The David Pakman Show - 9/18/25: MAGA cancel culture explodes, Trump fails in the UK
Episode Date: September 18, 2025-- On the Show: -- Jon Favreau, Pod Save America co-host and former Obama speechwriter, joins David for a Substack Live -- Donald Trump celebrates Jimmy Kimmel’s show being taken off the air and ...cheers ABC for cancelling him after months of threats -- The Federal Reserve lowers the federal funds rate by 0.25% and warns that job gains have slowed and downside risks to employment have risen -- Barack Obama publicly rebukes Trump and contrasts him with past Republican leaders to argue he departs from American values -- Trump delivers a rambling speech in the United Kingdom and struggles to read prepared remarks -- Trump's bruised and discolored hands and raise concerns about his health -- Trump speaks incoherently during his UK trip and makes exaggerated claims about the economy and tariffs -- White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt posts a tweet framing an earthquake as a divine sign -- Kash Patel faces intense questioning in a hearing as members press him on numbers and evasive answers related to Trump and the Epstein files -- On the Bonus Show: Trump says he's going to classify Antifa as a terrorist organization, Luigi Mangione's state terrorism charges dismissed, House Democrats weigh whether to support legislation honoring Charlie Kirk, and much more... 🍽️ CookUnity: Get Free Premium Meals for Life at https://cookunity.com/pakmanfree 🐟 Wild Alaskan Company: Get $35 OFF at https://wildalaskan.com/pakman 🥐 Wildgrain: Use code PAKMAN for $30 off & free croissants FOR LIFE at https://wildgrain.com/pakman 🔬 Freedom From Religion Foundation: Text DAVID to 511511 or visit https://ffrf.us/school -- 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) Donald Trump cheers Kimmel cancellation (09:24) Fed cuts rates, warns on jobs (13:12) Obama rebukes Trump publicly (20:37) Trump rambles in UK speech (26:46) Concerns over Trump’s hands (30:33) Trump exaggerates economy, tariffs (38:12) Jon Favreau joins us on Substack Live (1:05:24) Leavitt calls earthquake divine sign (1:10:12) Kash Patel grilled on Epstein files
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It truly pains me to start today with a story that really points to such a dark time in the United
States of America.
Jimmy Kimmel's program on ABC has been indefinitely suspended.
And it's been indefinitely suspended because of the following 60 seconds related to the
assassination of Charlie Kirk.
This is why the channel has taken this measure.
And there is so much wrong with this.
I'm not even a fan of Jimmy Kimmel's.
I never watched this show or shows like it.
It's not about specifically Jimmy Kimmel or his jokes.
This is about a chilling, dystopian crackdown on speech that is now leading not just to censorship
but to self-censorship, a hallmark of authoritarian regimes.
Here is what Jimmy Kimmel said that has gotten him canceled.
We had some new lows over the weekend with the Maga Gang desperately trying to characterize
this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything
they can to score political points from it.
In between the finger pointing, there was grieving on Friday the White House flew the
flags at half staff, which got some criticism.
But on a human level, you can see how hard the president is taking this.
I condolences on the loss of your friend, Charlie Kirk.
May I ask, sir, personally, how are you holding up over the last day and a half, sir?
I think very good.
And by the way, right there, you see all the Trumps?
They've just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House,
which is something they've been trying to get, as you know, for about 150 years.
And it's going to be a beauty.
Yes.
He's at the fourth stage of grief, construction.
Demolition, construction.
This is not how an adult grieves the murder of somebody called a friend.
This is how a four-year-old mourns a goldfish.
Now, that's actually pretty funny.
That's actually pretty good.
But the show has now been canceled because of this, I guess it's the earlier part where
he says the MAGA people are falling all over themselves to try to make it to tell the story
where Tyler Robinson had no right wing beliefs or whatever.
This is how authoritarianism works.
It terrifies people into self-censorship.
Now I want to put aside for a second that these are the people who told us they are against
cancel culture.
These are the people who told us that opinions shouldn't lead people to lose their jobs or
comedy shouldn't lead people to lose their jobs.
I want to put aside the double standard of it.
You know why?
Because this political movement doesn't give a damn about double standards.
These people do not care about hypocrisy.
The do as I say, not as I do or whatever, we're against cancel culture.
Let's start canceling people.
It's totally hypocritical.
But they don't care.
The MAGA voters don't care.
Doesn't even make sense to address it right now.
Do we live in a country where there is freedom of speech, where satire, comedy, commentary, opinion,
are revered and protected even if they're uncomfortable or the dear leader doesn't like them.
Or are we turning the United States into a true authoritarian regime?
And I don't think it can be denied at this point that the answer is we're doing the ladder.
We are doing the ladder and it is terrifying. And at this point, I mean, we were all a bunch of the
creators in my cohort. We were all texting yesterday. They're going to come for us. It's abundantly clear
that they're going to come for us. There's reportedly a meeting happening in about a month with some of the
big platforms and the White House. Obviously, the suspicion is that this is going to be a start policing
the content. We'd better not see any jokes about X. We'd better not see anybody making fun of Trump for
why. This is an extraordinarily dark moment. And just think of the vision of the founders,
the framers of the Constitution. There is nothing here that they would look at and say,
that's why we created the United States of America.
That's why we have a constitution and a bill of rights.
That's why we have a First Amendment.
They would see this and be disgusted.
And it's so cliche to say, oh, they'd be rolling over in their graves.
I don't know that I've ever used that phrase before.
But it seems appropriate for the circumstances in which we find ourselves.
This is cancel culture and they promote this.
Now, earlier yesterday, FCC chairman Brendan Carr was on with Benny Johnson and actually
mentioned ABC saying, we're not going to run Kimmel anymore, like something reasonable that a
broadcaster should do. It was really written on the wall here.
There's actions that we can take on licensed broadcasters. And frankly, I think that it's,
it's really sort of past time that a lot of these licensed broadcasters themselves push back
on Comcast and Disney and say, listen, we are going to preempt. We're not going to run Kimmel
anymore until you straighten this out. Because we, we licensed
broadcaster are running the possibility of fines or license revocation from the FCC if we continue
to run content that ends up being a pattern of news distortion. So I think, again, Disney needs to see
some change here, but the individual licensed stations that are taking their content, it's time
for them to step up and say, this, you know, garbage to the extent that that's what comes down
the pipe in the future, isn't something that we think serves the needs of our local communities.
But this.
Do you understand what's going on here?
They are talking about terrifying broadcasters into self-censorship.
And they are talking about making platforms directly liable for any political repercussions
to what they air.
Now, I just have to be up front.
I'm showing all my cards.
If this were to be applied to YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, potentially
even Spotify and Apple.
podcasts. If that were to all of a sudden be something where YouTube goes, you know, when Brian
Tyler Cohen makes fun of Trump or when the Micellis brothers go after Pam Bondi, that might
cause a problem for us as a platform. We are gone, folks. We are gone overnight. So this is
clearly something that they have been wanting. Trump said, remember when Kobe lost his show,
Trump said Kimmel and Thallon might be next.
Like this is clearly something that they are not only cheering today, but that they planned
in advance.
And Trump is cheering it.
Trump posted the truth social yesterday, quote, great news for America.
The ratings challenge Jimmy Kimmel show is canceled.
Congratulations to ABC for finally having the courage to do what had to be done.
Kimmel has zero talent and worse ratings than even Colbert, if that's possible.
That leaves Jimmy and Seth to total losers on fake news NBC.
their ratings are also horrible. Do it NBC, encouraging NBC to push others off of the air.
So they've gotten Kimmel off the air. They've gotten Kobe's show canceled. It's running a little
longer, but it'll soon be gone. Trump is extorting settlements out of media companies paramount,
the ABC fiasco. He's got a new lawsuit against the New York Times. This is the administration most
hostile to free speech that I have ever witnessed and worked under. And my expectation is one of us is
going to get hit. And all of a sudden, it's going to be a multiple six figure or potentially
even a seven figure legal bill. And this is going to get extraordinarily ugly. But forget
about that, right? You might say, David, I don't care about you or might as touch or Brian
Tyler Cohen. Forget about that. Well, do you care about the foundation that this country was
built on? Do you have the ability and the confidence to say, I can give opinions? I can do what the
First Amendment is supposed to grant me the right to do without being worried about frivolous
lawsuits, firings, et cetera, or don't I? Do I or don't I have that ability? Did the founders
intend for me to have that ability? The answer is yes. And by the way, for people in the audience
who go, well, you know, David, this is a problem for creators, but it's not a problem a problem for
other people. How many people, random, not random people, just everyday people without a public
facing job been fired because of their opinions about Charlie Kirk.
It doesn't mean that I agree with the opinions that are stated.
It doesn't mean anything like that.
But that is not the way this country is supposed to function.
And so I hope that there are Republicans out there, reasonable people willing to say this is
not a partisan issue.
We either have free speech in the United States or we don't.
the self-censorship, a hallmark of authoritarian regimes. This is terrifying stuff. There is no more
important time than today. I mean, really, uh, than to support the independent media programs
that you want to see stay on the air because they're going to come for us. Someone's going to get
hit here. Donald Trump has been begging, begging for a federal funds rate cut while
insisting that the economy is just awesome. Well, Donald Trump appears to have damaged the economy
just enough that Fed chairman Jerome Powell has now decided it's time to lower rates. And the Fed
has done so by 25 basis points. That's a quarter of a point. So we're talking about 0.25%. Now listen
to what he said with a major warning about the economy. And this is again, Trump has now hurt
the economy enough that the rate cut is appropriate. Good afternoon. My colleagues and I
remain squarely focused on achieving our dual mandate goals of maximum employment and stable prices.
for the benefit of the American people.
While the unemployment rate remains low, it has edged up.
Job gains have slowed and downside risks to employment have risen.
At the same time, inflation has risen recently and remains somewhat elevated.
In support of our goals and in light of the shift in the balance of risks,
today the Federal Open Market Committee decided to lower our policy interest rate by a quarter percentage point.
We also decided to continue to reduce our securities holdings.
I'll have more to say about monetary policy after briefly reviewing economic developments.
Recent indicators suggest that growth of economic activity has moderated.
GDP growth, GDP rose at a pace of around 1.5% in the first half of the year, down from 2.5% last year.
The moderation in growth largely reflects a slowdown in consumer spending.
Uh-oh.
In contrast, business investment in equipment and intangibles has picked up from last year's pace.
Activity in the housing sector remains weak.
In our summary of economic projections, the median participant projects GDP to rise 1.6% this year and 1.8% next year.
Those are not extraordinary numbers.
So understand that Trump has been saying the economy is doing great, but please give me massive rate cuts.
It's not coherent.
The Fed normally lowers rates when the economy isn't doing well enough.
The idea of lowering rates is to buoy the economy.
So Trump, by hurting the economy with his tariffs, has worsened it enough that now the Fed chair
says, yeah, now we've got to do a rate cut.
And Jerome Powell, in his sort of pedantic and understated way, made it clear here, there are some
real problems on the horizon.
Overall, the market slowing in both the supply of and demand for workers is unusual.
In this less dynamic and somewhat softer labor market, the downside risks to employment appear
to have risen.
In our SEP, the median projection for the unemployment rate is 4.5% at the end of this year
and edges down thereafter.
We are going in a direction where the economy is softening and the person in charge Donald
Trump is convinced that nobody knows better than he knows.
what to do. And yet the reason that the economy is softening, according to the Fed chair, who has a
dual mandate and who is a non-political operator, the reason for the softening is to a degree the policies
of Donald Trump. This is where we find ourselves today. And so we need now to start considering
what sorts of changes need to be made in order to turn the ship around. But does it matter because the
the person in charge is incessantly convinced of his omniscience and isn't willing to hear any other
ideas. And so he got his rate cut because he hurt the economy. And Jerome Powell is warning
this is potentially going to get very, very ugly. Former president Barack Obama pounded Donald
Trump in a rare public rebuke. This is not common. It is not common in general that former
presidents come out so loudly against current presidents. And it is not typical for Barack Obama
specifically to start doing this, but he did. And I understand why, because he sees a lot of the
same threats that we believe. And he lays out in a really clear way here how there are even things
that other Republicans would have said, no, this is too far. These are, there are certain values
that are not Republican or Democratic values.
They are American values.
And Barack Obama pointing out implicitly that that is different with Donald Trump.
Take a listen to this.
There's never been an experiment like this where you have people from every corner of the
globe show up on in one place and say, based on these ideas, based on these ideas, you know,
ideals, we hold these truths to be self-evident, all men are created equal, that based
on that and a Constitution and a Bill of Rights and a democracy that we can somehow
figure out how to get along and maintain our private beliefs and
pray to God in our own ways and retain aspects of the cultures that we bring from wherever
it is that we're coming from, and yet still decide that we are all Americans who can
salute that flag and believe in a certain creed and defend this country and and
try to make it better for each successive generation.
And I'm not alone in that belief.
As I said, I think George W. Bush believed that.
I believe that people who I ran against,
I know John McCain believed it.
I know Mitt Romney believed it.
So this is, what I'm describing is
not a democratic value or a Republican value. It is an American value. And I think at moments
like this when tensions are high, then part of the job of the president is to pull people together.
Now, that does not mean ignoring very real differences.
Now, did Donald Trump pull people together, for example, after the killing of Charlie Kirk
by saying the problem in this country is left-wing scum and we're going after them. Now, Barack Obama
rarely does stuff like this. And that to me signals the urgency of the situation. And when he said,
you know, even my Republican opponents believed in American values. What he's saying is Donald Trump
does not. And the subtext here is brutal. Trump's obviously a bad president. But he is outside
the tradition of American leadership and American values altogether. And you, you know,
with Barack Obama, he speaks in full sentences. He speaks in paragraphs. You've got to be able to
really focus and hone in on what he's saying. What he is saying is that Donald Trump is
fundamentally on American. Now, that's my interpretation of what.
he's saying. He's not saying it in the patriotic, patriotic sort of like jingoistic sense.
He's just saying in the value sense. This is not a guy whose instinct as president is to pull the
country together. And I can't say that he's wrong. And when we see the self-censorship,
the cancel culture from the right, the oppression of media, the insulting people with different
political beliefs, it's hard to see any of it as even remotely an American value.
Barack Obama's right.
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Donald Trump's trip to the United Kingdom is failing.
so spectacularly and so disastrously that my prediction is Trump's approval rating never recovers.
Now, I'm going to show you some of what went down here.
I do think, and even before we get into the clips for context, and we'll get back to this,
Donald Trump's hands look completely rotten.
Every single public appearance, they look worse and worse and worse.
And we're going to get back to that in a moment.
But Donald Trump flat out incoherent sitting alongside King Charles.
You see Secretary of State Marco Rubio to King Charles is left.
Everyone looking around what is going on with this guy.
He can barely articulate a thought here.
It's a singular privilege to be the first American president welcomed here.
And the, if you think about it, they said, it's a lot of people.
presidents and this is the second state visit and that's the first and this is the second state
visit and that's the first maybe that's going to be the last time i hope it is actually but this is
truly one of the highest honors of my life total incoherence total absurdity reporting that the
environment inside the room was tense in the way of me listen to to be perfect
Frankly frank, in the Biden White House, especially after that disastrous debate, it's been widely
reported that every time Biden would speak publicly, there was tension.
Staffers were tense.
Oh, my God.
Is he going to lose his train of thought?
What's going to happen here?
Reportedly the same thing is going on with Donald Trump, where people go, oh, is he going
to mispronounced?
Is he going to go off on some tangent?
Does he have any idea what's going on here?
Donald Trump really, really struggling to read his.
remarks.
In the finest tradition of British sovereigns, he's given his whole heart, everything he's got
to those parts of Britain that are beyond the realm of mere legislation.
It's not easy, but which define its essence and its virtue, its harmony, and its soul.
You can tell Trump doesn't even understand syntactically what it is that he is reading,
and maybe the most humiliating moment when Trump's.
started with some very risky pronunciation. You know when Trump has to pronounce names, it can get,
it can get pretty dicey. Here is Trump talking about a number of unbelievable authors, none of whom,
none of whom Trump has read any of the works from. Perfected in the pages of Shakespeare and Dickens
and Tolkien, Lewis, Orwell, Kipling. Incredible people. Unbelievable.
people like we have rarely seen before, probably won't see again.
Yes, I always, when I want to have feedback about the literary world, think of Donald Trump
and just everyone in the room looking around like what the hell is going on.
And then a weird moment, Trump did his routine where he says we are the hottest country
in the world, but he thanks King Charles for saying you gave us the footing.
when we started, which I guess is sort of like a thank you for the revolutionary war.
It's so bizarre.
It's what, what is going through this?
It's the cringe heard round the world.
Bond of kinship and identity between America and the United Kingdom is priceless and eternal.
It's irreplaceable and unbreakable.
And we are as a country, as you know, doing unbelievably well.
We're hotter than ever.
We had a very sick country one year ago and today, I believe, we're the hottest country anywhere
in the world.
In fact, nobody's even questioning it, but we owe so much of that to you and the footing
that you gave us when we started.
The footing you gave us when we started.
There is no, you know, you think back to Trump's arrival in the UK and mass.
massive projections and images of Trump with Jeffrey Epstein strategically placed at Windsor Castle
and elsewhere.
You see Trump's favorability and approval among global citizens, among European citizens, specifically
among those in the U.K.
It's even worse than in the United States.
You know, in the U.S.
He's like in the high 30s.
I believe it was the U.K.
Or was it Europe?
No, I think it was the U.K. number, Trump with 23% favorability.
What empirical case is there to make that this presidency is good for the reputation of the United
States around the world?
And we sort of delved into that a little bit yesterday.
And the answer is there really is no such case to be made.
This has been a complete and total exercise in humiliation.
And Trump, quite literally, doesn't seem to have the slightest idea what's going on, both in terms
of decorum, tone, history, context, protocol.
And this is not me going, oh, it's the Brits.
Everything must be protocol.
and Trump should always walk behind King Charles.
And by the way, Trump walked in front of him.
I don't even really care about that from the standpoint of enforcing arbitrary, you know,
royal family crap that I don't even give a give a damn about.
This is just about the idea of how are we supposed to relate to our allies?
And why is it that increasingly Trump relates to anti-democratic authoritarian adversaries
in the way that shows deference and.
how pressed he is and he's just so taken with it. And increasingly with our allies, it's
sort of like, does he even recognize what we're doing here? Like what, what actually is it
that is taking place here? And it is bizarre and wacky stuff. Donald Trump's hands are
suddenly completely rotten. What is going on with Donald Trump's hands? Once again,
yesterday, uh, during Donald Trump's UK trip and today, everybody who's.
saw these pictures, started noticing what is going on with Trump's right hand?
It is no longer sort of subtle makeup on a small part of Donald Trump's hand.
It is like a bright yellow, almost white, thick patch of concealer of some kind.
And it is growing and growing and growing.
Before the MAGA crowd jumps in, these are.
hands of someone with some kind of health issue. Now, if this were Joe Biden, Fox would have a 24-7
story. Is Biden dying? And yet with Donald Trump, they no longer even talk about it. They've gotten
their bogus explanation from Caroline Levitt. He shakes hands so vigorously with people that he just
has bruises. Well, that might explain the right hand, at least theoretically. But Trump,
Trump's never shaking hands with his left hand. How does it explain the bruises on his left hand?
This is not the first time that we are seeing this. It's getting worse. We're also increasingly
seeing Donald Trump's struggle to walk down ramps. He's slurring his way through speeches. He's
wandering off at events. And now his hands look like they are rotting from the inside out at another
moment during this event. Donald Trump fell asleep. He was next to King Charles. King Charles is delivering
a speech. And here is Trump just unable to stay awake. Remember, we were told Sleepy Joe was the problem.
Our countries have the closest defense, security, and intelligence relationship ever known.
In two world wars, we fought together to defeat the forces of tyranny.
Donald Trump just cannot stay awake. And we were told, of course, that,
Biden's the sleepy one and it's Trump who's nodding off in public while his hands are turning
purple, we think, except it's covered with thick, almost white makeup.
So at this point, we don't even know what color Donald Trump's hands are. Put it all together.
Bruised swollen hands, confusion, swollen ankles, regularly sleeping on the world stage at
events where you would think adrenaline would at least be somewhere keeping you awake.
So this is not a guy in command. And this is not a guy in command. And this is not a
a guy projecting strength. Now, what's the bigger issue? The bigger issue is that the administration
of total transparency that we were promised is being as opaque as you could possibly imagine.
There is nothing. There is nothing that will get them to stop ignoring this unless they are
pushed to give some completely nonsensical explanation. If it were anybody else, they would be
screaming medical crisis. Something is going on with Trump's health. I'm not a doctor, so I can only
speak to what doctors have pointed out, but we are not being told the story. And we were told
that the problem with health transparency was Biden. Every accusation that we heard during the Biden
administration seems to quickly be turning into a confession. Now, are we ever going to learn
the truth of Trump's health? I believe we will. It may be when Trump's gone. But I do believe
at some point, we are going to learn what it is that went on here.
And this only got worse this morning.
And I want to talk about that next.
Donald Trump behaving completely incoherently this morning at an appearance in Buckinghamshire, England, alongside the British prime minister, Kirstarmer.
Trump talking in circles.
Trump speaking meaninglessly.
I'll just play it for you.
see what you think.
I have a great process going and inflation is virtually non-existent.
As you know, we're taking in trillions of dollars from tariffs and they've been so incredible
for our country.
So incredible.
We're keeping our companies happy.
We're keeping them solid and sane.
Now remember that the companies are not happy about the tariffs.
The money that we have taken in is not coming from China.
It's not coming from India.
It's not coming from whoever Donald Trump wants to seize money from.
It's coming from American businesses.
And the reason that Trump got his rate cut yesterday from Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is that this
has all damage the economy just enough that Powell now says, well, we've got to do something.
And so we got our rate cut.
The tariffs are, of course, causing inflation.
Donald Trump promised us we are going to see prices go down.
have been going up.
And Donald Trump is even speaking incoherently and specifically about that, saying inflation
is gone.
It's just gone.
So your country was dead one year ago and now you have the hottest country anywhere
in the world.
And it's true.
And we'll have more than $17 trillion invested in our country this year, $17 trillion.
And as you can see, Kirstarmer has a sort of what on earth is going on here, kind of look
on his face.
Which is many, many times what we had.
last year and we're only in our just about almost ninth month getting just moving along quickly
it's amazing i was saying we're in our third month our fourth month our fifth month but we're
it's going to be over 17 trillion dollars no no country has ever had anything like that even
close you know my my eggs my beloved pasture raised organic eggs with the bright orange yokes beautiful
eggs, they used to be $6.79 a dozen. And today, in fact, I paid $9.49 for that dozen eggs. Why am I
bringing this up? Well, I'm bringing it up because it is Trump who promised that grocery prices
would be down and down quickly. And it's not happening. And in fact, I reported to you two days ago
that we're seeing the fastest and largest single month jump in grocery prices dating back years.
Now, even Brian Kilmead, Fox News host, Brian Kilmead, couldn't hide his skepticism, to put it lightly, about Donald Trump's economic claim.
Oh, this is tape.
This is tape.
Okay.
So he just mentioned overall $17 trillion in total investment since President Trump took over for a second term.
The question is, are the pledges going to turn into actual projects?
And you got to hand it to Kilmead, broken clocks are sometimes right.
Trump saying that countries have pledged money means nothing about taking money in it.
I hope that people actually understand the sort of mechanics of some of these pledges.
What Trump is referring to when he says we've taken in trillions is like, for example, during
the Middle East trip, you know, you'll get the Qataris or the Saudis to go.
We would conceivably be in for 600 billion over the next 10 years if you bring us a proposal
of projects that we want to do.
Trump comes home and goes, I just got 600 billion from the Saudis.
Well, no, what you got was a completely non-binding, generic statement that if there are
interesting projects that are a good fit over the next 10 years, they might be willing
to participate to some degree.
Very different, very different than they just gave me 600 billion.
And that's where Trump gets these numbers.
You'll also remember that the numbers are completely fabricated when Trump got back from
that Middle East visit.
he said, oh, we got five trillion. Now he says we got 17 trillion. Of course, very unlikely that you're
going to get 17 trillion when the entire American economy is $30 trillion. Trump then, by the way,
went into the whole. We passed such a great tax bill that now I don't even have to do anything
else the rest of my turn. The aspect of the bill. I go with the big, beautiful bill, the great
big, beautiful bill. We got so much a largest bill ever passed in the history of our country,
in fact, so big that we really don't have to pass too much anymore. We can just do this for four
years implement. And I like to implement because the bills. And of course, by implementation,
Trump means signing dystopian executive orders, subverting the will of Congress and just existing
in a dystopian authoritarian state. Now, I want to say one one other aspect to this. If we can
take the House from Republicans in 2026, Trump's not going to be doing.
anything else the rest of his term. And so I do think that right now the greatest opportunity
to stop this insanity, let's make Trump right that he doesn't do anything else the rest of his
term. The focus needs to be on taking the house in November of 26, which controls the purse
strings controls the spending. And you can make Trump an even lamer duck than he is right now.
I would love for you to be part of our community in so trying to take that house away from
Republicans. Make sure you're subscribed on the YouTube channel. We're pushing to 3.5 million
YouTube subscribers. It's free. Just hit the subscribe button. And remember that when I say,
I got a couple emails recently that that people said, you know, David, when you say later on the
show, what show, what show are you talking about? I just see clips on YouTube. Every clip you see on
YouTube or TikTok or wherever, it's part of a daily one hour show. That show is available free on
every podcast platform, including probably most, most notably, Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
So when I say later on the show, get the full podcast on Spotify, get the full podcast
on Apple Podcasts.
We'll take a break.
John Favreau joins me next.
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The link is in the description.
Welcome, everybody.
It's great to have John Favreau here today from crooked media, Pod Save America, et cetera.
I'm sure a familiar face to many in my audience.
John, so good to have you on.
I appreciate it.
Thanks for having me, David.
So listen, I want to start with something which you might say, hey, this is actually a bad thing
to even be talking about or you might say, no, this is a critical thing to be talking about
right now.
Talking to different creators in the space lately and also elected Democrats, the topic of
whether the left is currently divided and whether that is going to be a problem for winning elections
has come up a lot. And usually the sort of lines of that division, you could put them a couple
different ways. It's incrementalism versus accelerationism, right? The people that want to improve
upon the system we have and make changes rather than the system is so terrible, we've got to
burn it down to build it back up.
Sometimes it's, well, it's the difference between capitalism in some form and socialism.
Maybe that's the dividing line or maybe the dividing line is a particular issue or the degree
to which we should be willing to work with people we disagree with if there's anything to be
done that is better than the status quo.
Having said all of that, do you believe that the left is particularly divided right now?
maybe we'll just start there um i don't know if we're particularly divided but i think that as the
coalition um to sort of oppose trump and the maga movement um has sort of grown over the years
it has by necessity um become very large and heterogeneous and diverse and so um you know he's to say
back when he was in the Senate, you have a coalition that spans from, you know, AOC to Joe
Mansion. And maybe it's even bigger ideologically now. And you also named a number of other
divisions. I think it's normal, healthy for a part, not just for a party out of power, but for a party
that has now, you know, I mean, let's be honest, Joe Biden barely won in 2020. And we've had a
rough 10 years, Democratic Party. And I think it is good to be doing soul searching now. It is good
to be arguing with each other, debating with one another. I don't think that is, you know,
I don't, I don't subscribe to us fighting and having debates is going to somehow make us weaker,
is going to let the Republicans win more. Like, you know, we're in a bad place. We're almost,
we're almost at the bottom right now. And so some argument and debate about what we stand
for and the best strategy to defeat what I think is a authoritarian consolidation right now.
I think that's a good thing.
One of the arguments about the differences between the robust internal debate on the left
and the robust internal debate on the right that's sometimes asserted is that on the right,
they will always ultimately unite to win an election.
And then later you will see some of these coalitions break apart, whether it's, you know,
the Laura Lumer Wing versus the whatever, right?
And so, but they get united to win and then fine, we're going to have some, some problems
later, maybe that we'll figure out.
One of the ways that one might say it could be different on the left, and I'm curious to hear
your take is later after the loss, there's the, it's really bad not to be united, but in the
lead up to the election, maybe there's either purity testing or, you know, in 2016, if it's not
Bernie, then Hillary and Trump are essentially the same to me. And we found out that that is very
much not the case. You know, do you think that there's some substance there to that distinction?
I'm not sure if it's a Democratic versus Republican distinction as it is a party in power versus
party out of power distinction. I think, I mean, to go back to the 2020 example, I think that was
an instance where, you know, Bernie ran for the nomination and did quite,
well. And then when Joe Biden won the nomination, he, you know, Bernie supported him and did a lot
of work for him. I think the left and the center left, center right, far left, generally came together.
And if they hadn't, I don't think Joe Biden would have won that election. So I do think that,
you know, in the run up to an election, party out of power, unity is a stronger force.
I think once you've been in power, like Democrats were for the last four years,
then it's much harder in election to maintain unity because you've seen the party you voted for
in power, you've seen what they've done in the last four years, and you are either disappointed,
frustrated the change hasn't happened faster, upset that, you know, we've lost some battles.
And so you start thinking, okay, well, could someone else do it better with a different ideology,
a different style, a different strategy, et cetera.
When it comes to the communication of some of these ideas,
I've always been of the belief that the independent media ecosystem
that you're a part of, that I'm a part of,
that so many of our friends are a part of,
has been not by a small margin, a net positive.
Yes, there's disinformation on the internet.
Yes, conspiracy theories spread and algorithms can be weaponized
and all of the stuff.
But like the balance for me on the balance sheet,
was yes there are some liabilities here but like the assets are so big in terms of the diversity
of voices the ways in which owning you know the broadcast equipment of legacy media no longer is
a filter to preventing people people from getting ideas out so it's been like i'm so bullish on it
we now are at a point where some people who shared my view are starting to say you know i don't know
if on balance we're better off because x platform exists i don't mean x like
Twitter, but like because a particular platform exists, I think that maybe the balance is starting
to shift a little bit in terms of that. Has your feeling about like the net value of the space
we occupy changed it all in the last couple years? I guess this is the way I see it, which is
we're not going back to the old way that things were, right? Like legacy media is still
declining before our eyes. And, you know, the corporate media has all kinds of.
of problems that we're seeing come to fruition, particularly in the second Trump term.
So this is going to be the media landscape for the foreseeable future, independent media.
And so then I think the challenge is those of us who work in independent media and those of us
who consume independent media should want to demand and expect, you know, guidelines for
factual information, making sure that you can trust the people that you're going to.
you're getting news from and information from, and that we, you know, sort of hold ourselves
accountable to, you know, high standards of rigor and truth and, and responsibility as we, you know,
because I also think that, you know, there's, there's independent media, right? Obviously,
there's a spectrum here, right? There's, like, more established independent media. There's also
just, like, you know, random people on social media with big followings and not much else. And
some of them are great and some of them I don't think are all that helpful and so I do think
with so much information and so much choice right now I do think there's like a missing
curation function for people for an average news consumer who's just like okay I want to know
the news I want to know what's going on I want factual information and I there's too many choices I
don't know who to get it from right so I do think like as this industry as independent media
immatures, you know, it could probably use some better curation and some guidelines, not going
back to sort of the gatekeeper version of the legacy media, but, you know, better than just
being the Wild West. Is there some degree to which, like, the 80-20 principle ends up applying
regardless in the sense of, okay, now as the independent media space grows and grows and grows,
the top 20%, which is probably responsible for 80% of the views, or it's probably even more
concentrated, to be honest. It's probably the top, you know, five percent might be responsible for
90 percent of the views. It starts to reflect the establishment, regardless of any particular
editorial opinion that might be taken. Like, do you think that that's a concern? It's definitely a
concern. It's definitely something that I think about a lot, particularly because I came from the establishment,
right? I was an Obama staffer for a long time, so I'm not going to pretend that I'm not. And I think
the way to handle that, the way that I try to handle that here at cricket is to make sure
we are talking to people on our shows and elsewhere who represent a broad spectrum of views
and ideologies. And I think that sort of keeps us, at least with our finger on the pulse of what's
going on, because you're right. You don't, I think, I mean, look, we're also in Los Angeles,
which helps and not being in D.C. And I think that, yeah, I think that, yeah, I think that, you
you can, if all you do every day is just sort of, you know, read playbook and the New York
Times and that's it. I think that's insufficient if you're a content creator and you're in this
business. And so I think just try to consume a wide variety of sources is probably the way
to avoid becoming just, you know, part of the conventional wisdom. Let's look forward a little
to 26 and 28. Let me lay out what I see is like the really exciting good stuff that's going on
and then the things that kind of concern me.
So on the positive side of the ledger, for 26, I'm seeing so many young progressive candidates who are getting involved.
In some cases, it's primaries.
In some cases, they want to flip seats.
Really exciting.
For 28, the bench to me seems really interesting, both insofar as there's a lot of interesting people,
but also there's like some diversity in terms of the folks that are being,
thought of as potential runners if they choose to run in 2028. It's a deep bench. So I think that that's
phenomenal. On the sort of like concerning side, I've talked about all of this stuff on my show before
after the kind of like reckoning that took place after the November election with how
media was sort of mishandled by Democrats and they're not helping to build the alternative
ecosystem. And there was this period where I was like, I think they're getting in and it's going to be
good. I've had some interviews where like I have a Democrat on. I press them a couple of
times about an issue that I just think they're not giving me a good answer about.
It gets tense.
It gets hostile.
It wasn't the interview they wanted.
But like, this is kind of what we need.
You know, if you can't even face me, then where are we going with this?
So that's a concern.
I've said my opinion is I don't think Kamala should run in 2028, just based on everything
that's happened, not because I don't think she's competent.
I found her incredibly competent when I met her.
I just think strategically it doesn't make sense.
I started getting emails that I'm being misogynistic.
started getting emails that I'm being sexist
in that opinion.
That concerns me in terms of the sort of like,
is this how we're going to end up
kind of picking a candidate and that.
So those are the two sides of the ledger for me.
Let me kind of like turn it over to you
and see where you're seeing things.
Yeah.
Again,
this is something that we struggled with in 2020
because we wanted to be a place
and we were a place
where all the different candidates
who ran in 2020.
felt comfortable coming on the pod and just having a good conversation with us.
And so even though we might have had leanings towards one candidate or the other,
we didn't think it was fair to just be like spending all our time on the pod,
talking about a candidate we like, and then saying,
oh, but we also want you, some other candidate, to come in for an interview and we're going to be fair, right?
Now, that said, I don't know if it's just like the media environment we're in,
the political environment we're in or just what I consider the importance of being just
honest about who you are and where you stand. I kind of, I try to be as honest with the audience
as possible about where I am while also making sure that I can provide people with information
to make good decisions, even if those decisions are not the ones that I would make. So like,
I want to tell you what everyone stands for in a way that is objective enough so that I,
I don't, you know, seem to, like, push one way or the other.
But I also want to let you know, like, if a certain candidate makes a great speech and I think
that they're really inspiring, I don't want to hide that from people.
So I want to say that, you know?
And, you know, same thing with your point about, about Kamala.
Like, if you, I guess what I would say is if I had that opinion, right, all I would try to
do is say, look, from where I sit right now, it seems like she's going to have a tough time.
That doesn't mean she can't win.
I'm not making, this is why we try to stay out of the prediction business, right?
because who knows, everything surprises us these days
or nothing surprises us, I guess.
And so I try not to be certain,
but I try to give people a sense of like what my gut instinct is
based not just on how I'm feeling,
but like, you know, years of doing this
and seeing and watching this unfold.
So that's sort of, to answer your question on that,
that's the balance.
I do think in, you know, the purity test stuff
or people getting mad at you,
I guess I have developed I have developed a thicker skin oh some people could be laughing if they've seen me on Twitter but over the last over the last several years on like personal criticisms of you know you're doing this and you're this and people calling me names whatever else that doesn't bother me as much as when people come after us or or they have criticism that is sort of about a broader way in which I think politics needs to
to be in order for us to win, which may sound confusing, but like, you know, I, I have had some,
I don't know anyone, thankfully, who has, like, celebrated Charlie Kirk's assassination.
And, you know, to an extent there's people out there doing that and whatever, they're, you know,
you're going to lift up those Twitter accounts and that's that.
There has been like a, you know, I don't, I'm not celebrating it, but I don't want to, uh,
you know, he was hateful or there's like a sort of a little bit of a justification or
there's a denial that the person could, that the killer could possibly have, you know,
left-wing views. And it is this like, it's sort of this vision of politics where we are so,
because the other side is so bad and so threatening that we cannot give an inch and admit
anything with that like there's something going on on our side or we can't even admit reality
sometimes this in a much lesser way this happened i think with um joe biden and and his age and
especially particularly after the debate and people just like refusing to come to terms with what
the vast majority of the country had already come to terms with and i get where that feeling
comes from because we are scared and we are exhausted and we are facing
this authoritarian movement that is very scary to a very, to a lot of people.
And when that happens, you have a loss of control and you have a loss of agency and you feel
helpless. And so you're like, I don't want to give any ground. The one thing I can do is make
sure that I don't give any ground on anything. And I'm not introspective. And I don't
buy into the right wing framing. And I don't let them control the narrative. And it's always,
and I just think that, I think that ultimately is counterproductive to the movement, because
politics is a at its core it is a battle for hearts and minds and not only is political violence bad
but the entire point of politics is to avoid violence that we can live and disagree and even
hate each other without resorting to violence and and that's not just like a core principle to
have because it makes us feel good like that's how this whole thing works that's how we're all
safe that's how we all you know and um and so that that kind of stuff i get a little worried about
did you read either or both jake tapper's book and jonathan allen's book i didn't read
jonathan allen and amy parns's book i did read jake's book okay as a general concept
do you think he more or less accurately described the chaos and the cover-up that took place
in the Biden White House in 2024?
It's funny you said cover-up just then
because I think that the book itself
does not make the best case for a cover-up.
It makes a case for people who were in denial
about what they were seeing
and also wanted to give a president of the United States
and his closest staff the benefit of the doubt.
I'm sorry to interrupt.
I should agree that's my perception also.
And maybe I was wrong to even use what some are calling a cover-up maybe is better set.
Right.
Yeah, like, I don't, you know, I talked to some people pretty high up in the administration about this.
And what you'll hear is there was no, there's no like mental deficiency.
The guy was with it.
We saw him in the situation room.
But like, yeah, his communication got really bad.
And when he got tired, he got bad.
And we saw it.
And people were hoping that, you know, he had.
good days and bad days. People were hoping that there was more good days. And also, again,
like I said before, everyone's afraid. Everyone's afraid of Trump winning. And when you're afraid,
you sort of, you know, you're willing to deny reality because you're so afraid. And so I think a lot of
it came from a good place. I think it was a deeply misguided place. But I think it came from a good
place, at least for a lot of the people. And so, yeah, and I actually think that for all the
shit they got, I think Jake and Alex, like, did a pretty good job of,
reporting the nuance and complexity of the situation,
even if I don't think the title quite reflected that.
There was this interview that Hunter Biden gave
where he names you guys, right?
I mean, he goes, I don't remember the exact quote,
but it's sort of like F the Pod Save America guys
saying this, that, and the other thing.
How did you hear that he had invoked you guys initially
and sort of like, what was your reaction to the substance
of what he said?
Someone sent it to us.
I can't remember who.
It's probably in our company Slack channel somewhere.
But I had heard from many people inside the campaign and the administration close to it that he was extremely unhappy with us.
So I kind of had figured it was only a matter of time.
It's very interesting what the Biden folks have done or the like the true defenders have done,
which is they like to say that everyone who was pushing him to step aside is like establishment and this and that.
And it's like, you can yell at us if you want and be mad at us, but we were merely reflecting what most of the country had come around to and most of the Democratic Party had come around to.
I mean, there was like polls in February well before the debate, well before things really got bad that showed a majority of Democrats.
Democratic voters did not want him to run again because they thought he was too old.
And so I only think our role was trying to get people in the establishment, in the party, to understand what the rest of the country and the rest of the party, people outside, people who are not very online like I am, were seeing and feeling about the race.
Last thing I want to ask you about is we kind of get to the latter part of our conversation.
thinking about what Democrats can and should do between now and the midterms.
You know, one of the things I think is interesting about what Gavin Newsom is doing with
Proposition 50 is, you know, I've seen the analyses of if every state does it, it's actually
not really a net gain for Democrats, and it may be a mistake.
He is at least creating an outlet for a desire from many Democratic and potential Democratic voters
to do something other than, you know, the proverbial.
strongly worded letter or or the tweeting or whatever the case may be. And when people have asked me,
I don't know if on a personal level this has the legs to get him to a 2028 candidacy if the
calculation is the plan is this is how he's going to kind of enter. I don't know if it succeeds
what it will actually do overall to the 2026 map because there would still be time for other states
to maybe make some changes. But what's your view overall on what he's doing? I like it. I'm very grateful
that Gavin's out there fighting.
And like you, I don't, I don't know if he'd be the best 2028 candidate, maybe, maybe not.
I don't know right now.
I have come to know him over the last several years and I really like him a lot personally.
And I also think that, like I said, as a Democrat, as an American, I'm just very happy he's
out there fighting.
My general view on the like fight harder stuff is do fight harder.
if there is a realistic or even good possibility that you'll win.
And don't fight if you don't think you can win,
but you think that people want to hear that you're fighting
and you promise something that you can't deliver
because I think that deepens people's cynicism.
So sometimes I know that everyone wants dark cuts to fight
and when they don't fight or when they don't fight,
then they get criticized for not fighting.
Well, if someone's not fighting because there is no chance of winning,
because we just don't have power, which is just the reality of the situation,
then I don't necessarily think they should be criticized
because I don't think I'd want someone telling me that they're going to fight,
knowing that we actually can't win.
But with Gavin, this is a perfect fight because it's not like Proposition 50 is definitely going to pass,
but really good chance of it.
And really good chance then we get five seats.
And so he picked a fight that is absolutely winnable.
And I'm really happy he did that, you know?
And like, I'll be very honest on the government shutdown.
stuff, I do want the Democrats, I don't think the Democrats should fund this government. I don't.
Like, I think Trump is breaking the law. I think that he is consolidating power in a very dangerous way.
That said, I don't know how we win a shutdown fight. And I don't know how the government gets back,
opens up again. Now, that's a risk that I'm weighing and I still think that making a statement,
calling attention to it is probably the better path. But I don't want anyone to think that Democrats are
going to shut the government down and then Donald Trump and the Republicans are just going to
like throw up their hands and be like, you win. We're giving you ACA subsidies and we're going to
reverse the Medicaid cuts and all that kind of stuff. Like I just, I don't know that we have that
power. But that's, that doesn't mean that I don't support it. But I do think you got to when we're
when we're pressing Democratic politicians to fight, we should have in our mind the parameters
of the fight and the chances of actually being, uh, victorious. Do you think that this new
hostility to speech that we've heard from Trump, Pam Bondi, and many others,
over the last 48 hours, do you think it'll come to fruition
and may even play a role in suppressing the speech
of independent media?
Or do you think that even the backlash from their own side,
like Tucker Carlson came out against it in the last 12 hours or so,
do you think even the opposition to it from their side
will kind of stop it in its tracks?
I am hopeful that that happens,
that the opposition from their own side at least slows it.
I am also, you know, the other hopeful takeaway on this
is that they often over promise themselves or they often like they want their supporters
and Democrats and the opposition to at least think that they are cracking down hard and
they are going to they're going to go for it you know they keep calling like are you going to
designate this group a domestic terror group and blah blah like there is no legal designation
of a domestic terror group that's not that's not in the law will they try to make
life miserable for nonprofits will they continue to sue media companies and maybe independent media
companies as well i would not be surprised if they did that and they're going to try to make
life miserable and they'll as they've been doing they try to go after the most unsympathetic
characters so that everyone else when they go after that person are just like well that sucks
that they're doing that but i don't know if i like that person anyway this was like this was like
the reaction to the john bolton raid from people it's like oh john bolton was a warmonger it's like
okay great yeah i know he's a warmonger i don't like him either but like you still shouldn't have
the FBI raiding his house because he went on TV and said something that made the president
mad. So I do think that it is going to be on us, whoever they single out for this,
whoever they go after, people who have not been targeted need to stand in solidarity with those
people. We've been speaking with John Fabro. We're all listening to the podcast. So good to talk to you
today and I'd love to do it again. This was great. Thanks for having me, David. All right, take care. Good
to see you. Bye. Bye. Bye. There was a time when public
Education meant learning math, science, history, but now we are seeing Bible verses in biology
class.
We're seeing 10 commandments on the wall, religious chaplains taking the place of trained counselors,
and it's all funded by taxpayer money through voucher programs that are sending public dollars
to private religious schools.
This is part of a broader effort to inject religion into public education.
I'm against that.
And it often is coming at the expense of real academic standards and the well-being of the students.
Now, our sponsor, the Freedom from Religion Foundation, is fighting back.
FFRF defends constitutional principles, takes legal action when schools cross the line,
and protects students from religious coercion in public classrooms.
If you believe in facts in protecting education and keeping religion out of public schools,
I can tell you this is an organization very much worth supporting.
To get involved, go to ffrf.org slash school or text David to 511-511.
Message and data rates may apply.
The link is in the description.
White House press secretary Caroline Levitt has resurfaced.
Still not really doing press conferences.
We're going to talk about maybe why at another time, but she has resurfaced with a complete
mental tweet. Now, before I show it to you, I am not someone who just says religious belief
is mental illness. There are those people out there. I think for many people, they're religious
in some nominal way. The community aspect is beneficial and positive. They might or might not even
believe their sacred texts or they don't necessarily take them literally. They say, yeah, it's sort
of like the idea of a higher power of some kind. And I don't know if it's true or not,
it's useful or whatever. Okay. I think to reflexively say any religious belief is mental illness
is probably wrong. It's definitely unproductive. It doesn't bring people in. But Caroline
Leavitt gives us an example of something where I do think religious belief carries over into
mental illness. Caroline Leavitt took a tweet from a user who goes by Auntie Kitty and put it
on her, I believe this was an Instagram story where she just said, wow. Now, here.
is the here is the tweet on the night charlie was shot referring to charlie kirk on the night
charlie was shot a 4.1 earthquake struck utah in scripture 40 represents trials 41 signifies a
shift it hit at 557 local time that 757 eastern acts 757 describes stephen the first martyr stoned
as the crowd silenced his truth. The Bible says the earth trembles when God is angry. That
night, as a voice was silenced, the ground groaned. This is a textbook case of two overlapping
phenomena. One is called apophenia. The other is delusions of reference. Let me explain them.
Apophonia is this human tendency to see patterns and connections in random data. And sometimes we do it.
you look at a cloud and you see a bunny of course the cloud has nothing to do with the bunny it's
just you have the idea of what a bunny looks like and then you might see it in the cloud not a big deal
right but then sometimes it'll be oh i have there's a hidden message in a song lyric when the
song lyric aligns with your mood you see a message in the song lyric and it's not really there
right it's a cognitive bias it's a quirk of our brains our brains are kind of wired to find order
even when there is no order. More seriously, there's what psychologists call delusions of reference.
That is when a completely neutral event, an earthquake took place. It's 5.57 p.m., which is 7.57 somewhere else
or whatever, right? You start to believe that there's a direct personal significance or a hidden message.
In a clinical context, it's often considered a symptom of psychosis. And when you see a public figure
with a platform framing random numbers and natural events as this coded divine commentary about
their political of adversaries or allies or whatever, this starts to edge into mental illness
territory. You know, there was an example I've given before. There was an audience member who was not
well. And at one point, she wrote in saying she understood what I was really saying to her. And what she meant was
that even though I was talking and saying something like I am right now about Caroline
Leavitt, she believed that I was blinking my eyes in Morse code to her to give her a specific
message. Now, I don't even know Morse code, but that is an example of a delusion of reference.
And the bigger issue is that this is, you know, we're kind of pointing to Caroline Leavitt here,
this is representative of a bigger issue with the political ecosystem around Donald Trump,
which is that in many ways, instead of just engaging with the reality of situations, they're reaching for sometimes it's cosmic science.
Sometimes it's a biblical code.
Maybe it's numerology.
Sometimes it's just debunked economic ideas.
Like what pervades this administration is a sort of faith mixed with conspiracy.
And it is a very dangerous blend.
And if every tremor, every timestamp, every biblical verse is a message about your movement, nothing is random.
nothing is too unhinged or too absurd to be folded into your movement.
And that's how you weaponize apophenia and these delusions of reference go mainstream.
This does start to border on some form of delusion.
I leave it to you to sort of determine how serious it is.
Cash Patel got pounded yesterday during a brutal, brutal congressional hearing.
Our friend Eric Swalwell, Democratic congressman from California, he employed a classic, classic
law school technique.
And this is what skilled attorneys do when they've got a witness that wants to go with, I don't
know.
How many times have you been to this person's house?
I don't know.
Really?
You can't estimate?
No, I can't.
Oh, could you have gone a million times?
Well, no.
I haven't gone a million times.
And have you ever been there? Yes. All right. Well, now we're between one and a million. Do you think
maybe you visited this person a hundred thousand times? No. Okay. That's the, that's the idea of the technique.
Cash Patel tried to use the I have no idea for how many times does Trump's name appear in the Epstein
files. And Eric Swalwell uses this exact technique on him.
You said you don't know the number of times Trump's name appears in the files. So it could at least be a thousand times.
Is that right?
The number is a total misleading factor.
We have not released anyone's name.
We have not released anyone's name
in the Epstein files that has not been credible.
Director, could it at least be a thousand times?
We have released every piece of legally permissible information.
You can characterize the numbers however you want it.
You claim you in my time, Director.
It sounds like if you don't know the number,
it could at least be a thousand times.
It's not.
It's not.
Is it at least 500 times?
No.
Is it at least 100 times?
No.
Then what's the number?
I don't know the number,
but it's not that. Do you think it might be your job to know the number?
My job is to provide for the safety and security of this country. My job is not to engage in
political window. So you can go out to the sticks and get your 20-second hit and your fundraising
article. Keep going, reclaiming your time because the people of California are being underserved.
He knows it's not in there a thousand times. He knows it's not in there 500 times. It's in there
just enough times that he doesn't remember, I guess is what we're supposed to believe.
So this is an interesting legal technique. You kind of, you force.
a witness into a corner by pinning them down with ranges. If a witness says, I don't know, you go,
is it more than X? Is it fewer than why? And you start chipping away at the ambiguity. And then
you narrow the range until the witness either looks evasive because they're just not giving you the
answer or they kind of end up boxed in and admit a number. You know, how fast were you going?
I have no idea. Could it have been 200 miles an hour? Well, no, my car doesn't go that fast.
Okay. Could it have been 100 miles an hour? Definitely not. Could it have been 90? No.
Definitely not. Okay. Could you have been driving five miles an hour? Well, no. I mean, it's a highway. Could you have been driving 10 miles an hour? Same answer. It's a highway. Okay. So we've gone from no idea to between 10 and 90 miles per hour. This is a very well executed technique. Now, Congressman Ted Lou also had a chance. And he said, is Trump on Epstein's client list? Here's how that went.
You confirmed that exists
Attorney General Pambati confirmed
earlier this year that exists. I just want to ask you
a simple question. Is Prince Andrew
on Epstein's client list?
The material related to Prince Andrew
has been made public. Is Prince Andrew
on the client list? We have released
the index of names that were in Jeffrey Epstein.
Is Donald Trump on Epstein's client list?
The index has been released and the index will speak
for itself. I'm going to say
America is a huge red flag.
The FBI director could not answer
gentleman, whether Donald Trump was on episode.
The gentleman's time has expired.
It's more than a red flag.
And this was not only Democrats, even Thomas Massey, a Republican congressman, sat there and
said, wait, you're telling us, you're telling us there's no one on the client list?
And, and so have you reviewed those 302 documents that were the victims name the people
who victimized them?
If I personally know, but the FBI has.
So how can you sit here and in front of the Senate and say there are no names?
I said, all I named one today.
I said, we are not in the, we are not in the practice of the department of justice, FBI,
of releasing victims names.
And of course, he's not being asked about victims.
He's being asked about perpetrators.
That is not what we do.
We are also not in the habit of releasing incredible information.
That's not what we do.
But multiple authorities have looked at the entirety of what we have.
It's hard to think of less honest.
less transparent people. And my hope is that at some point, they pay a political price for this.
I don't know that they will, but certainly one step in that, just one step is taking back the House
of Representatives. It is, it's not, it's a necessary step, but not a sufficient step. And that is an area
where we need significant focus over the next year and a half. On the bonus show today, Donald Trump is designating
Antifa as a terrorist organization. There's one little problem. It's not really an organization at
all. So that's going to be difficult to do. We are also going to give you an update about Luigi
Mangione's case in which state terrorism charges have been dismissed by a judge. And then finally,
tensions boil over among House Democrats over a vote to honor Charlie Kirk. All of that and more
when I'm joined by producer Pat on the bonus show. You can sign up instantly for the bonus.
show at join packman.com. And I want to remind you the 30th of this month, the last day of the month,
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