The David Pakman Show - BONUS FREEBIE: Shooting at Dallas ICE facility, Trump's attempted assassin convicted
Episode Date: September 27, 2025-- On the Bonus Show: Shooting at Dallas ICE facility, Trump’s attempted assassin is convicted, a lawyer is fined over ChatGPT fabrications, and more... Become a Member: https://www.davidpakman.com.../membership Subscribe to our (FREE) Substack newsletter: https://davidpakman.substack.com/ Buy David's book: https://davidpakman.com/book
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Hey, everybody, David here. What you're about to hear is an episode of the bonus show.
We do a bonus show every day for our members. And for a limited time, we will release one of the
week's bonus shows on Saturdays exclusively for our audio podcast listeners. If you'd like to get
access to all of the bonus shows, simply sign up at join packman.com. Here is that bonus show episode.
Welcome to the bonus show, a breaking while I was recording today's show.
We learned that there are two dead, including a suspect, in a shooting at a Dallas ice facility.
Three people shot our ICE detainees, according to an ICE spokesperson.
No ice officers have been hurt.
Now, the shooter took his own life, self-inflicted gunshot wound is the cause of death.
The round, here we go again, you know, remember when the bullets were trans Pat.
The reporting right now from NBC is that the round found near the shooter had an anti-ice message.
They didn't like ice.
And of course, it's like here we go again.
We know how the trans bullets with the Charlie Kirk killing turned out not to be accurate.
But the reporting right now is that this was an anti-ice protester, which makes this, it's not
that it's more tragic, but it makes it more futile in trying to, whatever, achieve change
through violence, which is that there were detainees that were heard.
And if indeed not like either way, this is despicably wrong, Pat, but it sort of reminds
me of, you remember that that guy Glenn Miller, I interviewed on the show a long, long time ago,
who ended up trying to kill Jews in Kansas.
And he happened to kill Christians of which he was one.
And so like it doesn't make it any more or less tragic, but it does maybe just understate
the futility of trying to achieve change in this way.
I don't know. It just kind of reminds me of that.
Definitely. It's a tragedy regardless.
If the reporting that we have now turns out to be true, which is that he was anti-ice,
even though it was migrants who he shot.
Could the takeaway be that political violence can affect all people?
And this could be the type of story where people could come together on.
Because like with the Charlie Kirk shooting, for example,
there were right wingers who said, this is all the left that does this.
And one of our own was taken.
Well, in a strange way in this scenario, maybe there was left wing motivations.
But the people who were killed weren't left wing.
They were migrants who obviously didn't deserve.
this, no one would have deserved this. So could that be the type of thing that brings people together
on this issue? I don't even know. I don't know. It's such a strange story at this point.
This is, you know, we'll get the exact details, but it's starting to, let me see, how do I want
to say this? Obviously, we don't just give up on trying to end political violence and gun violence.
There is a feeling of there being such cultural rot in this country.
And that's not even a partisan statement.
I mean, you can interpret it in a partisan way.
I'm not saying it's equal on both sides, but I'm just making it as a general statement.
There is such cultural rot of various kinds that like a lot needs to happen to dig out of this mess.
What do you think about people who say we need to focus on turning down the temperature
in this country we have to tone down our political rhetoric because what seems to be lost on them
is it really just takes one person to do one of these atrocious acts like with the charlie
kirk assassination for example it's not the fault of the left or political people in general that he
was shot it's the fault of that one person who took it upon themselves to engage in the shooting
that shouldn't be reflective of what hundreds of thousands millions of people think i think it's
It's absurd to draw such a conclusion.
So is it incumbent on like you and me, for example, to supposedly tone down the rhetoric of
our show as if we're encouraging violence?
We're not doing any of that stuff to begin with.
So what exactly are we supposed to change here?
Yeah.
You know, there's this thing where oftentimes the people calling for something are most guilty
of it themselves.
And so the problem is there's an asymmetry here, right?
Charlie Kirk is killed.
they say, we got to turn down the temperature. What they mean is stop criticizing Trump.
Trump immediately goes out and goes liberal scum is responsible for this. I hate my enemies
and my opponent, you know, my opponents. He said at the eulogy, which is such a crazy term to use.
It was no eulogy. It was a political speech. And so they're turning up the temperature. But then if I just go
like, hey, farmers are getting screwed by these tariffs. They go, oh, that's exactly the type of rhetoric that led to the
shooting. It's like, no, they have that sort of rhetoric everywhere. What they don't have
everywhere are presidents inciting insurrections, right? And so there is this asymmetry in their
demands. But of course, anytime you bring up Trump, they'll just claim that you have
Trump derangement syndrome. They won't accept that there is a double standard here and what
they're asking for. They want left wingers to supposedly turn down the temperature, but they
don't expect that from Trump, maybe because they know at this point that that's just not in his
nature, he's not the type of person to do that. So he's, they've given up on that or they just
view him differently. He gets a different set of rules than the rest of us because every time
I see this double standard get pointed out to them, they always say, oh, all you can ever do
is bring up Trump and they don't address the actual issue here, which is that they're not
being consistent. Right. And of course, the reason we're bringing up Trump is Mitt Romney isn't
out there saying this stuff, right? Who's another nominal Republican? Like, even Rand Paul, who
I find totally distasteful in terms of his views.
He's not out there turning up the temperature.
And, you know, maybe I'll end up having to eat my hat on that.
I don't think Rand Paul is out there saying this sort of stuff.
The reason the focus is on Trump is because Trump and the people he's chosen to have around
him, Caroline Levitt, Stephen Miller and others, they are the ones that are primarily the purveyors
of this.
And so again, it's just an attempt to defeat an argument without a real argument.
Oh, you're just talking about Trump.
Well, he's the guy who said that.
But we've got to stop this leftist scum.
That's why.
And of course, and not only is he one of the only ones doing.
And he's also the president of the United States.
And that's still supposed to matter, right?
What the president says is supposed to be reflective to some degree of what we as a country think.
And sure, that's eroding over time because people don't like or trust what Trump has to say.
But, you know, it's still a much different standard than even a senator or congressperson saying some of these things,
let alone one of these commentators that they tend to equate the president's who without a doubt.
So listen, we're going to wait and get the full details here, but this is part of a much broader
cultural rot. And that I think is much more difficult to fix. You may remember the other
assassination attempt of Donald Trump. This was Ryan Ruth, who was caught in and around Donald
Trump's South Florida golf course. He has now been convicted of attempted assassination.
Now, I genuinely have some questions on this, Pat, and I want to get your take on it.
You may recall that the rifle was not fired. Secret service caught this guy. And the argument was he had the
intent to assassinate Donald Trump. And that by being there with the rifle, that was a substantial
step in his attempt to assassinate Trump. He faces life in prison. Now, I don't deny for a second
that this is someone who was there with the goal of killing Trump. I just wonder like,
would your average person who is caught somewhere with a gun be charged in this way?
I don't know.
I'm just not sure without ever having even approached the potential victim or fired the gun.
Maybe that's typical in terms of attempted assassination.
I don't know.
Well, yeah.
I mean, I'd have to imagine there's a different set of rules when it comes to a president, right?
So if you are in the vicinity with a gun and you have plans to assassinate the president,
they're going to throw the book at you. And I'm not surprised, especially because this attempt
took place, what, just weeks after the one that Trump got shot in, that Trump nearly died in.
So, of course, they're going to be serious about it. And I don't buy his defense that he didn't
plan on shooting Trump. Why else would you be there with the weapon? He argues that he had an
opportunity to shoot the president from a long distance away, but decided not to. So that goes to show that
he didn't intend to kill the president.
Well, no, that probably just shows that you're waiting until he got closer
so you'd have an easier shot at him.
Also, something strange that happened was that after this conviction,
this man tried to stab himself with a pen, of course, unsuccessfully.
And I think it goes to show that this was probably just someone who was clearly not in the
right state of mind and certainly deserves the penalty that he's facing.
Yeah, I am it every aspect of this just goes again to some of these bigger issues like how many times are we going to have very similar sorts of analyses on the same situation at some point it's like, hey, until we change something, this stuff is going to continue happening.
It is different as Pat points out because we are talking about a president here, but it's another young man happens to be white, decided to try to take out whatever grievance.
he perceived against the president, whether even doing that successfully would have satisfied
whatever sick belief he had about how he would solve problems, kind of doesn't even matter.
So I think that we really need some kind of situation.
And by the way, this guy was not young, right?
No, I was supposed to correct you on that.
He was a 58, 59 years old.
This was a 58 year old.
It's another, another white man.
This one happens not to be a young guy.
but often they are.
I don't know.
I'm kind of out of ideas, Pat.
Like, if we're not going to deal with the gun aspect, if we're not going to deal with the
cultural rot, if we're going to just talk about mental health without actually encouraging
and making it easier for people to access mental health services, none of these in things
individually would prevent every shooting, of course, but there are things that we talk about
and we never do.
I don't know, Pat.
I mean, is, is it a race to the bottom where it's just like the solution is get better security?
Yeah, it may be.
I mean, it's a terrible situation that we're in, even.
when we think about solutions that don't involve the guns because maybe we view the gun issue
as futile in this country with the amount of weapons that we have, if we just want to approach
this from trying to change our culture or change like mental health in this country or
change how the media covers these shootings, all of those things aren't easy to do.
All of those things would be tremendously uphill battles.
So I don't see a solution in sight and it's terrible, but I think events like this are going
to continue for the foreseeable future. Yeah, it's just like what's going to stop these events.
It's just nothing's happening that would stop the events. So it's unlikely that that we would see
them stop. Hey, I don't know if you remember a story we did a little while ago about legal briefs
being filed, which had references to cases that didn't exist, which led to the understanding
that chat GPT generated some of this stuff. Well, now a California lawyer has been assigned
a has been levied a $10,000 fine for filing a state court appeal full of fake quotes generated
by chat GPT. And the verdict is that 21 of 23 quotes were made up by chat GPT. And the court said that
this ruling in $10,000 fine should be seen as a warning. This is a warning that briefs, pleadings,
motions or papers should contain citations that are real and that even if they are provided
by chat GPT, the attorney ultimately is responsible.
You can't say, well, chat GPT came up with it as an excuse.
If the lawyer submitted it and signed their name to it, then that is their responsibility.
This is going to become a bigger and bigger deal, Pat.
And I know I have a lot of lawyer friends who have already acknowledged.
A bunch of the work I do is going to be taken over by AI eventually.
How soon that is going to happen is sort of a question mark.
But certainly like I have a friend in real estate law.
They're like, you know, first of all, a lot of countries don't even require lawyers necessarily
for real estate transactions or there might just be a lawyer that's sort of like handling
paperwork, but not that each party has a lawyer.
Anyway, the point is a lot of my real estate lawyer friends are like chat GPT is going to get pretty
good at handling a lot of this stuff.
we're going to be more valuable for the advice and counsel around business issues or strategy,
but especially given that even many lawyers believe this is inevitable, we still have to be
clear on who's ultimately responsible for what's submitted. And right now, it's still got to be
the lawyer. Yeah, absolutely. And this happened a while ago back in July 2023. I think chat GPT got
released and got popular at the very end of 2022. So people were still getting used to the technology.
they didn't realize that sometimes chat GPT will make stuff up, even though 90% of the time,
whatever, things are fine.
Sometimes it will hallucinate and you can't always trust what it says.
Yeah, of course, using just a made-up number there, but that's in my experience about how it works.
And it even says at the bottom, if you read the disclaimer, that sometimes it makes mistakes
and to check important things.
I think we should treat it largely like we do Wikipedia, right, which is you can go to
Wikipedia and pretty much 90% trust what you read.
How you really verify it is to click on the links that it provides and see for yourself what
the primary source information says.
You can use chat GPT in a very similar way, which is it can come up with the answers for
you, also include the citations, click on those citations, and make sure what it's saying
is actually backed up by the primary source material.
So we can still take advantage of AI.
Lawyers can still use it for their research and I'm sure it helps a tremendous amount, right?
You don't have to seek out the information yourself, it can just assemble it for you,
But then you just have to take that extra step of verifying everything.
And I don't think that's that's that hard.
I have so many friends who teach college right now.
They said a lot of their work is now just trying to figure out how to get around students
using chat GPT.
This includes even just for emails written to them.
Like obviously for assignments for tests for work, no, no doubt.
But even just like for emails, they have come to believe that a lot of the emails they get
from students are written by chat GPT.
Certainly, like, the blue notebook with a pen in class is one way to do it.
It's not really applicable to every single class type necessarily, but they're beside themselves
about what to do here.
Yeah, because the notebook with the pen in class isn't really what we're doing in the world
today.
And in fact, in many areas, we are using chat GPT for work.
So we want to prepare students, but we also want to make sure that they're not cheating.
So I don't envy their position.
that seems like a really difficult place to be in.
Yeah.
I would not want to be teaching college right now.
That's for sure.
I'm glad my tenure and I'm not using that term literally.
I didn't have tenure,
but I'm glad that my tenure teaching is not active at this point in time, I guess I would
say.
You just wanted to be able to say that you were a former professor adjunct at that.
Exactly.
Former professor and New York Times bestselling author.
Former instructor.
Exactly.
All right, everybody.
We'll be back tomorrow.
New show and new bonus show if we're lucky.
Thank you.
Thank you.