The Majority Report with Sam Seder - 3614 - BONDI FIRED; Trump's Deranged Iran Speech; The Downfall of Nation States w/ Rana Dasgupta
Episode Date: April 2, 2026It's an Emmajority Report Thursday on The Majority Report On today's program: Trump delivers a speech on the war in Iran where he still cannot clearly explain his goals and objectives. Oil price...s surged past $113 a barrel following his uninspiring speech. At an Easter lunch event at the White House, Donal Trump says the federal government cannot handle daycare, Medicare or Medicaid because "we have wars to fight". Author and essayist, Rana Dasgupta joins Emma for a discussion about his forthcoming book After Nations: The Making and Unmaking of a World Order. Fox News reports that Pam Bondi has been fired from her role as Attorney General. In the Fun Half: Brandon Sutton and Matt Binder join Emma. The Supreme Court hears the oral arguments for the Birthright Citizenship case. Neil Gorsuch pressed the U.S. Solicitor General on whether Native Americans count as Americans under his interpretation of birthright citizenship; the response: "I'd have to think about it." Adam Sosnick fails miserably in a debate with Dave Smith which leads to Patrick Bet-David dressing Sosnick down live on their podcast in a fashion that has to be heard to believed. all that and more Preorder Molly Crabapple's book: Here Where We Live is Our Country. To connect and organize with your local ICE rapid response team visit ICERRT.com The Congress switchboard number is (202) 224-3121. You can use this number to connect with either the U.S. Senate or the House of Representatives. Follow us on TikTok here: https://www.tiktok.com/@majorityreportfm Check us out on Twitch here: https://www.twitch.tv/themajorityreport Find our Rumble stream here: https://rumble.com/user/majorityreport Check out our alt YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/majorityreportlive Gift a Majority Report subscription here: https://fans.fm/majority/gift Subscribe to the AMQuickie newsletter here: https://am-quickie.ghost.io/ Join the Majority Report Discord! https://majoritydiscord.com/ Get all your MR merch at our store: https://shop.majorityreportradio.com/ Get the free Majority Report App!: https://majority.fm/app Go to https://JustCoffee.coop and use coupon code majority to get 10% off your purchase Check out today's sponsors: WILD GRAIN: Get $30 off your first box + free Croissants in every box. Go to Wildgrain.com/MAJORITY to start your subscription.. SUNSET LAKE: Use coupon code "Left Is Best" (all one word) for 20% off of your entire order at SunsetLakeCBD.com Follow the Majority Report crew on Twitter: @SamSeder @EmmaVigeland @MattLech On Instagram: @MrBryanVokey Check out Matt's show, Left Reckoning, on YouTube, and subscribe on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/leftreckoning Check out Matt Binder's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/mattbinder Subscribe to Brandon's show The Discourse on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/ExpandTheDiscourse Check out Ava Raiza's music here! https://avaraiza.bandcamp.com
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You are listening to a free version of the Majority Report.
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The Majority Report with Sam Cedar.
It is Thursday.
April 2nd, 2026.
My name is Emma Bigeland in for Sam Cedar, and this is the five-time award-winning majority report.
We are broadcasting live steps from the industrially ravaged Gowanus Canal in the heartland of America, downtown Brooklyn, USA.
On the program today, Rana Das Gupta, author of After Nations, The Making and Unmaking of a World Order.
Also on the program, oil prices surge after Trump's address to the nation confirmed,
that the war in Iran will continue,
but also that we've achieved victory
and also that it's not a war,
because that would be illegal.
Although he hasn't had no accountability for anything,
so it just gets more and more unhinged.
He's threatening to stop all Ukraine aid
unless European countries
help him join in on the war in Iran,
help him open the Strait of Hormuz.
Cherish the Strait of Hormuz.
U.S. Israeli strikes hit a medical research center in Tehran.
Iran ups its missile attacks on Israel,
and the death toll in Lebanon rises to at least 1,300.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard begins a recruitment drive
to get volunteers to defend the country from a U.S. invasion.
Mike Johnson may have caved, signaling the House will support the Senate plan to fund DHS but not ICE or border patrol.
Supreme Court oral arguments to end birthright citizenship did not go so well for Trump and Republicans.
Trump sat in the audience, apparently, to make direct eye contact, I guess, with the Supreme Court justices.
they still express skepticism.
And Pam Bondi was his date for these arguments.
You know, you put on a brave face when you have reports that say a breakup could be coming.
Apparently, he wants to fire her and replace her with EPA head, Lee Zeldon.
Lateral move?
Yeah.
Democrat in name only, Governor Jared Polis appears to have overturned the
sentence of election
denier Tina Peters at Trump's
behest in Colorado.
Libertarians, everybody.
Isn't he the abundance guy?
Yeah, but he's literally a libertarian.
But so are they.
So are they.
They don't identify that way.
Or at least Ezra.
Derek. A liberal.
I mean, but like liberals and libertarians,
how much are we
distinguishing?
That's a conversation for another day.
The death of Neural Amin Shah Alam, the nearly blind refugee that Border Patrol agents abandoned at a closed donut shop in the cold has been ruled a homicide.
Coral Springs Vice Mayor Nancy Metair Bowen, a progressive voice in Florida, was found dead in her home after a suspected killing by her husband.
And lastly, Bernie Sanders endorses Claire Valdez in New York, in New York 7th.
district joining zora momdani's endorsement in that key race all this and more on today's majority
report welcome to the show everybody it's an em majority report Thursday hello matt hello brian
hello audience let's get right into it we pre-recorded this interview with rana das gupta
just a few hours ago and i'm really excited for everybody to listen to it um
fascinating book, fascinating book and really relevant to current events.
Last night, Trump addressed the nation trying to calm the markets ahead of the three-day weekend,
where it appears like a ground invasion of Iran is imminent.
Let's pull up two here.
we can just give you a preview of how this went.
This is a live view of oil prices.
Well, I mean live in like in the middle of his speech.
So this is as, oh, this is the wrong one.
Oh, no, okay, great.
No, no, no.
Yeah, not live right now.
This is as Trump was speaking.
It surged to, this is now above 100.
$12 a barrel.
It was a, I believe, a $13, $10 or $13 increase.
Just from his speech alone.
So it didn't go so well.
Because that's literally all he seems to respond to.
And he's, he wants to do what he wants to do because he wants to look like the tough guy,
but he doesn't want the markets to react negatively.
The markets have been operating outside of logic, seemingly.
on this front and taking him at his word for weeks within this five weeks of war. But that is changing now
because he's consistently lying, lying to the Iranian negotiators, lying in public to try to do what
he wants to do with this criminal war in Iran without the consequences that he cares about.
Yeah. I think the taco stuff is looking like it was maybe a miscalculation.
Yes. And this speech was like,
hey, the war is over, but it's not a war, and it will be over when we do this operation that I'm previewing.
He talked a lot about bombing them.
There was, in the introduction to the speech, bragging about the Venezuela operation as quick, lethal, violent, and respected.
So.
It got rave reviews.
Yeah, right, right.
Did you check the rotten tomatoes score on our kidnapping of Maduro?
I, like, calling something respected doesn't make it so.
Perhaps they view it as a success within their own kind of limited psychopathic worldview.
But as we've said, Iran is not Venezuela.
Iran is significantly larger.
Iran has a long history of resisting U.S. and Western imperialism.
and as does the Iranian government.
They lived through the bombing campaign last summer from the Israelis
and with the approval of the United States, for example.
He also blamed in his speech, Iran for October 7th,
says that Iran wants to annihilate Israel,
the most standard Zionist talking points possible.
He said that there would be no Israel in this speech,
if he did not get out of the JCPOA
that Obama negotiated, which is just like
he's a ventriloquist dummy for Netanyahu here.
The JCPOA was a complete success,
and our intelligence and the assessments of this
from third parties,
that fact is,
it's a fact.
But we have warmongers and Zionists
that want to obscure that.
So when Trump gone to office after the 2016 election, he ripped it up.
And now we've been escalating with Iran ever since.
And then apparently Trump is still fascinated with this idea of going into Iran and taking
their uranium, which would involve building a runway, sending in extremely expensive
special equipment and would be really risky for U.S.
troops because the stockpiles of uranium are in mountains in many ways.
Some parts of the stockpile are currently buried under rubble due to U.S. bombing, so we would
have to excavate in that area.
And it's also material that is protected with layers of concrete and other protective
coverings that they would have to break through, then get to the bottom of these silos,
safely take the nuclear material out and fly it out, requiring this runway to put the cargo onto the special planes,
all while having U.S. troops doing this mission, this mission impossible thing, and putting them in harm's way in a country that is now trying to get volunteer forces to help defend their homeland.
What a shock. Carpet bombing a country, bombing schools, medical facilities, universities
has engendered some sort of nationalism and pride in defending the homeland. Who could have seen it coming?
It's almost like bombing them wasn't going to make them more likely to be pro-Israel defenders and people that believe in Western capitalism.
But then this morning, Trump tells Reuters that he doesn't really care about the uranium anymore because it's so far underground because maybe people got to him and said, this is insane.
So, I mean, very clearly they were like, he was sold on a Venezuela-style-Mish, and I thought it'd be, well, you did it once, do it again.
Going to get that uranium, which they haven't really been tracked very closely.
there's a story like a couple weeks ago that they barely like kind of forgot about it.
But now it's like, oh, this would take weeks.
This would take like thousands of people on the ground within Iran.
They would just be sitting ducks.
So, you know, he could go for it.
So I still don't know which way if I had to bet on one of the illegal betting services.
But it would be like a huge problem if they try it.
The bet that we've been having on the show is that it's going to be over the long weekend,
Good Friday. Tomorrow it's closed, the markets.
And it's going to be some sort of Christian nationalist Easter theme.
Yeah, my bet is Operation Resurrection.
Ooh, okay. All right.
If they go for the uranium, perhaps there's an Easter egg hunt involved.
But I would say that that doesn't involve enough implied crusades stuff for Pete Hegseth and the bloodthirsty Christian nationalists that populate this administration.
Here is part of this address from Trump in which he is bragging about being an absolute savage, speaking about the war crimes that he wants to continue to inflict upon the Iranian people.
What was coming? They've never imagined it. Remember, because of our drill baby drill program, America has plenty of gas. We have so much gas.
This is not. Wrong part. Sorry, part two. Part two. Yes, yes. But that part was funny when he said.
We have plenty of gas.
So much gas.
That's, he's not lying.
You, you have plenty of gas, sir.
We've heard about all of this before.
Ask Susie about it.
Or anyone within a one mile radius.
Tives are fully achieved.
Thanks to the progress we've made, I can say tonight that we are on track to complete all of America's military objectives shortly, very shortly.
We're going to hit them extremely hard over the next.
next two to three weeks, we're going to bring them back to the Stone Ages where they belong.
In the meantime, discussions are ongoing.
Regime change was not our goal.
We never said regime change, but regime change has occurred because of all of their original leaders' death.
They're all dead.
The new group is less radical and much more reasonable.
Wait, okay.
All right.
I mean, I'm sorry.
Just to pause for a second.
What were our objectives?
I just want to list them out because they didn't really say.
Regime change was a purported objective.
And then he says that we achieved it already.
Oh, you know, by killing the elderly father and having his son be in charge.
Technically, there have been changes within the regime.
But does that constitute regime change?
No.
The Iranian people have not risen up against the government, which was one of the
other objectives that he said they wanted to achieve. The nuclear program has not been destroyed,
even though they said last summer it had been. Then they claim that was the objective this time
to destroy it. And the Strait of Hormuz has been perhaps indelibly pushed in the direction of Iran's
sovereignty and leverage, where it's quite possible that going forward they exert essentially taxes
on ships that go through there,
which is an objectively worse outcome for Western interests.
So also the Stone Age is plural.
Come on, buddy.
We're talking to them and negotiating them,
but we want to destroy them so that they have no modern society.
That's the two things that he said back to back.
On key targets, if there is no deal,
we are going to hit each and every one of their,
electric generating plants very hard and probably simultaneously. We have not hit their oil,
even though that's the easiest target of all, because it would not give them even a small chance
of survival. Okay, just pause really quickly. The Israelis did hit the oil fields. We spoke about that
within the first week or so of this illegal criminal war. It was such a devastating attack that
it is likely to remain in the soil and waterways in Iran for decades to come, causing cancer
and other health issues.
It's a war crime to attack civilian infrastructure.
Well, he's bragging about, I mean, talking about going after their domestic energy capacity.
I mean, to hear people talk about our allies and stuff like this, like these are sort of things
where if Putin did it, we would rightly call it a war crime.
And instead, we like, act like, well, I guess, well, actually our president is just bragging about it.
So it's not like we're even having a pretense about it anymore.
I mean, but this is where our complicity in Israel's genocide has led us to this moment.
It's ripped the fabric of international relations apart.
No consequences for genocide means why would Trump anticipate any consequences for bombing civilian infrastructure like this?
It's the unraveling of any kind of world order.
But we could hit it and it would be gone and there's not a thing they could do about it.
They have no anti-aircraft equipment.
Rapists speak.
Their radar is 100% annihilated.
We are unstoppable as a military force.
We open the state of Hormuz, though.
Yeah, then do it.
Then stop begging Europe.
Clear sites that we obliterated with the B-2 bombers have been hit so hard
that it would take months to get near the nuclear dust.
And we have it under intense satellite surveillance and control.
If we see them make a move, even a move for it, we'll hit them with missiles very hard again.
We have all the cards.
They have none.
It's very important that we keep this conflict in perspective.
American involvement in World War I lasted one year, seven months, and five days.
World War II lasted for three years, eight months, and 25 days.
The Korean War lasted for three years, three years.
one month and two days. The Vietnam War lasted for 19 years, five months and 29 days.
Iraq went on for eight years, eight months, and 28 days. We are in this military operation,
so powerful, so brilliant against one of the most powerful countries for 32 days.
Okay, so I just want to, first of all, is there a word limit on this speech that he had to hit?
They're all writing chat GPT, their speeches in chat GPT,
list the length of other wars to make our not war look so much less time consuming than the other.
And Matt, the reason I want to play that part is because you've been on this,
the whole like no forever wars thing, enough.
No wars of choice.
No offensive wars.
Because when you hear Democrats say no forever wars, what does that mean?
It's literally what he just listed there.
Hey, these other wars were really long and costly.
This one that will completely, that involves a litany of war crimes and will be devastating to the Iranian people and probably also to the ground troops and to the world at large.
That's okay.
I guess if it's a short military conflict.
It aids what we've spoken about, how the executive branch has entirely taken over the wartime authority that Congress is supposed to have when you see.
say that limited wars in their scope are allowable because it just feeds into the hands of
the more of more unilateral action by the executive.
It's a coupon for the military industrial complex that it will cash every time you say
that because what the real problem is is that we overprepared for war in this country and
we should be addressing other things like daycare for instance.
And instead for our entire lives, we've just been giving more and more money to the
Pentagon and they need to burn it somehow.
And every once in a while, yeah, it's nice to fire off some missiles at a country and get
everybody's, you know, defense contractor stocks up.
But we shouldn't be doing any of these wars at all.
We way overuse our military and look where it's got us.
And you mentioned daycare.
You mentioned childcare.
To top it off, this was before the address last night.
Trump here is speaking extemporaneously and he says more of what's his true thoughts are.
And as he degrades, it's becoming, it's interesting to see him just say exactly what his
motivations are explicitly.
As he's declining and as there are no consequences for his actions, this is what narcissists do
as well.
Like, they like to give you little breadcrumbs as to what they're thinking is.
but Trump's becoming even more and more
undisciplined about this.
And every Democratic candidate
should have this clip
in one of their ads in the general election.
Because the United States can't take care of daycare.
That has to be up to a state.
We can't take care of daycare.
We're a big country.
We have 50 states.
We have all these other people.
We're fighting wars.
We can't take care of daycare.
You've got to let a state take care of daycare
and they should pay for it, too.
they should pay.
They have to raise their taxes,
but they should pay for it.
And we could lower our taxes to them to make up.
But it's not possible for us to take care of daycare.
Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things.
They can do it on a state basis.
You can't do it on a federal.
We have to take care of one thing, military protection.
So Trump ran on something called America First and no new wars.
We all knew he was lying if you were paying any attention.
Dave Smith didn't.
If I don't know.
I would love to see him react to this clip.
He's literally saying he's giving it away.
We cannot pay for daycare.
We cannot pay for childcare.
We cannot pay for health care.
They're trying to further gut health care to pay for the war in Iran even more than they
did previously with the one big ugly ass bill where they kick tens of millions of Americans
off their health care, raise preempts.
premiums doubled them to pay for tax cuts for the rich.
Now let's double dip back into your health care and cut more from that to pay for this war in Iran,
which is America first apparently.
This is one of the greatest, Trump is a scam artist, and he scammed the American public for a decade at this point.
But this might be his greatest, his greatest scam.
It's a Capone-like mafia hit, which is the entire world, because the,
Well, you didn't play this.
Maybe we'll put in the fun half.
But where he's like, we don't really get any oil from the sugar humus,
so we don't really care.
If you want it open so bad, because we got it closed, you should go fix it.
But in the meantime, you can buy from us.
That's like Al Capone going to a rival moonshine dealer,
smashing up all their bottles and going to their clients and saying,
hey, you need some liquor for your speakeasy.
That's just what's happening.
He is a gangster on the world level.
Yep.
and we've gotten to this point not in a vacuum,
not by the actions of one individual or one individual political party.
The tactics of our colonial outposts in the Middle East
have now been fully and unapologetically adopted by
the state that gave birth to its client state.
we're doing more crimes and bragging about it and acting as if that's strength and showing how
completely divorced public will is right now from the actions of our supposed democracy.
I think, you know, when we talk about how it's a myth that people don't vote on foreign policy,
this is going to be an example of that because people do want to see a government.
that is responsive to mass public sentiment.
And whether it was Biden committing genocide, in spite of how his party was reacting or even
running for re-election in spite of what people wanted.
And whether it's Trump here, doesn't matter that at the outset of this war in Iran, it's
the most unpopular war in the modern era, we're still going to pursue this because it's
it's largely irrelevant at this point what people think.
We are a country that has completely been taken over
by the explosion of dark money since Citizens United in 2010,
insulating our government from public opinion and public will.
And the consequences of that are deadly.
It's going to hurt that we've geared so much of our economy towards just killing,
as the Palantir guy said, like, we're the best at killing.
That's not much to offer the world.
We used to offer them much more.
Now we still lead culturally.
There's a lot of media and entertainment that we do in this country and still do make some good things.
But also, I don't know that our tech exports are really that much to hang our hat on for the future either.
It'd be nice to be making the future electric vehicle or being really good at making high-speed trains.
Or like, you know, it's depressing that all we do is.
can all week as Trump said is fight wars
in a moment you will hear my conversation with
Rana Das Gupta but first a word from one of our sponsors
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Quick break.
and when we come back, you will hear my conversation with Rana Dasgupta.
We are back and we are joined now by Rana Dasgupta, essayist and author, including of his new book, After Nations, The Making and Unmaking of a World Order.
Rana, thank you so much for coming on the show today.
Thank you for having me.
This book is fascinating.
I'd really encourage people to pre-order it.
I know it's coming out in a few weeks.
It's so relevant to this current moment because, as, as, you know, you're going to.
we're living through this kind of rise of nationalism, particularly right-wing nationalism
within like a European and American context, you could also describe this period as the death
of liberalism to a degree.
But your book takes the time to kind of denaturalize, if you will, the concept of the nation-state,
meaning just unpacking how the nation-state became this dominant form of political organization,
really in the 20th century.
So let's begin there, maybe 1900,
comparing how many nation states existed then
to where we are right now.
Yeah, I think that is a good place to start
because, you know, our news media, our very short term,
it's not just in news media,
it's also indeed our education even.
The last few decades weigh very, very large
in our conversations.
And so we don't often reflect much on how recent are all the structures that we live with today.
So as you say, there were in 1900, somewhere around 50 sovereign states, it's difficult to count them exactly because there are some that are ambiguous, but somewhere in that region.
Compared to 193 seats in the UN today plus a few other territories. So the number of
sovereign territories is pretty much quadrupled in that time.
Of course, there were two big waves of it.
One was the end of the European empires,
which produced about 100 new countries.
And then there was another big wave after 1989
when a lot of states were made independent
from the Soviet Union.
And so we have, and that's, of course,
30 years ago. So the situation of having a globe, which is totally covered by a mosaic of sovereign
nation states, is a very recent phenomenon. And my book started, I mean, I started thinking about
it when Trump was elected for the first time when Brexit had just happened, and when there
was a lot of shock in various countries as to about changes, big changes that seemed to be happening
within states and between them.
And so I thought I'd, you know, go a bit further back in history and try and work out how
shocking, in fact, this was.
So you go back to even in the beginning of your book, France in particular, having the nation state
having some of its roots in religion as well, the theocratic origin of the nation state.
Let's go to your first chapter and trace it back even to them.
Yeah, I wanted to start with religion because one of the shocks that we were all having at the time that I started writing of this was, and this includes lots of other countries.
I was spending a lot of time in India where Prime Minister Modi was elected in 2014 and was
pursuing a clearly non-secular idea of a state that had been famously secular for since independence.
France was panicked by the rise of the far right, which at that point was proposing a sort of
union of defenders of Christendom, seeing Putin, Trump and Marine Le Pen as that
the three sort of vanguard members of that union.
I felt as I started looking at this history of religion
that it wasn't actually surprising that as liberalism began to crumble
or lots of people felt that it was a hoax
or it was a conspiracy against of elites,
that religion would rush in to that vacuum
because if you look back at the long history of the nation state,
theology has always played a very important part.
So you talk about France, the sort of opening gambit of the book is the moment when the
King of France in the 13th century bought the crown of thorns that were supposed to have
sat on Christ's head as he was crucified in order to boost his own political and spiritual
authority.
And that crown, he put on his own head, literally,
taking the crown of heaven and putting it on the king of France's head, and thereby giving France
a sort of mystical theological authority akin to the church or anything else. And that has not
disappeared over the centuries. That's my argument. It's not disappeared over the centuries.
It's just been institutionalized into the state. But at its foundations, there are very powerful
theological energies still in the state.
And that's what nationalism is all about to some extent.
And the exclusionary nature of it going back to the kind of theological roots of, say,
excluding Jews and women from this.
Or even to add to that, the idea that France, the crown being put on the lead of the head of state in France's head,
attempting to fuse or perhaps this is later on,
but like the rifts between the Protestants and the Catholics.
It's like, okay, you are a part of this national identity under Christianity,
but there is always still that exclusionary nature in this premise, Jews, women, etc., not a part of it.
Yeah, I mean, we can contrast this with what went before.
So if we think back to the Roman Empire,
so France is just one of a number of countries that come out of tribal conquests
emerging from the collapse of the Roman Empire.
So the Roman emperor, who by that time was a Christian emperor,
proposed himself as a universal emperor,
ruling over countless nationalities and language and ethnic groups
and indeed religions.
The problem of these nascent states
was that they were clearly not universal entities.
They were tribal entities,
but they wanted to have the same kind of authority.
had to work a sort of trick of borrowing God for their own little territory.
And that territory was bounded, and it was in conflict and competition with other similar
territories around. So exclusion was also there at the heart of the identity of the state,
that not everybody can be a member of this state. It's not an empire. It is bound to a certain
religion or a certain ethnic group or whatever it might be. So that's,
That's another thing that's in the sort of foundations of states, that the foreigner is a very
big character in the state, and the internal foreigner, the person who's a suspect citizen,
Jews played that role for a very long time in many European states, risks potentially
enormous danger, because the state can at any point whip up violence and anger towards
those who don't have a legitimate claim on citizenship.
And perhaps we can look at Britain for a second, because I do want to take us to the
modern context, but so much of this history is so rich. Just the idea of, say, like, the joint
stock companies and the rise of like a sort of entity that is somewhat sovereign, but
working for capital interests alongside the nation's interests.
state, working hand in hand, in the modern context, we've now seen kind of the global elite
supersede the nation state, and I do want to get there. But when we look at the origins of this
kind of structure, take us to the British Empire, the East India Company, etc.
Yes, so Britain is the first capitalist superpower. The first country, the first country,
I mean, there really only been two, Britain and the United States.
There were very powerful capitalist states before that, Netherlands, Spain, et cetera.
And they hosted sort of major financial centers, but they never did what Britain did,
which was to supply a currency to the world and to try and lay a net of British law also across the world,
which is essentially the drive behind the big share of it.
But the very interesting part of this is that in the early stages it was not the British government,
but a joint-style corporation, the East India Company, that primarily drove this.
So the East India Company had its own armies and navies, its own ambassadors, and it governed large areas that, say, of India, for instance.
And what's fascinating when you get into that history is that you've really
The East Indy company is essentially the most dynamic forces of the planet.
It is expanding the capitalist system.
It is creating vast and very savage economies of slaves and trade and conquest.
But it is producing profits and value on such a level, capitalist value that can be traded.
But by the 18th century,
the British state is totally mortgaged to the East India Company.
The heart of 25% of all MPs were stockholders in the East Indian Company.
So British policy was essentially kind of bound to company policy.
But even more than that, the country itself, its entire financial system, was underwritten both by East Indian Company profits and East Indian Indian Company share value.
So the country was following behind the corporation rather than the other way around.
And, you know, as I'd explained in the book, this meets a crisis in the 17, in the 1760s and
when basically Parliament, when the company kind of crashes because of things going on in
India.
And the government has a choice whether to bail out the company and risk the country or vice versa.
And it decides to do that, to save the company rather than the state.
And the result, through lots of complex tax innovations, is American independence.
So it's extraordinary that the state would risk its American colony.
rather than allow the company to go bankrupt.
And of course I'm going to draw parallels between that and Silicon Valley today.
I'm so eager to get to those parallels.
I'm trying to kind of follow a sort of timeline to a degree,
but there's so much to chew on.
Perhaps we can then move then to the history that we touched on
at the beginning of our conversation,
which is where we were at the beginning of the 20th century,
with nation states, with fewer than 50 nation states.
But then you have, of course, the two world wars.
You have the fall of the Ottoman Empire.
You have the carving up of the Middle East via Sykes-Picco, the Balfour Declaration,
but the creation of these kind of newer nation states that are right now having their
sovereignty completely disregarded because of Israel's expansion.
and then, of course, the post-World War II order that cemented this reality.
What role did nation states play in both of these two world wars, and where did it set,
and then we can move, I guess, to the back half of the 20th century as nation states kind of
play a role in the expansion of the capitalist system as America takes over the globe as the capitalist empire?
Yeah, this is where we get in.
into the crucial significance of America and the crucial importance of America, not just in building
a powerful state, but in building a world order.
So by 1900, British-Higemany is clearly in decline.
Britain is not the power it once was, and it's faced increasingly by very powerful competitors.
America, which already has greater industrial capacity than Britain at that time, but also
Germany, which is more technologically advanced, and Japan, which is increasingly ambitious,
territorially ambitious in Asia, where Britain, of course, has immense territory itself.
So Britain is in decline, and we enter this period from 1914 to 1945,
where there's 30 years of immense turbulence in the capitalist system and in competing imperial
blocks to essentially replace Britain.
And of course, the Second World War is that sort of final conflagration.
And the Second World War ends with a situation that is so much more extreme than 1815
when Britain takes over from France, because you have Germany and Japan totally destroyed
as economic powers even as simple physical entities.
Most of the rest of Europe is also destroyed.
And so America enters the post-war period with something like 50% of global industrial capacity
and the ability essentially to draw on the back of an envelope the kind of world it wants,
which is exactly what it does.
And the world it wants is a new kind of empire.
It is an empire whose creation will require the dismantling of the European empire,
so the breaking up of the world into a set of sovereign states,
all of which will trade with each other in a global capitalist system,
from which America will draw immense rents and profits,
and to which America will supply various hegemonic services,
keeping the seas open, keeping the free trade system afloat, supplying a stable currency,
and indeed administering the system through various arms-length organizations like the World Bank,
the IMF, even the United Nations.
That system is finally...
NATO is another example, too, increasing Europe's military dependence on America.
Yeah.
the Marshall Plan rebuilding Europe, all that stuff.
That system becomes mature in the 1990s when the Soviet Union disappears from the picture
and with the sort of the Washington consensus and the ability finally of America to dictate the terms on which global trade happens
and to implement a global property regime through the World Trade Organization and all that.
So the nation-stained system in its mature form is very much an American creation.
And America has always played an exceptional position in it, setting international laws that it alone did not have to abide by.
So America was always exceptional in being able to wage any kind of war it wanted,
impose, you know, dictators on foreign countries and all that sort of thing.
But only America could do that sort of thing, and it would be a powerful policeman campaigning
against other powers that tried to break the rules of the international system.
And that is what is disappearing now.
America, like Britain, is losing its hegemonic position, is no longer able to guarantee the supply
of energy, guarantee the supremacy of the dollar, keep the seas open even very topically.
And so that's why we're again entering this period of turbulent competition between other empires that would like to take away from America some of the powers it's had.
Would you describe the promulgation of nation states in the very kind of American framework that places us as Americans as Supreme that we're now seeing a decline?
Would you argue that that was an effort by the United States to sort of maintain the skeleton of a colonial world while giving kind of the appearance of some sort of even-handedness?
Or is that too simple of a way to describe what the vision was?
No, I think the vision.
I mean, it's very interesting when you look at the actual individuals.
who designed this system.
And I look in detail at the Dulles Brothers, for instance.
I mean, many of these people had come out of finance.
They were bankers.
They were very wealthy.
They were directors of companies.
Americans corporate CEOs had a very large, and Wall Street,
had a huge say in the design of what I'll call the American Empire.
And absolutely, there was a nostalgia for Britain.
They wanted to, essentially, to maintain a lot of the dynamics of the British Empire,
to maintain, very importantly, Western superiority in the capitalist system,
whilst not wishing to have any of the ambiguous rights and responsibilities
of actually administering large parts of the world, which was very expensive and was clearly not
possible in the climate following World War II. So I think both in its intention and in its
actuality, yes, this regime continued in a more virtual and more modern technologically
heavy way, many of the principles on which the European empires have been set up.
And we can see this in a very interesting statistic,
described by Branko Milanovic in his work on global inequality, where he describes the fact that essentially until the 19th century, being rich in Africa or Asia was pretty much the same as being rich in the West.
And what happened under the influence of the Ukrainian influence was a massive and very rapid divergence, so that by the beginning of the 20th century, it was better to be lower middle class or even poor in the West.
than rich in much of the rest of the world because of the extraordinary affluence of the society
and power of this society you were part of.
And that line of divergence in wealth between different regions of the world did not stop
in 1945.
Its peak was actually in 1974.
So there is unfortunately a correlation between everything we think of as best in the West,
meaning democracy and equality and all those kinds of things.
those things hit their peak precisely at the moment when the West was most, when the world was most unequal and the West was, the gap in wealth was the greatest between the West and everywhere else.
So yes, I think the system of the Americans set up after 1974, after 1945, perpetuated and intensified actually in a more effective way what the European empires had done.
it's so just i mean i chilling
prescient uh important to understand
the limits of
if you're if you're somebody that cares about the world and not just the nation
the limits of democracy when living in true democracy
when you're living in the imperial core under capitalism
you know
we see this very acutely with israel um israel has a
so-called democracy within their, you know, cloistered colony.
But, of course, the people that they rule over and extract from in Palestine have no democracy.
I mean, the U.S. is to the global south as Israel is to Palestine to use an SAT formulation of logic here.
Yeah, I think the moment we're in now is unfortunately very different.
as far as the U.S. is concerned.
I mean, I think the, the, the U.S., the system that we're talking about was built very much on
the supremacy of oil and the supremacy of an industrial system.
There's a particular kind of energy and a particular kind of economic structure to the.
And just to interject for a second, I mean, you mentioned the Dulles Brothers,
of course, oil and the explosion of kind of capitalists out west, this new rush of money,
the bushes. I mean, they were so embedded in the United States' covert operations and in the
post-World War II order of installing the despots that you describe to benefit the oil and gas
conglomerates in the United States. I mean, that is an industry that, of course, you can't tell
this story without. Absolutely. And in fact, I mean,
It's not even a secret.
It is actually America's official role is to supply cheap energy to the world and keep oil flowing into the capitalist system.
And it's at moments of crisis and the Iraq war is one of those when you see what really counts, what is really at stake in the U.S.
Is it the spread of democracy and freedom and all that sort of thing, or is it something else?
So often behind America's wars, and wars, for legal reasons, are always couched in certain terms,
if there's a threat from another party or whatever it might be, or a threat to human rights or threat to democracy.
But wars are usually fought over other things, which are more existential, such as currency and energy.
But the point here is that the offshoring of America's industrial production
and then later on a sort of move to an AI economy
where human labor becomes less and less important to the production of value
completely changes the relationship of America to the rest of the world
and to its own population because amazing,
reason why all the Western countries granted democracy to citizens who've often been fighting
here for it for a century and a half, they conceded it because finally those citizens were
very, very valuable to them as industrial workers.
And granting those people some kind of political voice and making sure that the industrial
system could function without massive breakdowns and strikes and class conflict was very, very
important.
And so those countries suddenly granted something that they had been with.
withholding for a long time and self-consciously built up a working class, free public education
and healthcare and all those things that made the working class feel that they had a stake in
the system and made them feel secure and all that sort of thing. So there's a sort of late 20th century
system where a lot of these things are linked in a virtuous circle of industry and democracy
and the West being much richer than the rest of the world
because it's monopolizing the industrial system.
And none of that really holds today.
So all those things are under pressure.
There's a lot of labor in countries like the U.S.,
which is not really important
and is losing value to other parts of the world
because it's in direct competition with Asia.
And again, the population doesn't have the same strategic significance.
and democracy, I mean, we are looking at a much more oligarchic structure to the U.S. economy.
And democracy is under threat and is even, I would say, being withdrawn in various,
various devious ways.
So with the countries like the United States needing workers a lot less,
with the outsourcing of all of this to other countries with globalization,
we see the rights of folks within the Imperial Court within the United States in this context,
diminishing because as their importance as workers diminishes,
so do their importance, I guess, in terms of buying into this system.
I guess we could turn back to the role of nation states because they served a
purpose for a few decades
for the promulgation
of the U.S. as
the world cop,
the hegemon, etc.
But when did
nation states, or did they ever
become
a threat
to, say,
the capitalist order?
Is there a situation where
nationalism
has
bumped up against
capitalism? Where are we at today?
Well, I see the nation state essentially, to be crude, I see it as the political apparatus of the
capitalist system. And that has lots of implications. The capitalist system is very dynamic.
It's not the same from one decade to the next.
And so if we define the nation state in that way, we should be skeptical about the nation state being a stable unit, too.
It may not be the same in 1975 as in 2050.
And that may especially be the case in terms of things like democracy.
So democracy might be very useful to the sort of partnership of politics and capitalism.
at one point. Democracy might actually be the sort of energizing tool that allows capital and labor to
work together in the best way. But at another point in time, that convergence of interest
might completely have broken down. So I see us as in a moment where the sort of interest of the
capitalist system and therefore of the nation state diverging from the interests of citizens.
And I think Trump is very interesting in this respect because in whatever way his mind works,
he seems to have quite a profound instinct for the particular pressures on the United States
today. And he's almost like one of these guys who comes in and strips down a corporation
and turns it around for greater profit.
Trump is not only stripping down a lot of things domestically,
but stripping down a lot of America's previous historical commitments internationally.
You know, I was just in Peru, where the withdrawal of USAID services
has meant a complete arrest of a lot of the work going on,
to try and convert farmers from cocaine to other crops in an attempt to sort of diminish the power of non-state actors in that country.
So America has, as the hegemonic power, has not only been global policemen or that sort of thing,
it has actually physically held other states together and sustained them because it has had a fundamental commitment to states as states.
They shouldn't collapse.
This is our system, and we need to sort of, if there are states in trouble, we need to give them
expertise or arms or whatever they need.
Trump has sort of pulled out of a lot of those kinds of historic responsibilities.
Both Britain and America, when they were capitalist superpowers, they would charge very
low tariffs on other countries' imports, even if those countries charge high tariffs on.
bears simply because they were the superpower and they had to advertise the virtues of free trade,
even if other people didn't fall in line.
And that was a cost that they would bear as superpowers, just like NATO and all these other things.
So Trump is pulling out a lot of those things, and in a way leading the transition from America
as hegemon to America as a regional empire with the same sort of strategies.
indeed moral status as Russia and China and its other competitors.
So, you know, whether he's a genius or he's a fool, I think he has very, very single-mindedly
decided that no longer is America going to play the role that it has until now.
with all the consequences we can see around us.
Yes, except, I mean, in terms of militarism, I think, you know, that Trump has this,
I believe that he acknowledges, at least on the surface level,
the fact that we are moving towards a multipolarity,
and he will say rhetorically, this is the Don Roe Doctrine,
we're going to focus on domination in the Western Hemisphere.
And yet, what we're seeing in Iran right now, this war, is still very much,
within the framework that you describe.
It's almost immense.
It's accelerating, I would say,
multipolarity because it's been done so stupidly
and barbarically and without planning.
So I'm a little hesitant to assign some intentionality to it.
It's like he has a recognition of the reality
as opposed to Biden, you know, trying to fortify NATO,
turn back the clock.
Trump understands where we are,
but his attempt to reaffirm
American power is backfiring. It's accelerating the dynamic you're talking about.
Yeah. I mean, I'm, there are much better people than me to analyze American military strategy
today and all those sorts of things. But all I would say is that once again,
Trump, like previous American presidents, has to give a sort of legalistic account of his
reasons for declaring a war like this.
But his actual reasons might be quite different, and I don't know what the discussions are
going on around him.
But I suspect that much more than is discussed in the media today, his motives for a lot of
what he's been doing, a lot of what he declared with respect to Greenland, a lot of what he's
done in Venezuela and in Iran, have to do with an attempt to seize a window of opportunity
to improve the U.S.
is competitive situation with China.
I think that the U.S. faces an existential threat from China,
which it does not face from anyone else,
and that existential threat is that China has a plausible currency alternative
to the U.S. dollar,
and China is also using,
energy politics to create coalitions around the world that don't involve the United States.
And it's able to do that partly because it has a near monopoly on rare earth minerals,
or at least on the processing of those minerals.
So Greenland, for instance, I read that very much as an attempt to sort of quickly make up
for this deficiency as vis-a-vis China.
And as you know, as Trump keeps telling us, America is quite self-sufficient in terms of oil,
but China depends massively on cheap oil to keep producing, and most of that oil comes from the Middle East.
So I wonder if there are not intra-imperial competitive motives behind all this.
But as you say, I mean, there is a long-standing American and before that British desire to prevent a powerful state from emerging in the Middle East.
This is a very, very long tradition.
And I think, you know, the creation of the state of Israel is part of that attempt to essentially keep the Middle East chaotic.
and conflicted.
And to some extent, I think Trump and maybe some of his colleagues have brought into their own
fantasies that the Middle East is extremely weak and can't do anything for itself and that wars
like this would be won very easily.
And yes, I agree with you that potentially he is actually creating the opposite effect of what
attended, dramatically enhancing Russia and China's situation in the world vis-a-vis America,
and indeed creating, throwing lots of other countries into their arms because the U.S.
is proving so unreliable and so sort of difficult to deal with, that alliances with Russia
and China are seeing much more attractive to many other states.
Just one or two more questions here, just because I want to return to the East India Company comparison to the tech industry and AI industry completely capturing our government here.
You know, China's competitiveness is also in its state capacity.
It's in its ability to have long-term planning, in its ability to direct resources in a way that the United States no longer can.
because of a investor class that is taking and gobbling up historic amounts of value for themselves, efficiency be damned.
So when you look at the tech industry and you compare it to the East India Company kind of running the show for the empire,
where do you see those parallels and how do you see that as it fits within the context of competition with China?
Well, the East India Company was essentially doing a lot of the British states work for it in maintaining its competitive advantage against France, especially. Other countries, too, but especially France. France had its own similar trading companies, but they were nothing like on the scale of the East India Company. And Britain had a much more developed stock market and debt market. So it was able to fund
the expansion of the company much more efficiently.
And the East Indian Company also plugged into one of the most dynamic industries in the world,
which was India's textile industry.
This had the effect that the British economy,
elites made their money essentially from outside the British Isles.
It was land in the Americas and trade,
in Asia that was basically putting money in the pockets of elites and giving them a greater
and greater share of the British economy every year, not what British people produced.
And so the political apparatus was designed really to protect that company and joint stock
companies in general and elite interests all over the world rather than give British citizens
of voice. In fact, it would have been impossible to give British citizens of voice. Silicon Valley
is performing a similar role for America today. Silicon Valley spends much, much more money than
the U.S. government on scientific research, which is a reversal of 50 years ago when the U.S.
government was by far the biggest fund of scientific research in the world. It is Silicon Valley
that is producing
most of the
not only of the technological
edge that America has, but also
a lot of the dollar inflow since
they account for such a large amount of
stock market value.
And indeed, you know,
pulling rents from
users all over the world
and increasingly accumulating
data about citizens of countries
all over the world. So Silicon
Valius is enormous
asset to American
power, which is the only thing really that can stave of an incredibly effective, as you say,
state-run program of technological development in China. So inevitably, the state must give
concessions to Silicon Valley. Silicon Valley CEOs were all there at Trump's inauguration,
which was an advertisement of a kind of alliance between Washington and Silicon Valley that's now very apparent.
We saw Musk's involvement with the early administration.
It's quite clear that the sort of power of social media, of Tesla, of private space exploration,
of Amazon as a sort of a new style of East India company, which is interesting.
essentially taking rents out of the entire, out of every transaction on the planet almost,
America is disproportionately reliant on these firms.
But the difference between these firms and, let's say, General Motors and AT&T of the previous
era is that they don't necessarily contribute to state power in the same way.
They compete with it in some ways.
So there are lots of, you know, well-meaning U.S. officials who would like to preserve a certain integrity to American democracy,
who can see that Silicon Valley is able to basically hijack American democracy, automate a lot of opinion, produce enormous confusion around what is the truth and what people actually believe.
and Donald Trump has enjoyed that chaos and confusion a lot.
So I think the parallels are really to do with a sort of a disproportionate political power,
which is not of the same sort of the car companies and steel companies
and oil companies even of a different era where antitrust regulation could break them up
and create competition between them.
It's almost in the nature of Silicon Valley to create monopolies,
which are meaningless if they're broken up.
If you break up Google into 12 different companies,
it's not very useful to the users anymore.
Users depend on that monopoly.
It's supposed to be a universal data system.
So those companies, they have a monopolistic power.
They've devoted all their immense political energy
to making sure they are not regulated,
that they maintain a lot of their legal freedoms.
And they have ideas about political organization, about economic organization, and even about the nature of human life.
That is quite different to what the U.S. state has promoted for quite a long time.
And I'm not just talking about the private opinions of many people in Silicon Valley, which, however, I think are quite significant.
Some of them are very radical.
And I don't think it's insignificant that some of these individuals hold views that are massively at odds with what most Americans believe and what the state officially believes.
But I think it's also in the nature of these companies to start becoming geopolitical actors in their own right.
And holding states increasingly to ransom because they can run states.
They run the military.
They run the bureaucracy.
They can produce outcomes of elections.
So clearly they will only have more, be able to extract more and more concessions
from states in the future.
Well, the book is phenomenal after nations,
the making and unmaking of a world order.
There's so much that we didn't even get to touch on.
But I was thrilled to have you on today,
Rana Das Gupta.
will put a link to After Nations down below, wherever people are listening to or watching this
episode. Rana, thanks so much for your time today. I really appreciate it.
Thanks for a great conversation.
We are back. Hope you enjoyed that interview. We now have breaking news. And I would use that
down drop if I had remembered to fix my soundboard. Thank you.
it. Well, maybe we'll let Fox News take it away for us. Pam Bondi is out. What is her next position?
We do not know. Perhaps ambassador to Atlantis. Is there a position? Not the fun one in the Bahamas.
Is there a position at the shield of the Americas opening up?
Vice Ambassador. She'll have to serve under Christine. He's just sending the women there.
I'm going to say the shield of fired broads.
fired mouth fever odds.
Right, right.
Here's Fox News with the breaking, breaking news for us.
I just got off the phone with President Trump.
We have a big scoop.
Pam Bondi will soon leave her job as the Attorney General.
She is going to get a different job within the administration.
It doesn't sound like there is any bad blood between her and President Trump,
but it does seem like they want her to go and do something else.
She will be replaced.
Let's take that again.
It does seem like I don't want you.
She's telling you go do seven else.
Yeah.
Not firing you, but.
Can you make me a sandwich or something?
Ambassador to Boar's head is her next, is her next gig.
It doesn't sound like there is any bad blood between her.
Sure.
But it does seem like they want her to go and do something else.
And in an interim role, she will be replaced by Todd Blanche, who,
is currently her deputy at the Justice Department.
So it doesn't sound like Blanche is being elevated long term to the Attorney General.
There might be somebody else that the president wants to go in there.
But President Trump soon will announce to the entire world that it is the end of Pam Bondi's time as the Attorney General.
He still thinks that she is a great person and that she did a good job.
Does it a breakup?
Because she will still be an important part of the administration.
he tells me.
She's got a lot of dirt on me.
Yeah.
Officer of the United States, that at least for a little while is going to be...
She's going to be...
Like, I like how he's keeping them under his control,
but with the most humiliating possible non-position position.
I'm actually promoting you.
A higher thing than Attorney General, but we don't know what is yet.
If she had any dignity and wasn't involved in a literal criminal conspiracy
to cover up the Epstein fight...
in
contravention of the law,
then she would, I would imagine,
just be like,
F this, I'm going to private practice.
But I was trying to remember,
you know, Trump has fired a few
attorney generals at this point.
The first was Jeff Sessions.
Do you remember why he fired Jeff Sessions?
It was because Jeff Sessions refused
to recuse himself from the Russia
interference investigation that was happening
independently in the Justice Department.
apartment, like how far we have fallen.
Jeff Sessions looked at Trump like he was the love of his life, that little Keebler
elf.
And that was that was what Trump was upset about.
Now, Pam Bonnie did everything that she could to politicize the DOJ in his behalf, but
she wasn't as probably directly obsequious and effective as Todd Blanche as a bully.
Like we saw what Blanche did in going to Galane Madison.
Maxwell and negotiating her to get to that cushy prison, which by the way, real housewives of Salt Lake City's Jen Shaw just got out of prison and was saying, you know, she scammed a bunch of elderly people, but is trying to take the moral high ground when giving her people interview about her experience with Galane.
And she was saying that she felt no remorse seeing the victims on TV, which we knew already. But apparently Trump's upset about her poor.
handling of the cover-up of the Epstein files.
And the other reporting is that the,
he's literally just firing the women now,
because Tulsi Gabbard's next.
It's apparently like already going to happen.
They're already floating this.
Yeah,
they call her do not involve, right?
The DNI position.
Do not invite.
Which is somehow worse.
Yeah.
I mean, so he's upset that the cases
against James Comey and Letitia James
were dismissed, I guess.
and he's upset that
there were all
the Epstein Files cover up
didn't go that well
he was talking about Leavitt
maybe doing a bad job
for the reason why he's getting all this bad
PR too so maybe she's
the motor mouth might be a running out of gas
yeah oh someone correct me
it's because Sessions did recuse himself yet
that's what I meant to say
I say didn't
yeah I was confused about it I hate when my brain does that
I hate when my brain does that didn't
but Bondi
RIP, she was a good soldier.
Trump loved her when she was on his impeachment defense.
But prior to that, when she was Florida Attorney General,
she basically blocked an investigation into Trump University.
And it was after he gave her $25,000 donation.
Right.
But I also failed to look at the sweetheart deal that Jeffrey Epstein got for his time
when Alex Acosta was the AG of Florida.
Yeah. Yeah. All right. Well, there's the breaking news, folks. And with that, we're going to wrap up the free part of this program and head into the fun half. And we will say hello to our fun half friends. And that includes Brandon Sutton. Brandon, your reaction to this breaking news.
Oh, I mean, honestly, I can't help but feel like it's an unfair, another one of Trump's unfair HR decisions to blame the failure to.
cover up the Epstein files on Pam Bondi. If he wanted the Epstein files properly covered up,
he should have made sure to kill Epstein when it was Joe Biden's presidency instead of his own,
because that's really the set of events that kind of put this into motion.
Right, right. What's happening on the discourse, Brandon?
Well, I am back from a little micro vacation, and so we're going to hit the ground running.
honestly it's going to sound crazy.
I think Trump is going to launch his special ground operation on Easter.
So I'm preparing myself to be streaming on Easter.
But in the prelude to that, I'll have some clips out for you all today over on the YouTube channel, the discourse with Brandon.
We are, I think, only 75 followers.
I'm just every time near a milestone.
We're only 75 followers away from 19,000.
So it's still not too late.
to be part of the first 19,000.
Or not, it's fine, but either way, you should send me your money.
All right.
Hey, Matt Binder.
Hello.
Hello.
What's happening on your shows?
Leftist Mafia tonight at YouTube.com slash Matt Binder.
At what time, 8.30 p.m. Eastern time.
I forgot what time it was for a second.
All right.
And Matt Leck.
what's happening with Jacobin and Left Reckoning.
Yeah, a new Jacobin show tomorrow.
We're talking about Brazil.
And also following me on Instagram at Matt Leck,
where I am fastly approaching 8,000 followers,
which is like 2,000 less than I need to, like,
be able to post links.
For free without having to pay Instagram.
You can, for the highest thing,
it is $150 a month on Instagram for unlimited links.
That's too much more.
money.
Yeah.
And it's so amazing how they just stole the Elon model after he started doing that.
Elon really broke the seal and let them do all.
Like that's the problem is like it's they all suck.
They're all Elon's.
Elon is just public about, you know, sucking.
But Zuckerberg and there's actually texts, Binder, maybe you've been following this
story, but text between Elon and Zuckerberg.
And it turns out that the whole like challenge to fight thing really truly was political
K-Fabe.
And they're in fact like,
conspiring against things like, you know, to do business deals.
Oh, yeah, Zuckerberg reached out to Musk earlier last year when Doge was fully ramping up
and told Elon that he really liked, this Zuckerberg telling Elon via text message,
that he really liked what Doge was doing and to let them know how Facebook can help
because they're already making sure to stop and censor anyone who's sharing information about the Doge members.
Like Zuckerberg openly saying that the public employees of Doge who were cutting everybody's, you know, programs and stealing their personal data from government systems, all those people should have been able to do so in the shadows, according to Zuckerberg.
Yep. So, yeah, if I was somebody who credited the Trump era Republicans as being free speech champions,
I would probably want to reassess that, but, you know.
Probably.
All right, folks, with that, we're going to wrap up the free part of this show and head into the fun half.
As a reminder, the show relies on your support.
Join the Majority Report.com.
You can become a member.
You can IM the show.
We'll take some calls in the fun half, have some fun.
it, Philopian tube says, can we get a somber? The Dow is over 50,000 for our fallen soldier.
Oh, yeah, actually, I wanted to play a little bit.
The Dow, the Dow right now is over, the Dow is over $50,000. I don't know why you're laughing.
I just found out you're over 50, so you've got to go to you.
The Dow is over 50,000 right now. The S&P at almost 7,000. And the NASDAQ smashing records,
Americans 401k's and retirement savings are booming.
So good.
I can't believe they got rid of her.
I can't believe they got rid of her.
I can't believe it.
There's no bad blood.
There's nothing going on.
We just want her to do something else now, okay?
I too will bury her in the back of my golf course when she's dead and gone.
I don't know.
It's very weird watching that.
Very weird watching that.
Fox News segment.
Like Matt said, it sounded like a breakup.
I mean, what are you doing reporting on this like this?
Can you imagine any other administration, people coming out when someone was fired or
leaving their position or resigning or whatever if they came out and like, oh, but don't worry,
the guy or a girl resigning and the president, they're still friends.
They're still a place for that.
Like, that's ridiculous.
Yeah.
I'm just not emotionally available right now.
I do think we do have to admit, though, agnosticly, she did.
handled cover up very poorly i don't think there's ever been a cover up handled as poorly as she
handled it now i think that's mostly a commentary on trump's hiring policies but it was really
terrible i think everyone agreed to that susy wilds bongino they the the it was the binder thing
like the binder thing really sold it for me i mean to be to be fair it really felt like they
they ramped it up because it wasn't a cover up obviously in the beginning to them because they
really believe they were going to unveil things. And then they actually took a look after all that.
And then went, oh, shit, whoops. We, we, we actually, this is now a cover-up. We didn't realize
Trump was in here so much. Donald Trump's like the guy who doesn't tell his attorneys, like everything,
that might be a problem in the future. And they get into the evidence. Yeah. Oh, shit. Right, right.
I also found it, find it really amusing that Bondi was his date to the Supreme Court
birthright citizenship hearing yesterday, which he attended as a way, as an intimidation tactic,
like staring at the Supreme Court justices, and she apparently came with him. And it's like
that last ditch effort right before you got a breakup, like, let's go on one more date. Let's go on
one more date to the Supreme Court to see if we can intimidate the justices and to
participating in our ethnic cleansing campaign. And it didn't go that great, you know? So,
time to break up. All right, guys. See you in the
on half. Okay, Emma, please. Well, I just, I feel that my voice is sorely lacking on the majority
report. Wait, what? Look, Sam is unpopular. I do deserve a vacation at Disney World. So, ladies
and gentlemen, it is my pleasure to welcome Emma to the show. It is Thursday.
Yeah, I think you need to do a program for Sam. Yes, police. Sir, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna,
pause you right there. Wait, what? You can't encourage Emma to live like this. And I'll tell you why.
So it's offered a twerk, sushi, and poker.
with the boys.
Twerk,
sushi and poker with the boys.
So it's offered sushi and polk.
That's what we call biz.
I just think that what you did to Tim Poole
was mean.
Free speech.
That's not what we're about here.
Look at how sad he's become now.
You shouldn't even talk about it because I think you're responsible.
I probably am in a certain way, but let's get to the meltdown here.
Twerp, oh, sushi.
I'm sorry, I'm losing my fucking mind.
So it's offered a twerk, sushi and oh.
with the boys.
Logic.
Tuft.
Sushi and Pulp.
So I'm not trying to be a dick right now,
but like, I absolutely think the U.S. should be providing me with a wife and kids.
That's not what we're talking about.
It's not a fun job.
That's a real fit.
That's a real fit.
That's like the way of the world on the shoulders.
Haugers.
Sam doesn't want to do this show anymore.
It was so much easier.
One of the majority report was just you.
You were happy.
subject.
Right.
Now, shut up.
Don't want people
saying reckless things
on your program.
That's one of the most
difficult parts about this show.
This is a pro-killing podcast.
I'm thinking maybe it's time
we bury the hatchet.
Left is best.
Violet twer.
Incredible theme song.
I Bumbler.
Emma Viglin,
absolutely one of my favorite people.
Actually, not just in the game.
Like, period.
