simply has not happened.
And when you add to the rest of just the K.
year, voters do not see the president's policies and actions, although there are many of them
affecting their lives in a positive way. As I've been talking to voters in New Jersey and Virginia
over the past few weeks, I mean, it's the independent voters who really come alive here. And it's not that
hard to find voters who voted for the president. They really wanted to see some change, and now
they are not pleased with this. Now, look, we have to put a million caveats here because a lot will
happen between and now and next year. But I am told by White House officials that the president is
obsessed with the midterms. You can just hear him talking about it already. He talks about it so
often. So Virginia and New Jersey tomorrow are going to offer a window into what the country's
thinking, as are pulled it, of course. So listen, the heart of Trump's comeback pitch was, we're going to
get the economy fixed finally after Biden destroyed it. I'm going to bring costs down. He repeated it like
it was the cure for everything from inflation to, you know, male pattern baldness.
And notably, Donald Trump has lost 15 points among independence.
Back in February, 43% of independence approved of Trump's job performance.
And now only 28% do.
That is a stunning collapse with independence.
And this is not because independence suddenly said we love Democrats.
independents looked at Trump's first few months.
They saw the chaos.
They saw the tariffs, the economic effect, the markets panicking, the job losses, the crackdowns,
all of that uncertainty.
And they said this doesn't seem like it's really making any sense.
And I don't, you know, I always try to be careful when we look at the data from independence.
I don't want to make independence out to be enlightened centrist who are above the partisan fray.
And in fact, most independents vote one way or the other.
Like I'm an independent.
I've never been a Democrat.
I mostly vote for Democrats.
I evaluate each race and in just about every race, I determined that a Democrat is the person
most closely aligned with me.
But there is a degree to which independence, especially in polling, are believed to be
a little less ideologically beholden to the party they're a member of because they're not
member of a, not members of a party.
So a 15 point wipeout with independence is massive.
And then if you zoom out and you say, okay, his big thing was the economy.
You go back to 2015.
He was the guy who understood trade and was the only one who could fix it.
He'll run the country like a business even though he bankrupted many businesses.
When your main area of expertise, the economy, now sees 61% believing the economy is worse today
than when you took office because of the things you did.
Everything that could go wrong is going wrong when those are the numbers.
It's happening very quickly.
And then we get to what could save him over the next six months.
Is there anything?
There is this kind of reality.
that presidential approval ratings rarely go up. Why? When a president comes into power, they have some
approval rating, which usually includes everybody who voted for him and some portion of the people
that didn't vote for him, but want him to do well. As the president does things people don't like,
they switch from approved to disapprove. So you've got the totality of the country. He does blanket
tariffs. A lot of people don't like that. They go from, I used to.
to approve, now I don't. He bombs Iran. Some people go from, I used to approve, but now I don't.
And what doesn't seem to happen is that when you stop approving of the job a president is doing
overall, if they go and do one thing that you like, rarely do you go, now I approve again. Usually
approval ratings just go down over time. What's the exception? The exception are events like
9-11. George W. Bush's approval was collapsing.
in 2001.
And at the end of 2001, close to the end in September of 2020, 2001, we had the 9-11 attacks.
George W. Bush's approval rating shot up, I believe, in the 80s, upper 80s, if I recall correctly,
although I'm going from memory and it was a little while ago.
That is not the sort of event that you consider that you can cause or create.
Although there are conspiracy theorists who say it was created, but that is not my belief at this time.
So might Trump try to create a crisis to boost his approval rating?
I wouldn't put it past him.
I don't think he has any moral qualms with doing with doing that.
But these numbers, especially among independents, look like they're going to be a disaster
for Trump next November.
Finally, finally, finally, corporate and legacy media is starting to talk about Donald Trump's
right eye.
I have spent years pointing out in passing.
Sometimes it's a rally clip.
Sometimes it's whenever that Donald Trump's right eye is often almost completely swollen shut.
What is happening on the right side of his face?
Is it the cheek that's closing the eye?
His face is sometimes droopy.
It's like did he walk into a closet door at Mar-a-Lago?
What did he do?
And for the longest time, nobody was touching this.
Mainstream and legacy outlets pretended not to see it.
They analyzed everything he said, but they didn't comment on the fact that this guy's right
eye is almost completely swollen shut.
Until now, Drudge Report has posted and they linked to an example from the 60 Minutes
interview.
Quite frankly, Trump's swollen eye has been much worse before.
Drudge report linked to this moment in Trump's 60 Minutes interview, as it is an example of Trump's
right eye almost completely swollen shot, but it's not the worst example out there.
That publicly to the rest of us.
What is he understand?
I don't want to give away.
I can't give away my secrets.
I don't want to be one of it.
And indeed, Trump's right eye is barely open.
These guys, it tells you exactly what's going to happen if something happens.
The other side knows, but.
So listen, I don't have any new information for you about like what is going on with Trump's
face. This isn't like everybody has a rough day. This is a recurring visible asymmetrical swelling.
It keeps showing up. Usually, you know, in scenarios that don't have any rhyme or reason.
It's not, oh, it's always when he gets off the plane or it's not always when he's doing interviews.
It's all over the place. And now that it has finally crossed over into the pseudo mainstream,
Drudge report is like, I mean, it's not CNN, but it's the pseudo mainstream. More people are starting.
to ask what the hell is going on here. Is this some kind of sinus issue? Is it a neurological problem?
Is it a medication? Is it what what is it? And why does it keep happening? And why has no one ever
asked a question about it other than people on independent shows like ours? This is the guy who demanded
cognitive tests for other presidents and regularly brags about passing a dementia screening test.
And now, finally, there are some in the legacy in corporate media who are catching up.
Now, I have to tell you, when I asked Jake Tapper and more recently, Jonathan Carl, why isn't more being said about what's going on with Trump, his face, his legs, his bruises?
They were not exactly profiles and courage in their answers.
And I think they're being careful to a degree because of who they work for.
But, you know, Jake Tapper just kind of said, like, well, what?
what is it that we would be covering? And I gave him the list. And then Jonathan Carl said, well,
you know, there have been questions about Trump's health for a long time.
Almost like that means it's not news. I don't know. I wasn't super impressed with either of the
answers. But slowly but surely there is this clawing that is happening. And we are seeing more and
more examples of this. And finally, the swollen eye make it into something approximating
legacy corporate or establishment media, which at this point, Rudd,
Drudge report certainly is.
What will it take to really mainstream the story?
I don't know.
Former Vice President Dick Cheney has died at age 84.
We will discuss it today on the bonus show, along with this incredible story where a guy
who flipped out on me and blocked me eight years ago, Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert,
he has gotten a special recently approved prostate cancer medication, thanks to getting Trump
involved by tweeting about it.
Really a reminder of the two-tiered systems that we have in this country.
And finally, Nancy Pelosi rumors are swirling that she will be quitting politics.
She says she's going to wait until she sees the results of California's Prop 50 before making
a final decision.
but the rumors are swirling that Pelosi is getting ready to hang it up.
All of those stories and more on today's bonus show.
Get instant access to the bonus show by signing up at join packman.com.
Your first payment, whether it is monthly or yearly, will be donated to saving America.
This month, we are doing what we can to counteract the snap benefit cuts.
I will see you on the bonus show.
I'll be back tomorrow.
And I will be live tonight at 8 p.m. Eastern with election results.
Thank you.
