The Eric Metaxas Show - Solomon Schmidt
Episode Date: February 7, 2025Author Solomon Schmidt shares his new biography: Legal Gladiator: The Life of Alan Dershowitz ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Noble gold investments is the official gold sponsor of the Eric Mataxis show, a company that specializes in gold IRAs and physical delivery of precious metals.
Learn how you can protect your wealth with noble gold investments.
That's noble gold investments.com.
Welcome to the Eric Metaxus show. It's the show featuring Go-Go-Go the Chimp.
Nothing like a chimp to liven up the radio show.
Easy there. Go-go, go, go. Go-go. No, go-go! No! Go-Go! No!
Folks, it's Eric Mataxas show.
I am in Palm Beach right now.
I'm in Palm Beach.
By the time you listen to this, I might not be in Palm Beach, but I'm in Palm Beach now.
Chris Heimes, I'm in Palm Beach.
It is Friday.
But why am I in Palm Beach?
Why, you ask?
Well, last night, we had a Socrates in the city event with Senator Josh Hawley right here in Palm Beach, except guess what?
What?
Guess what?
It didn't.
Fantastic? It was not fantastic. It did not happen. Senator Josh Hawley turns out he's a U.S. Senator,
Senator. And he was required to stay in Washington to vote for, you know, the, to confirm whoever, RFK Jr.
Tulsa Gabbas. Who knows? But the bottom line is he needed to be there. So we've never had this happen in 20-something years of Socrates in the city where we had to cancel an event.
But here's the good news.
We've rescheduled the event.
So I have to come back to Palm Beach March 21st.
So folks, if you want to come down on Palm Beach on March 21st, we're now doing the event on March 21st.
Kind of bizarre to have an event be canceled.
But it's also bizarre to be at this moment in history where a president is trying to get people confirmed.
And the recalcitrant scummy Democrats, you know,
refuse to confirm. I mean, it really is. You talk about ugly. Like, what is their excuse,
except that they're afraid they're going to go to jail because they're criminals? I don't know what
their excuses. They're certainly not going to put it that way, but I will. So anyway, so the good news is
I get to come back to Palm Beach, March 21st for Socrates and City event here with Senator Josh
Hawley talking about his book, Manhood. I read the book, of course, and I have to say,
it is very good. It's excellent. I don't know if we had him on the program to talk about the book
when it first came out. It's almost two years ago, year and a half ago. But it's one of those rare
books that is really particularly well written. Everything he says is important, but it's not
merely important and accurate and true. It's also well written. So that's Senator Josh Hawley's
book on manhood. March 21st is the new Socrates date. So now everybody knows. Great.
most people, nobody would know this, but I should right now be on my way to the White House.
There is an event at the White House today of Paula White.
Some people know Paula White.
She's a Christian leader.
She has been close to President Trump for a few decades.
And he really trusts her.
And I've gotten to know her and Jenny Corn.
And it's very exciting that they are today launching.
this faith-based office in the White House.
So I wanted to be there with the president and all this stuff.
I've never been into the Oval Office.
I've been to the White House a bunch of times.
But there was just no way for me to get from Palm Beach to D.C. in time.
So I'm missing this.
But it's exciting that this is happening.
What the president said at the two prayer breakfast he attended yesterday,
presidents, you know, it's not since Lincoln.
has a president been this outspoken about faith?
Washington was outrageously outspoken about faith
through the course of his leading our troops in the revolution
and innumerable times in his two inaugural addresses.
But the way Trump is talking about God
and the need for us to get back to God
and to bring religion back into American life
and on and on and on,
I have to tell you, all of his never-Trump pseudo-Christian detractors, what do you make of that?
Really, really exciting.
And very exciting to me that Paula White is somebody who cares, not only cares deeply about religious liberty,
but who understands how to work in the White House and to get stuff done.
So I'm really excited that she and Jenny Corrin are making this happen.
And I hope to be a part of it.
And of course, I hope to get to go to the White House another time.
But not today, not today.
So that's exciting.
What Donald Trump is doing right now is it's hard to take in.
There is so much happening that I think there's a great joy in seeing all the right
people getting very upset. If you have Chuck Schumer and, oh, I don't know, you name it,
freaking out, that's a good sign, actually. That's a good sign. So we'll see what happens with a lot of
these things, but I'm just so excited because he's taking action. And Chris, I don't know if you've
noticed this, but I don't know if I mentioned this on the air the other day, but he doesn't seem to be
doing any saying anything mean. He's being.
really, really gracious and kind.
The other day he couldn't understand what that woman
was saying, and he was saying, oh, you have such a beautiful
voice and it's such a beautiful accent.
The problem is, I can't understand a word you're
saying. So it's funny, but he's
being super gracious. And
it's kind of like a baseball player. He says,
I let my bet do my talking, you know?
Like, it's how I perform at the plate
and that's what Trump is. Like, I'm getting it done.
I don't need to talk about getting it done. I'm
actually getting done. I mean, the stuff
that they're revealing, you
you know, in terms of where the money's been spent,
that our government's been wasting.
It's like there's no argument.
You know, it's like he's not doing anything that's argumentative or ugly.
He's actually, it's kind of like somebody showing you the tape of the robbery.
He's like, hey, I didn't, you know, here's the tape.
It's just evidence.
But if you're the criminal or friends of the criminal, you are upset.
And that tells you everything you need to know.
Listen, I have to say it is shocking.
to me to see the level and the depth of corruption, it's disgusting. It's more, it's far more
disgusting and horrifying than even I had feared. It is horrifying the level of corruption in
U.S. government. It's just so disgusting and so offensive to Americans who work hard to think
that your hard-earned money is being stolen by corrupt, selfish people who are their purposes.
And I say stolen because it really is your money.
Taxes are supposed to be spent on us, on we the people.
We spend money to pave roads to make our life better,
to have a military to keep us safe, on and on and on.
They have used our money for nefarious ends.
It boggles the mind, the level of corruption.
Christianity today, political, all of these people have been taking our tax dollars
surreptitiously.
They're not broadcasting it.
They're taking it.
They're using it for their own purposes.
for evil purposes. It's wicked. It's horrifying. Thank God. Donald Trump cares about this. Thank
God. He's deputized people like Elon Musk who care about this, who want to go scorched earth on the deep state,
who want to drain the swamp. So before we go to Bevelin Bady, and again, wait until you hear her story,
because this is the evil of the Biden administration at work. But I want to mention, I keep saying, you know, Donald
Drain's the Swamp is a book that I wrote. People are excited because Donald is draining the swamp right now.
If you want to get my children's book, Donald Drain's the Swamp, or my children's book, Donald builds the wall, or the other children's book, the best place to get these books. Donald drains the swamp. Donald builds the wall is go to my store.com. That's our friend Mike Lindell's website, mystore.com. You can probably even access it from MyPillow.com. Make sure you use the code, Eric. If you use
Use the code Eric. On those three books, those children's books, you get a gigantic discount.
Instead of $60, which is the retail price, it's like $3499 for all three books. Donald drains the
swamp. Donald builds the wall. Donald and the fake news. They're very funny and they're coming true
by the grace of God. MyStore.com. Use the code. Eric. We'll be right back.
For years, customers have been asking if my pillow sells cross necklaces like the one that
Mike Lindell proudly wears every day. Well, they're excited to announce.
that Mike has partnered with a jeweler right here in the United States to create beautiful
sterling silver my crosses. You can save 30% today using promo code Eric at mypillow.com
and click on the radio podcast square or call 800-9783057 and be sure to use promo code
Eric. You can choose from the women's or men's style. The My Cross for Women has a more delicate
look and is reversible with Mother of Pearl-style translucent white enamel on one side
and onyx-styled black enamel on the other. The My Cross for Men has a slightly
larger cross with onyx-style black enamel and a slightly longer, thicker chain.
This amazing offer won't last long, so order now.
Just go to Mypillow.com, click on the radio, podcast square, or call 800-9778-3057, 3057, and use promo code Eric.
Mypillow.com, use promo code Eric.
800-9783057-3057.
promo code Eric.
How would you define your current relationship with sleep?
Do you struggle like most of us?
Here's the thing about sleep.
It's the foundation of whole body health.
That's why I'm so excited to tell you about Beams Dream Powder, a science-backed, healthy hot cocoa for sleep.
Our daily performance depends on getting a good night's sleep.
Other sleep aids can cause next day groginess, but Dream contains a powerful, all-natural blend of rashi-magnesium, L-theonine, Epigenin, and Melatonin to help you fall asleep, stay asleep, and wake up refreshed.
My listeners get a special discount on Beams Dream Powder.
They're science-backed healthy hot cocoa for sleep with no added sugar.
If you want to try Beam's best-selling dream powder, get up to 40% off for a limited time
when you go to shopbeam.com slash metaxus and use code metaxus at checkout.
That's shop beam, B-E-A-M dot com slash metaxus, use code metaxus for up to 40% off.
That's shopbeam.com slash metaxus.
So you're putting money away, saving for the future, for retirement, for your family.
You're doing what you're supposed to do, right?
Well, what if I told you that your 401k, IRA, and other investments are probably paying for gambling, abortion, and LGBT causes?
Inspire Advisors can tell you where your profits are really coming from.
Do what I did. Go to InspireAdvisors.com and order your free customized impact report and find out.
Inspire is a recognized leader in faith-based investing.
They can empower you to put your money where your values are.
They stand by their biblical values donating 50% of their profits to Christian ministries each year.
and they know that investing with Christian values has power.
Get your free customized impact report now at InspireAdvisors.com slash Eric.
And together, let's show Wall Street what investing with biblical principles can do.
Inspire advisors, biblically responsible investing, visit inspireadvisors.com slash Eric.
That's inspireadvisors.com slash Eric.
Hey, folks, welcome back.
I don't typically talk to very, very young people, but sometimes I'll make an exception because I'm very
open-minded. For example, my next guest is Solomon Schmidt, who I believe is 21 years old. Solomon,
my first question, true or false, you're 21? True. True. All right. I think we're done here.
You and I met at a Newsmax party. We were in Washington, D.C. for the inauguration, and the Newsmax party,
everybody knows I rave about Newsmax, but I didn't know that they threw great parties. It was one of the
delightful, I think it was the most delightful event that we attended. And one of the highlights of it
was you and your dad coming up to me and introducing yourselves. So tell my audience about that.
I didn't know you sound so mature. I didn't imagine that you were 21. I knew you were young.
I didn't know you were that young. But how did you, I don't remember what you said when you came up to me,
but how is it that you know of me?
Well, it was a terrific party.
The cheesecake bites were tremendous, but that's a different matter.
No, I've known about you, Eric, for a number of years, ever since I watched your interviews
with our mutual late friend, Walter Hooper, who was a secretary to C.S. Lewis.
And when I went over to England to interview my friend Walter from my YouTube channel,
I watched your series of interviews with him for Socrates in the city that you recorded in Oxford.
And they were terrific.
And when I was looking for a book recently on William Wilberforce, a number of months ago,
I was looking to learn more about Wilberforce.
And yours is obviously the most well-read, most recommended.
So I picked it up, started reading it, loved it, love your commentary.
I'm sure you hear this all the time.
You're funny.
And the writing style is engaging.
and I've seen videos of you, so I knew exactly what you looked like.
And we share the same publisher, Tony Lyons, at Skyhorse Publishing,
who's been a tremendous person in my life.
And so I knew exactly what you looked like.
I was aware of your work.
And my father and I were mingling at the Newsmax party,
and I saw you and made a beeline for you.
And I started Fanboy, and I came up to you, and I said,
Mr. Metaxus, I love your Wilberforce book.
It's just great.
And we have a mutual friend, Walter Hooper, and you were, I mean, people are going to think I'm flattering you, but I mean every word I'm saying.
It was sheer excitement when I saw you.
And I love the work you do and the way that you make your subjects exciting.
It's one thing to talk about them reverentially or in an inspiring way.
And but, but to excite people is a, is a whole different, it's a whole different element.
And, well, listen, I honestly, when you, uh, you were talking to me about my Wilberforce book,
first of all, grabs my attention is usually people come up to me and they talk to me about
my Bonhofer book, sometimes about the Luther book, uh, or more recently, letter to the American
church. I am exceedingly fond of my Wilberforce book titled Amazing Grace, uh, not because I wrote it,
but because he is such a delightful subject.
I mean, people don't realize until you read my book, folks, you just think, what an amazing man, Wilberforce was.
So it was my great joy to write that book.
It's the first biography I wrote, never thought I'd write a biography.
And people say to me over and over and over that I make my subjects come alive.
Now, you know, that's something that only in retrospect, I just thought, well, I got to write a biography.
but it thrills me that people say that.
But as I said, people rarely mention the Wilberforce book.
And I'm so proud of that book just because I feel like it does what I hope to do in a book,
which is give you the definitive story because there's so many books about figures,
but they miss this or they miss that or they're not that readable and stuff.
So when you said that, of course, you know, as a vain author,
I was thrilled that you were aware of it.
And then when you said you knew Walter Hooper, oh my gosh, I mean, for a young man like you to be aware of Walter Hooper is astonishing.
The fact that you knew him personally thrilled me.
And again, for folks listening right now, I met Walter Hooper in Oxford, I guess through my friend Michael Ward and Gregory Wolf.
We had a dinner.
And I couldn't believe that I'm getting to meet this legend, Walter Hooper.
Walter Hooper was in the last year of C.S. Lewis's life, he was a secretary, he became his literary executor.
So he's an amazing man, and I remember being angry. This is a lot of how I get motivated. I see an injustice that makes me angry. I said, no one has ever interviewed Walter Hooper at length. This is a living legend. And in 2015, I went over. We had a crew. Socrates in the city interviewed him for three days.
running. So it was three hour-long interviews, and it's on the YouTube channel for Socrates in the
city. And it was a dream. It was a cornucopia of interesting anecdotes. I mean, it was better than I even
thought. And so I felt, sometimes I feel kind of a duty before God. Like this man, his story needs
to get out there, and I got to do this. So I did it. And of course, that's the joy, is that it lives on and on
and on and on so that a young man like you could watch it and that others could watch it. So I got to get on a
plug for Socrates and that it's city. Folks, go to Socratesandcityandcity.com and you can watch
these videos. And then our first Socrates in the city book, which just came out,
conversations on the examined life, I have the three interviews with Walter Hooper are,
we have the transcriptions of them. And it's fascinating to read if you prefer to read and not just
watch it. So thanks for reminding me of that, Solomon. But it just, you know, all of this is a long way of
explaining what a joy it was to meet you and your dad at the Newsmax party because people
rarely bring up, you know, Walter Hooper and Socrates in the city and Wilberforce. And I just thought,
you know, meeting young people that care about this stuff gives me hope for the future.
So now, just to be clear, you're in, you and your dad, you live in Buffalo, New York.
Yes, live here with my mom, Lisa, dad, Mike, and three siblings, Cecilia, Judah, and Sophia,
born and raised in Buffalo.
I think I've only been to Buffalo once.
It was during a blizzard.
I was doing my Bonhoeffer tour.
I spoke at a church up there.
But it's a long way from Buffalo to Washington, D.C.
What brought you to the inauguration?
A couple meetings I had.
I was meeting with a friend of mine named John Solomon,
who is a reporter and journalist who has a media company called Just the News.
I was meeting him.
And I was...
I read his stuff every single day.
I get his email.
I've met John Solomon.
So we don't want to get confused, folks.
We're talking to Solomon Schmidt, but he was in D.C. to meet John Solomon.
Okay.
So that's interesting.
And how do you know John Solomon?
I interviewed him for my biography on Alan Dershowitz.
John is just one of the many, many people that Alan Dershowitz has known, impacted.
I interviewed about a hundred people for the biography on Dershowitz and a little shameless name-dropping.
Some of the people who took time out of their busy schedules to talk to me about Dershowitz.
Oh, you got folks as different as Jamie Raskin and Mike Pompeo, Glenn Greenwald and Mike Huckabee,
Noam Chomsky, and President Trump, Jared Kushner, Elliott Spitzer,
Hold on, hold on. You interviewed President Trump about Alan Dershowitz?
He took the time to do it. And the reason I mentioned people on both sides of the aisle is it shows you what a unique figure Alan Dershowitz is. And yes, he's still very much despised by people on the left side of the aisle for becoming Donald Trump's lawyer. But the thing you'll notice in the biography I wrote on Dershowitz is that all of these people, whether they like him or not, and most of them do have some kind of admiration of fondness for him.
recognize the importance that he's played as a defense attorney.
And when I came into this book, Eric, I and other folks that I know kind of just had this view
of attorneys. To whatever extent I thought about defense attorneys before this book,
you kind of had this view that, oh, goodness, Alan Dershowitz represented O.J. Simpson.
That means he supports double murder.
And he represented Mike Tyson in a rape appear, which must mean that he's okay with rape.
understand that way of thinking because you instantly associate Dershowitz with the crimes that his
clients allegedly committed. And what I came to realize through this book, and this isn't a stump
speech for defense attorneys, I'm not planning to become a defense attorney, and we know there's
bad eggs in the profession. But what I realized through researching Dershowitz's life is how
integral the defense attorney, the role of the defense attorney is to the legal system that our founding
fathers gave to us. And then I'm reminded of the fact that John Adams himself was a defense attorney
and that quite a few of the founding fathers and the people who participated in the constitutional
convention and the Continental Congress were lawyers. Dershowitz cites the example of John Adams,
and it's very relevant to cite in the mid-7-7-7-7-7s.
1770s in the boss, after the Boston massacre, John Adams chose to represent the British soldiers who
opened fire on the American colonists who were harassing them.
Actually, just to correct you, you young punk, it wasn't the mid-1770s. It was the early
1770s. In fact, it was 1770 or 1771. We'll be right back talking to Solomon Schmidt.
For years, customers have been asking if my pillow sells cross-necklaces like the one that
Mike Lindell proudly wears every day.
Well, they're excited to announce that Mike has partnered with a jeweler right here in the United
States to create beautiful sterling silver my crosses.
You can save 30% today using promo code Eric at Mypillow.com and click on the radio podcast
Square or call 800-97783057 and be sure to use promo code Eric.
You can choose from the women's or men's style.
The My Cross for Women has a more delicate look and is reversible with Mother of Pearl
style translucent white enamel on one side and onyx style.
black enamel on the other. The My Cross for Men has a slightly larger cross with
onyx-style black enamel and a slightly longer, thicker chain. This amazing offer won't last long,
so order now. Just go to MyPillow.com, click on the radio, podcast, Square, or call 800-9778-3057-3057,
3057, 3057, and use promo code Eric. Mypillow.com, use promo code Eric. Folks, welcome back.
I'm talking to Solomon Schmidt. He claims to be 21. Nobody's buying it, because he knows.
was way too much. But Solomon, you were just talking about, you've written a biography of Alan Dershowitz.
Now, look, this is all comedic to me, because when did the book come out?
Back August of 2024.
Okay, so over a year ago. So you wrote it when you were 19.
I started it. I started working on it in mid, in late 2021, when I was 18, and I became fascinated by Dershowitz's life.
story and spent a number of years doing dozens of interviews with him, researching at the archives
at Brooklyn College, where he has hundreds of thousands of papers and memos and diaries and calendars.
I just have a lot of basic questions to ask before we even get into the subject. So, you know,
I find it kind of funny. I find all this very funny. I used to be extremely precocious. I'm too old now to
be precocious, but I used to be extremely precocious. And people's like, I can't believe you're only this
old or whatever. And it's sort of in some ways it's a selling point. And in other ways, it's not.
Because if somebody says, like, there's this great book on Alan Tershowitz written by a 19 year old,
most people would be like, yeah, I don't think so. I'm not interested in any. You got any books
written by 30 or 40 year olds? I'll read that. It's kind of funny. So let me ask you before
we get into this, you started writing books when you were how old?
11. Okay. So you're a seasoned author at this point. What was it in your life?
at age 11 that made you think you wanted to write books.
I mean, this is, it's not typical.
What was it that lets you at age 11 to want to write books?
What, you know, what kind of parents do you have that this is even possible?
Well, you hit the nail on the head, Eric.
It's only possible because of my, because of two people, Mike and Lisa Schmidt.
And no, they're not listening to this interview right now,
although I'm sure they'll listen to it later.
But my parents are extremely impressive people.
I mean, my dad, Mike, lived the American dream.
He was raised by an immigrant from Austria who came to Austria when she was four years old,
through Ellis Island, lived in Buffalo, New York, married to my grandfather, John.
They lived in poverty.
My father grew up low income.
He had a lot of different stories.
shared with me that I've got out of him over the years, even anecdotes like when he was in middle
school, the wealthy girl sitting next to him in the auditorium made a point to say, I don't want to sit
next to Mike Schmidt. He stinks because his family didn't use deodorant. They didn't, they didn't
buy it. They didn't think to use it. Little anecdotes like that. My dad went from that to a self-made
businessman, having a number of different business ventures, real estate, odor style.
up a company on Amazon where he sells ozone generators, air purifiers, just an amazing business
mind.
And he's built up a nice life for his family through living the American dream.
And my mother was a public school teacher for 10 years and then homeschooled my siblings and I.
So, and she was always giving me books.
Okay, I got to correct you.
From the time I respect you so much.
Homchooled my siblings and me.
So ladies and gentlemen, I just want you to see that Solomon Schmidt is human.
It's possible that he makes mistakes, even though on every other level, you know, A++,
but I'm so glad we caught him in a small mistake.
Solomon, thank you for appearing human for a second.
It's very important to establish your bona fides as a human being.
So when you say that your parents homeschooled, you like, I was on the air just before you came on with Chris DeGal,
who's with the Herzog Foundation, and I was pushing homeschoolers in your exhibit A, because everywhere I go around the country, I meet young people like you that are just uncommonly impressive.
And it's always the same story. I was homeschooled. It's an amazing thing. We don't know what young people are capable of because we haven't lived in a world where there's been a lot of homeschooling. When you read about, you know, people like John Quincy Adams and others, in, in previous,
times in our history, young people achieved astonishing things. And I think because of homeschooling,
we're seeing that again. So it's good to hear you mention that because it gives some context
that if you've got a bright young person and you're homeschooling them, who knows what will happen.
They might start writing books at age 11. So I didn't mean to cut you off for such a long
period of time. But I always want to get in the plug that people have no idea what is possible.
and homeschooling really just opens the door. So you might have been stifled for a long time
in public school and you wouldn't bloom until much later. But you were given the opportunity
by your wonderful parents. So, but what was it that precipitated at age 11 wanting to write a
book? Yeah, and I agree with what you said, Eric, just briefly. I'm sick of the marginalization
of homeschoolers and I'm not I'm not pointing fingers. I'm not scolding.
anyone in particular, but I've gone all over the country meeting thousands of homeschool families.
They are some of the most hardworking, kind, diligent, loyal, compassionate, faithful people
that you can meet. So it's exciting to see homeschooling being given the do that the parents
who work darn hard deserve to have. So I started writing my first book, U.S. History Bites,
which is an overview of 30 major events of American history from Columbus to modern day.
I was having a conversation with my dad by his workbench, and I was looking, trying to figure out
what to do with my free time. I had designed these board games. I was working on films that my
siblings and I had made. And my dad said, well, what are you most passionate about Solomon?
And I said, U.S. history. He said, well, what if you wrote a book for kids your age about U.S. history?
and I looked into the format I was thinking of, and it really hadn't been done.
And so I sat down and wrote from memory because I knew the stories after reading encyclopedias and biographies and immersing my head in the story of the American Revolution, Ronald Reagan, et cetera.
I wrote down the stories I remembered, fact-checked them with various sources, and put out this first book, and then continued the series from there.
I went on to U.S. presidential history bites after the first one.
And a lot of them.
Sorry, going to a hard break.
We'll be right back, folks.
I'm talking to Solomon Schmidt.
Welcome back, folks, talking to Solomon Schmidt, who claims to be 21.
I'm not buying it.
Solomon, so you, at age 11, encouraged by your father, start writing these books you say for kids your own age about U.S. history.
And you kind of just kept going.
I did.
And again, you go back to the theme of exceptional parents.
You mentioned John Quincy Adams.
Well, he had perhaps the most remarkable.
remarkable woman in American history, Abigail Adams, are certainly one of them. And my mother's
comparable to her. My mom came up with the name History Bytes and was a public school teacher
for second grade kids. So I had the perfect people looking at the manuscript early on. And this is
not to pat myself in the back when I say this here, but I have met hundreds of young people
all around the country who have used the History Bytes books and they love them.
I have met a kid who slept with my book on military history underneath his pillow at night.
I've talked to parents who say that they have to go into the kid's bedroom at night,
and they're holding the flashlight up underneath the blanket,
reading the history book past bedtime.
And that's exciting to me, not just because they're my books,
but because that proves it's not history that's boring.
It's the way it's presented.
And that's exciting because imagine if you can get young kids excited
about whether it's watching a YouTube video about, which I'm fine with, but preferably reading a book
or a chapter about George Washington or David Livingston, one of the successors to your man,
Wilberforce. Imagine if you can get a whole lot of kids reading those books and becoming excited
about them and filling their minds with heroes like George Washington. And I mean,
it's so it's very gratifying. It's very exciting. And it's, it has,
Happened through a lot of, you know, history bites happened through a lot of kind people, as did the Dershowitz book.
And every project I've done has, you mentioned Walter Hooper earlier in the interview.
Walt, there's a line at the end of the Harry Potter movies, which I know Harry Potter's controversial.
I'm working on a biography of J.K. Rowling right now.
So Harry Potter is everything I eat, breathe, drink, sleep.
And there's a line at the end of the Harry Potter movies where Harry takes his son aside as he's about to go off to Hogwarts.
and the son is all concerned about being sorted into Slitheran House,
which is known for producing cunning and ambitious wizards.
And Harry says, Albus Severus Potter,
you were named after one of the former headmasters of Hogwarts, Severus Snape.
And he was probably the bravest man I ever knew.
And Walter was probably the kindest man I ever knew.
And when you see the way he reacted to some of the controversies he had to deal with,
turning the other cheek, showing love in the midst of persecution.
I mean, he once told me there was this woman who made all these outrageous claims about him,
about shoddy scholarship and stuff that's totally bonkers.
If you look into it, you can see it's so easily discreditable.
And I said to Walter, you know, Mr. Hooper, why don't you call her out as a liar?
This was his response, 87-year-old Walter Hooper.
He said, my mother used to tell me that if you don't have anything,
nice to say. He don't say anything at all. And he really meant it. Like, wow, what a clear example of
blessing when persecuted, the faith of a child. So anyway, that's a plug for Walter. I don't know if he
can hear us, but I miss it. Well, it's amazing. I mean, there's so much I want to ask you,
but I have to ask you, what in the world possessed you to say, I need to write a biography about
Alan Dershowitz. I've interviewed him on the program. I think generally well of him. I think he
idiotically said, you know, like six months ago that he would be voting for Joe Biden or whatever.
You know, like he's wrong on a lot of stuff, but he's right on a lot of stuff. And he's fascinating.
And he's a principled man. And so I admire him. But the real question is, of all the people about
whom you could have written, what was it that made you say the world needs a biography of Alan Dershowitz?
Are there other biographies about him?
No, although I found out a few years into the, a couple years into the process,
I was driving with Alan on Martha's Vineyard, the elite abode that he often talks about
being shunned on, which he is.
And we were driving together, and I said, Alan, I have a question I've been wanting to run by
you for a while.
I said, why didn't anyone else write a biography of you?
And he said, someone else started to back in 2018, someone, someone,
here on the vineyard, but they stopped when I went on the floor of the Senate to represent Donald
Trump. That was it. It was the bridge too far. And not to be smug, but that person's lost my gain.
Alan Dershowitz, I first wanted to interview him on my History Byte's YouTube channel.
I had heard that he was an expert in constitutional law. I do a lot related to American history,
so I thought it would be fascinating to get this Harvard professor on to talk about the Constitution.
And the more I learn about his life, the more I was intrigued by all of the legal cases and people he's impacted.
And then when I found out there hadn't been a biography.
I thought it would be an interesting change of pace from the History Bites series.
I did eight titles in that series.
And my last one was called Great Adventures History Bites in which I wrote about Livingston, Ferdinand Magellan, Thor Heyerdahl, Edmund Hillary.
and wanted a change of pace, began researching his life, started reaching out to people who were alive who knew him, doing interviews, sending them questions via email, reading all of his books as much as I could read about him.
And then I came across a man named Harvey Silverglade, who was a close friend of Dershowitz's for about 60 years.
And as I was interviewing Harvey, I broached the question of getting Dershowitz's involvement. And so he helped put me in touch with Dershowitz.
I interviewed him on my YouTube channel, and then at the end of our interview, I told him about the biography I had started working on and said, you know, I want to write your biography professor.
And he said, I'd be honored and privileged if you would do it. And I'd give you access to all my archives at Brooklyn College.
So I'm down in New York. Let's set up a meeting. And I came down to his place in Manhattan, went up the elevator, and there he was. He's a smaller man.
I mean, there he was, the legend.
And I walked in, and one of the first questions he says is, okay, now tell me, what publisher is going to take my authorized biography from an 18-year-old?
And he wasn't asking it in a snide way, but I think he was just testing me to see if I had an answer ready.
So after that meeting, we parted ways, and he said, hey, let's, you know, I'll be involved, do interviews, and let's go from here.
But basically, Eric, as I kept learning about him, you just get more and more fascinated by him.
In addition to 300 legal cases like Klaus von Bulow, Jim Baker, Leona Helmsley, Mike Tyson, Jeffrey Epstein, Donald Trump.
In addition, all the legal cases, he was a professor at Harvard for 50 years, taught Ted Cruz, Jamie Reskin, Mike Pompeo.
It goes on and on. I interviewed all three of those folks for the book.
Well, we're going to go into another break.
Folks, we'll be right back having fun talking to Solomon Schmidt. Don't go away.
Folks, welcome back. I'm having the fun of speaking with Solomon Schmidt, who claims to be 21 years old. A lot of people claim that, and they're usually 40.
So, Solomon, you have a YouTube channel called History Bites, which is very clever. What do you have on that? How many videos are on there?
There's about 100 and there's over 150 videos.
and interviews. A lot of the videos are me telling the story of a person or event that I highlight
in my History Bytes books, so the U.S. President's major wars, famous people from world history.
But I also have interviews on there with Alan Dershowitz, Jaka Willink, the Navy SEAL, Holocaust survivors,
World War II veterans, and I was able to interview Dr. Jane Goodall and Mike Tyson as well.
so you can see those interviews on the channel.
Hopefully not together.
Not together.
No.
Although they're both highly intelligent people.
And Mike Tyson is an intellectual person, which is fascinating.
Oh, I know that.
I know that.
I have never interviewed him.
I would love to interview him, and I assume I will at some point.
But, yeah, I know he's absolutely fascinating.
So it's just History Bites YouTube channel.
Yes.
History Bites with Solomon.
and I also am going through a series of videos based on my book, Great Adventures, History Bites.
I've traveled to Tanzania, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, Australia, New Zealand, Nepal to film videos for the channel.
And hopefully have some more exciting journeys that are coming up.
And I'll have videos telling stories of great expeditions and heroes who went to the South Pole and climbed Mount Everest.
and cross the deserts of Africa to end the East African slave trade,
which I'm sure you're well versed in David Livingston and other folks.
So history is endlessly fascinating.
I just have to interrupt and say, you know, you've accomplished so much at this point.
Have you thought about retirement?
Sometimes I would like a little breathing space to read more of Eric Metaxus's books.
And I mean that I mean that totally.
seriously. You know, it's interesting. Jane Goodall, who's going to be 91 in April,
she's an inspiration. There's a woman who has every reason, every excuse in the world to sit on the
beach and just spend the rest, whatever year she has left, pleasing herself. And she goes out there,
raising money for her foundations, doing boots on the groundwork, doing activism, doing interviews
hirelessly. She's going to be 91. So there's some inspiration for
for all of us.
No, it's
amazing. And what are you working on
right now?
Working on the first
complete biography of
J.K. Rowling. And I always
said that. I'm sorry. You did say that.
Oh, that's okay. I always say Rowling, but it is
rolling. And it's called a pen to
change the world. It's coming out
through our mutual publisher, Skyhorse
publishing. And it, boy,
it's been just a fascinating
ride. Oh, my goodness.
This single mom living on welfare, living in a dumpy apartment by night and by day,
pushing her daughter through the streets of Edinburgh in a stroller with the snow beating against her face,
coming into a cafe, trying to get the corner table so she doesn't bug people and stay too long to annoy the staff
and writing these notes about wizards and witches and the Philosopher Stone and Harry's Adventures at Hogwarts.
and then it becomes the best-selling book series in the history of the world in a quarter of a century, 600 million copies.
It's extraordinary. Has there ever been anyone quite like J.K. Rowling?
And she's been so brave against the transgender lunacy. We're out of time. But Solomon Schmidt, I'm so glad we began our conversation today.
A joy to have met you in Washington, D.C. under such happy circumstances. Give my best to your, to your
dad who may have the privilege of meeting and we'll have you back soon. God bless you, young man.
God bless you too, Eric. Thanks for all your work. This was fun.
