The Megyn Kelly Show - Dems Reckon with Biden's Pardon Lies, and Kamala's Possibly Tipsy Closing Message, with The Fifth Column Hosts | Ep. 955
Episode Date: December 3, 2024Megyn Kelly is joined by Kmele Foster, Michael Moynihan, and Matt Welch, hosts of The Fifth Column podcast, to discuss continued fallout from President Joe Biden pardoning his son Hunter, how this is ...just the latest lie in his lengthy career of lies, the spin from the corporate media and Democratic elite, ridiculous spin from the New York Times about how Biden "changed his mind" on the Hunter pardon on Saturday in Nantucket, Dave Portnoy’s rant on how the Democratic party needs to be blown up, Chuck Todd brutally turning on Biden, Don Lemon’s bizarre legal advice and attacks on Trump supporters, Kamala Harris’ video message to her campaign in which she seemed tipsy, slurring her words and leaning on her usual talking points, why the Democrats might have released this, the international conflicts Trump is inheriting in Ukraine and Syria, Trump's threat to Hamas to release the hostages before he takes office January 20, the continued smear campaign against Pete Hegseth, the overreach of #MeToo, and more.More from The Fifth Column: https://www.wethefifth.com/Prager U: Join PragerU’s fastest-growing podcast. Subscribe to Real Talk with Marissa Streit on your favorite podcast platform or watch at https://PragerU.com/RealTalkCozy Earth: https://www.CozyEarth.com/MEGYN | code MEGYNTax Network USA: https://TNUSA.com/MEGYN Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Transcript
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at noon east.
Hey, everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show and happy Tuesday.
The fallout from President Biden's pardon of his son Hunter continues. It's so fun watching
the leftist meltdown over this, like the wrestling with what, you know,
why, why did he do this to us? Because he's a lying liar who lies. Again, consume other media
people. Try to expand your horizons and then you won't feel so stupid all the time. Can you imagine
being one of these viewers of like MSNBC and that's just your only
news source? Like not, not an ironic viewer, like the rest of us, you know, who are like,
oh my God, maybe he didn't collude with Russia. I mean, oh my God, maybe he didn't actually do
anything wrong with that phone call with Ukraine. Jeez. I mean, maybe Trump has a point about the
weaponization of the Department of Justice.
Geez, maybe those so-called experts who attacked him actually weren't really all that reliable.
And now finally, maybe Joe Biden actually isn't all that honest. Is it possible he was intending
on doing this pardon all along? Hello, you don't have to watch Fox. You don't have to watch this show,
but you should because we're actually very fair. And we're very, as somebody put in our,
it was one of our commenters online, relentlessly factual. Thank you,
Megyn Kelly show viewer. We are a little relentlessly factual. Just expand. That's all I'm asking. Expand. You don't have to
eliminate MS, but you are being misled on a daily basis. That is why you feel so dumb and confused
all the time as these houses of cards continue to collapse week after week, month after month.
And by the way, we have an update for you on the MSNBC ratings. My God. Okay. So
now you've got the New York Times, which is one of the ones that got it so wrong. Now trying to
like spin its way out of this. You see, President Biden had a legitimate change of heart late on a
Saturday evening on Nantucket last weekend under a dark sky. That's how he finally
came to this realization. It was totally in good faith just up until the dark sky came.
And then there are those who are speaking out publicly attacking Joe Biden for even what they
say is a legacy-defining mistake. Here's what I think about this legacy-defining mistake. I mean, eh. Like, I don't... Here's what I think about this legacy-defining thing,
because we're seeing that in a lot of these pieces.
These are people who are mad at Joe Biden
for not stepping aside earlier.
They blame him for the fact that Kamala Harris lost.
And while they had to go through 107 days
of he's going to go on Mount Rushmore for this selfless decision to
pass the baton. They really were angry with him all along because they didn't really think she
could do it. And they were right. And now they got saddled with Trump 2.0, which they're very
unhappy about. So now it's fine to just be like, Biden fucking sucks. And this is as good an excuse as any to say
it was the pardon. His legacy is ruined. We were totally willing to go the Mount Rushmore route.
It wasn't because of the loss. It's because of the pardon, because we're a party of principles
and we don't break our word. So it's just super fun to watch these narratives take hold. They're all
lies, as was Joe Biden's promise not to pardon Hunter, as was virtually everything Hunter and
Joe Biden have ever said about Hunter Biden's Burisma and Chinese and Romanian business deals.
So where does that leave us today? Well, let's bring in our pals from the fifth column to chat all about it. Camille Foster,
Michael Moynihan, and Matt Welsh, who you can find at wethefifth.com. Is the education system
the cause and solution to the biggest problems facing America? Check out a fantastic podcast
from PragerU that is tackling difficult topics and conversations through the lens of education, Real Talk with Marissa Streit. As a mother, former educator, and the CEO of PragerU,
Marissa believes that education got America into the mess we're in and education will get us out.
This is why she built the pro-American nonprofit PragerU into a disruptor in education with videos
that reach millions of young people every single day. During her show, Marissa interviews leaders in business, education, mental and physical health, and world affairs.
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PragerU.com slash Real Talk.
Guys, welcome back to the show.
Thank you for having us.
Mary wore on anti-Christmas, we are noticing.
Very Christmassy set.
Really nice.
Well, it's December 3rd.
I'm leaning in.
It's time.
Do it.
Lean into it.
It's not anti-anything.
She's just celebrating Christmas, Matt.
Well, she's anti-war on Christmas.
She's just fighting on behalf of Christmas.
That's fine.
We say Merry Christmas.
Remember that from the O'Reilly War on Christmas?
We say Merry Christmas.
You'd have to walk into a store and explain that.
I do wrestle every year with a Christmas card.
Do I put Happy happy holidays on there because
i'm sending it to jewish friends too but in the end i always go with with merry christmas because
yeah like to your point i am they wrote the christmas songs yeah yeah libra and i'm playing
them non-stop i'm driving my kids crazy um okay what do you make of my analysis? That is just very fun to watch the spiraling of like, oh, he's tarn you did not. You said the people who watch MSNBC
should go somewhere else.
They have gone somewhere else
because no one watches MSNBC.
The premise of your statement is wrong.
If people did watch it, I would agree with you.
But as I assume we'll get to on this episode of the show,
there's seven people left watching it.
And one of them is Keith Olbermann
screaming in his basement.
But two others are my producers.
It's the new view.
I think, by the way,
and I'm totally convinced of this.
I'm actually quite serious about this.
Is it?
I don't think Joe Biden lied about this.
I think that he's so infirm
that somebody over the weekend was like,
hey, Joey B, do you remember that you said you were going to pardon somebody over the weekend was like, hey, Joey B, do you
remember that you said you were going to pardon your son? He was like, oh, yeah. Yeah, let's do
that. I think that's kind of probably how it happened. I don't think he's having any revelations
at this point because we can't hold those two ideas in our head at once that he is completely
infirm and out of it. And apparently still did that person's name rhyme with Bunter?
He's an oil expert who works in China and Ukraine. I don't know who he is, but he's a brilliant artist. That's right. Respect. Show some respect. The thing that gets me, Megan, and it's reiterated
the way that you introduced the whole thing is that, yeah, people like this is the thing that tarnishes his legacy. There have been more consequential lies that I'm still madder about.
I mean, I don't think that Hunter Biden should have gone to jail for lying on a gun application
for a crime that I think 100 people, 130 people are prosecuted for each year and also a crime
that his father enhanced the penalty of
going into it because Democrats have idiotic ideas about people and gun ownership. Let's
table that aside. A more consequential lie is when President Biden, Jen Psaki and Rochelle
Walensky and a bunch of other people said, oh, we're totally not going to make the COVID vaccine mandatory.
We weren't, the federal government doesn't even have that authority. They went from there to
look, look at what you made me do. We have to do it. And we're going to fire people in the military.
Tens and thousands of people lost their jobs because they lied about this consequential
thing and having healthy young people take a COVID vaccine and
forcing them to not giving them a choice is a much more consequential lie. And you don't see
the same wailing and gnashing of teeth among the media because they participated in that lie.
To this day, I mean, I was pointing this out minutes after this news came out that that is
the more consequential lie that I'm more upset about.
And, you know, rational people with blue check marks are like, you know, why don't they just take the jab?
We still have this mindset in this country that is one of it's one of the most beneficial things about Donald Trump winning,
is that he's appointing a whole passel of people who were on the other side of all of those debates, not just the lying about it, uh, not just the suppression of speech
that came, uh, uh, about it, uh, but all of the basic sort of morality of compelling people to
do something that they wouldn't, uh, wouldn't normally want to or need to do. Um, those lies
are more important. Um, so this is a guy who's been lying since the first time he was kicked out
of running for president guy who as president, how many times has he told the story about his uncle being eaten by cannibals?
And people like, oh, yeah, that's normal.
The worst lie that he told in part of this in this pardon.
Did you catch it all the way down at the bottom of his announcement?
He's like, look, I've been truthful.
The one thing about my life is I'll just be square and truthful to the American people.
My dude, no, you have been lying your face off my whole fucking life. Move off the stage.
Yeah. You know, to me, what's interesting about it, because like a president pardoning somebody,
even somebody who might be a relative, you know, it's a story for sure. But this one's gotten so
much attention from the left and the right.
So I'm asking myself, like, what is it?
I mean, yes, it's sweeping.
Yes, most sweeping since Richard Nixon.
It's for all crimes.
It's not just like for the one or two that he's been actually prosecuted or found guilty on.
So what is it?
And to me, it's just that it undermines, it's just the big reveal at the end of the Biden story
that he is an abject liar, that all the stuff we've been getting fed about how noble the Justice
Department is has been bullshit. And Biden knew it all along. And these Democrats who were defending
that system now look stupid, so they're angry. You know, I was telling my kids
a story about my mom because we did, you know, it was Thanksgiving last weekend and last weekend.
And it's a great story. The short version is when my Nana was like 90, she died at 101,
but this is my mom's mom. My mom and my stepfather were driving my Nana to my uncle's house where we
all met for Thanksgiving. And my mom was
joking with my Nan that my mom as a lifelong veterans hospital nurse would that whenever my
mom sees a flag out on the street, my mom has to salute or the VA will track her down the government
and get, she'll get in trouble. She's messing with my 90 year old Nana who's in the back seat. And Peter, my stepfather is going totally along with it. He's like, Oh no, no,
it's a, it's a rule. She's got to do it to my, my Nana. And, uh, my Nan's like, Oh my God. So
my important hands in the back seat going, Linda, there's one, there's one over there. And my mom's
like, Oh, that's a big one. That's a double. I got to do the double salute.
So we get to my uncle's and we all meet.
And my nan is like, oh, Megan, your poor mother.
She had to salute every single flag on the whole way down.
She was like, there's a huge one.
She had to do the double salute.
Otherwise the government, they're going to get her in trouble.
I'm like, no, no, nan.
That's not, it's not true.
She's like, what?
No, your mother said so.
It's true. I said, mom, she think like, and she goes, Linda, Linda, tell her, tell her the truth.
And my mom goes, no, mom, I was just pulling your leg.
What?
She couldn't believe it.
She couldn't believe the story that the truth came out. My Nana identified my mother as an abject liar.
And the big, the big reveal was had before the Turkey. This is the big reveal before the Turkey,
you know, or I guess right around the Turkey by Joe Biden. I was lying all along. The whole thing
was made up. The DJ, the DOJ is corrupt. Don't trust it. It's been politicized. I'm the one who politicized it.
And all of our protestations that we couldn't say that while Trump was in the crosshairs were made up.
Yeah. Not only not only could they not say that it was corrupt, they were insisting it was the other way around the entire time.
Like Kamala Harris is out there on the campaign trail talking about these active cases, and in some cases, recently decided cases, and touting all of this as proof that Donald Trump
could not be elected and was kind of an inappropriate person to elect, while all
this stuff with Hunter Biden was just kind of waiting there in the wings and would be
resolved. I am dispositionally inclined to agree with virtually everything that's been said. In
fact, I suspect I do agree with it.
But I also wonder if there isn't room for us to acknowledge that the political landscape is pretty weird.
The climate is pretty charged.
And I've tried to put myself in Joe Biden's shoes here.
And I think I'm on record, as are the other two guys.
You fell down.
You fell asleep.
That Joe probably should have done this pardon. You fell down. these things politically, and you're suggesting, look, the old wars are over, let's go forward together like we're all Americans. Maybe you could have done that, but that isn't what happened here.
Instead, it's Joe Biden kind of generally acknowledging that there is some kind of political corruption. There is a tinge of it in our justice system. It does seem that impartiality
goes out the window when you're a certain kind of person with a certain kind of profile. And to the extent that's true, then maybe that justifies a more sweeping pardon that is expansive, that protects
you from your political adversaries once they take power. I mean, again, that's a very generous
interpretation of things, but it does seem to me that some dimensions of that aren't entirely
unreasonable. One thing about this I would say is that that I think is incredibly
beneficial is look, the president, as you said, Megan, I mean, I don't get incredibly exercised
about this. I think it's wrong to pardon a member of your family. It's it's allowed. You can do it.
I mean, you know, back to Seth Rich and all of these kind of corrupt pardons that we've had in the past.
But the one thing that is, I'm sorry, Mark Rich, Seth Rich is a different conspiracy,
but Mark Rich in the end of the second Clinton term. But I will say this, that it does have this kind of x-ray capability. So I'm happy they did it because as I think that you might have
mentioned, and I saw all over Twitter, there was some brilliant
enterprising young person put together a nine and a half minute cut in a matter of what, eight hours
of people talking on MSNBC, on CNN, et cetera, about this pardon that was never going to happen.
And so the fact that it did happen is this great exposure
to a number of people that rely on hyper partisan news sources and people that are just playing team
tribal politics. They're saying, you know, this is a man who respects the Justice Department and
he would never do something as politicized. And now you have somebody like Molly John fast on MSNBC, getting the news in real time and just stopping and saying, can I process this? No, no, you're
you have to do it in real time. That's the job. So I got nothing. It's like, no, you have something.
Yeah. Yeah. Say it. And that's exactly right. It's been great about this is for your listeners to go find this nine minute cut.
I found it so compelling. And I can't remember who is the was was Weissman, I think, was the worst of them all on MSNBC.
You know, these people just like going so over the top of this is the fundamental difference between.
No, I'd love to. I'd love to have been in the anchor desk when Molly Jong fast was like,
I've got nothing. I'll be like, I'll give you a minute, find your balls,
come back and we'll continue the discussion. Like I understand you need a minute,
but there's, we played that yesterday. So if people want to hear it,
you can listen to that and Weissman. Um,
but here's a good one from Dan Goldman who I used to know a little bit when I
was at NBC is such a transformation. That guy, when he was coming on, when I was at NBC, he was
trying to be like this model. I think at the time he was a more moderate guy. Then he ran for
Congress and went far left and insane in his Biden defending. It's just such lies. So here he is on
CNN here with Brianna Keillor, who makes him watch the old clip of himself. Watch.
Great. In July of 2023, just after that plea deal fell through, this is what you said. I want to watch. Do you think a pardon for his son would be a mistake? Yes, and I don't think there's any
chance that President Biden is going to do that. Merrick Garland kept on a Trump-appointed U.S. attorney to investigate the president's son.
If there is not an indication of the independence of the Department of Justice
beyond that, I don't know what we could look for.
What does that feel like, watching yourself back then,
reassuring people that Biden was not going to issue a pardon for his son.
Yeah, and I think that if that plea agreement and that plea deal had gone through, there would be no pardon.
That was a satisfactory outcome.
It had already fallen through.
It had already fallen through.
Sorry.
She said it was good for her.
You took him at his word. So what does that feel like knowing that he's gone back on it?
Well, as I said, I'm disappointed that after the plea fell through and it became clear about
why it did, including Republican congressional intervention in this case, which made this case
very unique. But that's all. Everything he said happened happened before Joe Biden promised not
to pardon. So that was just spinning, spinning, spinning. It's so fun to watch him squirm.
Good for her. I've criticized her a lot and she deserves
it, but that was a good moment. Like rub his face in it. It was too long of a question, by the way,
don't ask somebody how you feel. Just say you took him at his word and then let them respond.
I don't like that. How does it make you feel? I kind of like different, different,
I feel bad. If Dan Goldman had any, like any sense of honesty, he would laugh. He'd be like,
bad. I feel embarrassed. He could have put it on Biden. He could have in that moment put it
on Biden and said, he embarrassed us all, those of us who believed him. But here he is again,
just doing the president's bidding, even if he makes, if he makes himself into yet again, the court gesture.
Imagine how much better politics would begin to be in this country.
We're not even politics or sort of political culture.
If we reimagined or reinstated the idea that once in a while, at least you say, gosh, sorry
for lying.
Whoops.
Sorry that I something that I asserted turned out not to be
true. A prediction I made was wrong. I mean, I predicted that JD Vance wouldn't become the
Senator of Ohio because he wasn't a talented politician. I was wrong. I probably said
something like that on the show. Sorry, wrong. That's why we try not to make predictions,
but like to actually carry water for a politician and then be confronted with it.
And you just kind of keep carrying water i mean
let's keep in mind that the reason why that plea plea deal fell through is because it was a weird
plea deal it was a strange thing um it tried to do for him what this pardon pardon did for him
exactly yeah white total absolutely every crime and going back to 2014 is a pretty weird thing, considering that we are talking about tax fraud and a gun charge.
And so what do we and why are we putting the judge in a position to decide whether the terms of the plea deal are being met or not?
The judge was rightfully scornful of that fact.
All of that looks bad. And this whole clothing that Democrats do and media
does of, oh, no, we are the ones who really care about the rule of law and the norms.
We're not going to hear much about norms for a while, I do predict, but we care about all that
stuff. Again, they have already swept under the rug that back in February when Robert Herr came
out with this report about why we're not going to prosecute Joe Biden for the documents case, what did Democrats do then?
Did they respect the independence of the judiciary? Did they say, oh, just a professional
over here doing his work? No, they threw him, led by Kamala Harris, under the bus for daring to
suggest in February of the year of our Lord 2024, that maybe Joe Biden is kind of too old to be prosecuted
because jurors would think that he's an old man
who's forgetful.
They absolutely threw him under the bus,
called him a Republican, said this and that.
They did that in real time
because it was politically expedient.
That's what politicians do,
whether they are Democratic politicians
or Republican politicians.
The very few politicians at all
that deserve anything like respect from
normal human beings are ones who could occasionally admit error and act like decent human beings.
Dan Goldman can't. Yeah. Norms and institutions is the new experts. Right. It's just we've stopped
believing those terms, like stop throwing those. Like, no one believes that anymore.
Go ahead, Moynihan.
Yeah, I just think it's worse in a way because he hasn't out.
You know, when Matt says liar, he's not a liar.
He didn't lie about this.
He trusted someone.
He trusted that what Joe Biden said was going to be true.
And you can come on the other side of that, as you pointed out, Megan,
and just be like, look, you know, the president made this promise to us, to the voters. You know,
Jen Psaki on her show on MSNBC, Karine Jean-Pierre in front of the lectern every day promising us
that this wouldn't happen because it stinks of corruption. But people are too obsessed with the tribal politics and people
like independent actors. When Jared Polis comes out from Colorado and says, this is no good.
And you see him get leaped on by all of these people that are within the firmament of, you know,
Democratic Party politics and machine politics. But you got to look at the voters. The voters
don't like being lied to. And there's no look at the voters. The voters don't like being
lied to. And there's no way around this one. The liar here is Joe Biden. If Mr. Levi Strauss,
scion to the fortune, wants to say, you know, well, yeah, Dan Goldman, by the way,
is just like you and I. He's a scion to the Levi Strauss fortune. And I think his great grandfather
that was like the president.
So this is like a lot of money for a lot of years.
But just like you and I,
you could just say,
look, I was misled on this.
I mean, who do you have fealty to?
Joe Biden is leaving office.
He's not going on Mount Rushmore.
He might go to Mount Rushmore just for a visit.
He's like, he's going to wander around for a little bit.
That'd be fun.
They gave us Kamala Harris, which is a total, total disaster. The Democratic Party is in the point like a baseball team that
goes in the last place. It's a rebuilding year. And it's totally fine to throw Joe Biden
under the bus. But there's so much thing back up%. It's a habitual thing where they're just like,
we got to go out there and protect our guy.
It just makes you look stupid and it makes you look untrustworthy.
But how much of this is-
I want to read you guys some of what the New York Times said about this
and their attempt to cover it up.
But before I do, take a look at Dave Portnoy
and his meltdown in response to this whole thing.
Your brain is broken.
Your brain is broken. You don't get it
because here's the thing. What the Democrats have done for, I don't know, 12 years have taken this
moral high ground that were the righteous party, the truth, honesty, integrity. And Trump is a
threat to democracy. He's Hitler and he's a Nazi and this and that. And then the Democrats, whether it's the primary or this,
time and again, they're worse than anything
Trump's ever done.
So if you're like, but, but, but, but, it's not that.
It's the lecturing, it's the Democrats, this engine,
just lying straight to our face,
pretending they're the moral righteous authority
and thinking the American people are so stupid that we don't see through it.
Blow up the Democratic Party.
You guys are fucking scumbag liars and you prove it time and again.
And this is just the latest in a long line with Hunter Biden.
Yeah, I would pardon my son, too, if I had one, if I could save his ass, too.
I just wouldn't lie about it like you guys.
Exactly. Scumbag liars. I just wouldn't lie about it like you guys.
Exactly. Fucking scumbag liar.
I can relate to that sentiment. It's in Massachusetts, man. It's just like a guy on the street in my home state like, dude, this guy's a fucking liar. I can't believe it. It's
just this accent from Dave Portnoy convinces me of everything he says.
Yeah. I'm very much in line with that thinking.
Like I'm the whiff of corruption, all of that stuff. Sure. Ultimately, though, he does have
this presidential prerogative here. It happens to be his son. The actual issue is the way that
you went about this, the lying, the dishonesty. And perhaps it's also fair to flag the overstatement
on the part of the people on the left who were like, oh, look at this, this very honorable man who could never possibly do the thing, the most bad thing, which definitely
separates him from Trump. Actually, it's very different. And actually, what about this? What
if it's not lying? What if it is, is the New York Times has told us just a change of mind.
A dark sky had fallen over Nantucket massachusetts on saturday evening when president
biden left church what a godly man alongside his family after his final thanksgiving as president
inside a borrowed vacation compound earlier in the week with its views of the nantucket harbor
mr biden had met with his wife, Jill Biden.
I'm going into Hollywood.
Yeah, wow.
And his son, Hunter Biden, to discuss a decision that had tormented him for months.
The issue, a pardon that would clear Hunter of years of legal trouble.
Something the president had repeatedly insisted
he would not do.
A pardon was the one thing
he could do for his
troubled son,
a recovering addict
who he felt had been subjected
to years of
public pain.
Poor old John. Red scare hooch again?
I gotta say, yeah, I mean, it sounds like the Philadelphia story.
You're like, I can't believe it.
It's being written in Nantucket Harbor, see?
But also, you're in Nantucket Harbor, and you're being defended by the Levi's scion.
It's like really relatable.
I'm sorry.
Other part of Massachusetts.
That's what's killing me about this.
Okay, Portnoy, it's the non non Nantucket versions. I appreciate that.
That's right. No, but that's, this is what I was saying yesterday. Like this is what gets to me,
you know? And I told the audience, they, they know the story, but like, I'm not the only one.
Millions of people have this in their family where somebody, you know, in love got swept up
into the opioid crisis. That wasn't Hunter's
thing. I mean, he was a crack cocaine, whatever. But, you know, my sister actually legitimately
got caught up in the opioid crisis by a doctor telling her this thing was not going to be
addictive. And then it was and really never righted the ship again. You know, she died two
years ago at age 58. And I I'm just, it makes me so angry because she had no advantages
like this. She did not have a presidential connection, nor did my place in the public
sphere or my financial resources save her. She didn't have the connection she needed
because there was some petty anti-crime that she got involved in, basically like a
shoplifting thing. But anyway, my point is it wasn't like a massive bank robbery. But once you
have that on your record, you're effed. She could just never get rid of it. She couldn't get a job.
Even when she got clean and sober, which she had been for many, many years by the time she passed,
she could never get a job once it's on your record. And they want us to feel sorry
for this rich, spoiled fucking brat,
Hunter Biden,
who's had an entire life of privilege
as the son of a senator,
the son of a sitting vice president,
the son of a president
who had every advantage in the book
and squandered them all
after exploiting them to the detriment of our
country with his dad's hand guiding the ship. And now we're supposed to feel sorry for these two.
Well, I don't at all. And the New York times doesn't get it. The thing that you're talking
about Moynihan, the thing you like about Portnoy and the thing that you're picking up on in what I read, the dark sky in Nantucket at the after leaving the church. Sure.
His final Thanksgiving as president inside a borrowed vacation compound on Nantucket,
like with views of the like, shut up. No one in the country who's sitting in jail or whose kid is about to go to jail for a gun charge or tax evasion or drugs gives two shits about your problems. country for my money, wrote about a really good piece about this pardon and all the hypocrisies
of it and the dissonances and the things that Biden has talked about that are lying, which
goes way beyond just his saying that he was not going to do it and then doing it just
the way that he characterized Republican pressure, this and that.
But there are people who are in jail right now for serving four year sentences because they lied on their application to get a
gun about being legal in their state cannabis user. That's it. They weren't a crackhead.
They weren't going down the slide in a way that Michael Moynihan still feels pretty envious about.
They weren't doing all the things. They didn't get a cushy job at Burisma while their dad was
in charge. The dad, the vice president was in charge of the, I don't know, Ukraine portfolio in the Obama administration.
Speaking of which, I mean, is that good parenting?
Let's see.
I've got a troubled fail son over here.
He's going to get a job that he would not otherwise get unless I was vice president, perhaps with his portfolio.
It has nothing to do with any of his skills.
I'm going to sign off on that and give him a high five.
That's not good parenting.
Sorry to say that out loud, but it's just not.
But there are people who are in jail for stuff like this.
Wouldn't you think that you might go out and find a few of those to pardon as well?
Maybe have second thoughts about you wanting to increase the penalties for
these types of things because you hate guns so much. And no, he's not taking that opportunity.
And this is one of the infuriating things about all politicized pardons. And of course,
Donald Trump did political pardons as well. And he's about to do some more, I'm sure.
The problem with that is that there are genuine people who should be pardoned.
We've seen the last three presidents deserve some credit for pardoning some amount of people.
It's not nearly enough for people who are languishing in jail for things that we no
longer consider crimes and who were never violent.
You should be spending your entire presidency doing that.
But particularly after you have pardoned your failed son and lied about it while doing it and cloaking it the mantle of truth. Go out and
find people who are in jail, who are less reprobate crackheads and get them out of jail now, too.
Yeah. Biden didn't just criminal justice reform when he was president. You know, I mean, that was
a lot of people who were affected by that. Forget the pardon power. He actually changed the law to
let some people out of prison, a lot of them.
But Biden's done nothing.
Biden tightened these laws, these very same gun laws that wound up coming back to haunt his son.
And now and then he gave him a pardon once he got convicted of the damn crime and wants us to feel sorry for him.
This is more from The New York Times, Moynihan.
Mr. Biden's decision has tarnished a storied public legacy.
Storied, I say.
That began more than 50 years ago.
It began more than 50 years ago at a hospital bedside of two sons who survived a car crash that killed his first wife and young daughter. Biden said the decision created a conflict between two core identities, the anguished father
trying to protect his son and the president who takes pride in standing on principle.
He's a private man. I just want to do everything in the Kate Hepburn accent.
That relates to what you were saying about your sister. I mean, this is a thing that most people are very reticent about saying and talking about.
But I think it's kind of necessary at this point.
We all know somebody.
I mean, I know people very close to me who have gone through very similar things.
Drug addiction, you know, in trouble with the law, etc.
And I'm not talking about myself matt
welch but i know other people close to me but you know if they were to lean on these things in their
life in the mistakes that they made people talk about this as a tragedy as an addiction all true
but in times and you actually have to also say we made mistakes, I made a mistake as a person. I'm trying to correct issue. I get that these are very difficult things for a
family. And I have an enormous amount of sympathy for that. But I start kind of losing that sympathy
when it's deployed, not mentioned, but deployed is the correct verb. It is like it is deployed
in a political way. I mean, we've all been through this and it doesn't resonate. Right.
The reason it doesn't resonate is right? The reason it doesn't
resonate is because we don't get out of trouble. We don't get board seats on Ukrainian energy firms
with no background in this. We don't get art shows, despite the fact that our art is absolute
garbage in any anybody with any taste in art understands this. This, like he has had a path out of this for so long.
Joe Biden was Scranton Joe,
working class man who took the Amtrak every day.
I don't buy that, but okay, let's grant him that.
His son was not.
These are people who grew up in extraordinary privilege.
I just made a joke about Dave Portnoy,
you know, the non-Nantucket versus the Nantucket.
Dave Portnoy, I don't know if people remember this, but he got stuck in his boat off of Nantucket this summer, which, by the way, shows you you're not a blue blood.
You have to call the Coast Guard.
But Dave Portnoy is like he got rich later.
He's like a working class guy with a working class accent.
And we have sympathy for him. We understand somebody who's made it. And we look at someone like Hunter Biden and Joe Biden,
you know, scratching his chin saying, what shall we do with Hunter when he's sitting, you know,
in his mansion, in a borrowed mansion, by the way, he didn't buy it.
Compound, please.
Like Barack Obama did.
Probably owned by Jim Biden, who's also going down.
Is that the next pardon, by the way? Is that the next blank check?
By the way, if I were Trump, I'd definitely pardon myself in the wake of all this. I would.
And then we'll have weeks of stories of whether a pardon can be given by a president to himself.
But I would be pardoning myself. Now, forget the J6 defendants. I'd definitely be pardoning
myself and saying these people are lunatics. Even Joe Biden admits they cannot be trusted.
They've already said that they want a dismissal without prejudice of these federal charges against
me. F them. I'm not putting my, my, why should I, why should I have less protection than Hunter
Biden? I want to play this for you guys. Chuck Todd, he's, he's in the Catherine Hepburn field when he looks at Joe Biden, or at least at least he was four years ago on Joe Biden inauguration day.
Listen here. To watch Joe Biden today, it was such a stark reminder of of how, as a country, we do seek out whatever we think we were missing.
You know, whatever it is we thought we were missing in the previous president. He is the better angel president. Joe Biden believes he's
eternally optimistic. He's not cynical. The guy's been in Washington so long, you would think,
you know, some of us are here too long and you become cynical. He's never cynical. He still
thinks the better angels exist. And it was just such an important moment.
Okay, stand by, stand by.
That's the, my boyfriend's so hot and dreamy,
he's never gonna cheat on me portion of our story.
And here is the expected epilogue.
And there is, you wanna read,
you wanna get angry just as a
as somebody in just all these mixed emotions. You read the Hallie Biden transcript and that's both
widow. Yes. And essentially he turned her into a crack addict. And this was all happening in 2017, 2018.
And Joe and Jill Biden were so concerned about their family that they decided to run for president.
Yep.
I just so when you talk about the word selfish, I it's almost like the word doesn't.
I mean, I their decision to run for president put the entire Democratic Party and the united states of america in the position that it's in now jeez my my boyfriend isn't loyal my boyfriend
my boyfriend is bad god don't fall who doesn't have a show who's just in front of some weird
screen with the changing landscapes behind it with chrisa, like, word, right on.
Is that what makes the difference? Is that what flips the switch from obsequious to honest,
like all of a sudden? And I mean, Matt, earlier in this conversation, you mentioned how Joe Biden
just kind of signed off on Hunter's joining the family business in which he and his uncle
fleece foreign governments for tons and tons of cash because
of their connection to the president or then vice president. He didn't just do that. He also lied
about it a lot. I don't know anything about this. I've never participated in any of Hunter's
meetings. We actually know that those things are fundamentally untrue. Never been in business with
my son. Yeah. If you're going to talk about the political dimensions of this and kind of bring
in all of the family matters related to it, you probably ought to mention that fact as well, that this has dogged Joe Biden for years, not just Hunter Biden, but Joe Biden, because he has been so reliably dishonest mightily from his time in politics, not just good old fashioned public service.
All of that is part of the story as well.
And all of that, in many ways, is a tale as old as time.
But it's also Joe Biden's story.
That is who he is.
He was never the savior of democracy.
He was never this man who was pure as a driven seal.
Like he was always this guy, too. He's always lied. That's what you do in politics. He's definitely not cynical because
when your son joins the board of a Ukrainian energy company on the heels of an uprising in
Ukraine, in which Viktor Yanukovych is shuffled off to Moscow and there's a lot of
tumult in the country. You as a father who, as Matt pointed out, your remit is the Ukraine
portfolio. You don't have the power to say at the very least, son, this looks really bad.
Maybe, maybe you should maybe don't do this. Not maybe don't do this. I'm the vice president.
Don't do this. I tell you not to do. I'm the vice president. Don't do this.
I tell you not to do this.
But there's no cynicism in him.
Like they said to Iran and Hezbollah.
Don't.
Yeah.
Please don't.
I mean, this wish casting is unbelievable.
I have to say that I hadn't seen those two Todd clips.
One, because I'm not on FaceTime calls with Chris Eliza.
I think it's the only way to get that one.
I presume, Megan, you were actually on that call in your screen recording.
I'm sorry, my producers earn every penny of their salaries.
Good Lord.
You should get hazard pay for watching that stuff.
But the first one, I mean, it is so obsequious and over the top and fawning and wish casting.
This is what we this is not what is
going to be heat, but, but he's claiming that this is the truth, right? We have seen through
his tenure in Washington. This is absolutely baffling to anyone who's watched Biden's tenure
is that he's not cynical. He's not a creature of Washington. He's managed to stay above
the fray. And it's like, and then to go four years later and be like, oh, by the way, he was running
for president because his family was in trouble. And by the way, his, his son was smoking crack
and having a relationship with his dead brother's widow. I mean, it's the most, it's like a Mexican
soap opera. It's so insane. And you didn't know that at the time. You didn't see that at the time. Cause I'll tell you what that would be. That would be like the most cynical thing I can
think of to run for president for that reason. Well, it's interesting to see like for some,
I don't know if the truth is finally becoming apparent, you know, like the Chuck Todd's of the
world, the Jared Polis of the world, um, Senator Michael Bennett of Colorado, a Democrat, he's
criticized Biden. Go take a look
at his his the comments under his tweet. They're killing him. The Democrats are so angry there.
They feel betrayed that he would criticize Joe Biden over this. So some some Democrats and media
commentators have spoken out like that, like this is bullshit. F him. What has he done? And then you
have The New York Times with Under
the Dark Knight started 50 years ago, man tormented. By the way, just for kicks,
here's one more of those. This is ABC's Mary Bruce and Sot 2.
Well, this is something that President Biden and this White House were adamant that he would not
do. But this morning, with just weeks left in office, the president is now protecting his only living son with a sweeping pardon. The about face comes just weeks before President-elect
Donald Trump is set to take office. Trump has vowed retribution against his political opponents
and has repeatedly bashed Hunter and the Biden family, accusing them without evidence of
corruption. Without evidence. Wow. We pivoted to a without evidence from Trump.
Without evidence.
Yes.
In the middle of all Trump's fault.
No evidence of corruption against the Bidens?
His only living son.
The only living son, by the way, is gross, I have to say.
I know.
Once again, he uses it, and so do his media enablers.
They also use it.
But anyway, more importantly,
I just wanted to show you a little bit more of dark night 50 years ago, coverage from ABC's Mary
Bruce, but that, that brings me to something I think is special that you're really going to
enjoy. And that's from your friend and everyone's Don Lemon. Oh boy. Good morning. Lemon nation.
I missed you guys. Did you guys miss me? No.
What's good for the Donald is good for the Hunter.
So if you're going to talk about selective prosecution and you're going to talk about
lawfare, okay.
That's why I said Joe Biden should use it, too.
And also, this whole idea about a president having complete immunity well maybe joe biden needs to do some
shit before he leaves because if he would just be immune what what if he jailed donald trump for
i don't know january 6th i'm just saying how do you do that what's good for the donald is good
for the Joe Biden.
The economy is messed up
and they're paying more for goods.
They don't even care
if their family member is going to get deported. They don't care.
Oh my God, I can't believe it.
What happened with the gas prices?
Don't do the voice talk.
You know what? I don't drive. I take the subway.
Y'all want to have dinner tonight?
That's my attitude.
And I wouldn't help them do
nothing.
There's a subway
in Sag Harbor?
I was going to say.
You seem dumb
out there.
Lemonation.
I kept on thinking that my internet connection was going out.
Hello, my lemon heads.
Now it's lemination.
Lemination?
I hope Adam Dando sued.
I kept on thinking that.
I think he was trying to do some legal analysis there.
I don't know what that was.
Just jail him.
He'd just go over to his house and put him in jail.
Get on the Sag Harbor subway sag harbor subway subway to washington and that is i you didn't you should have shown the beginning
of that clip where he gets kicked in the head by a horse because he's just like on the fritz the
whole time i literally thought my connection was going out i was like oh what i think i think i
lost them because there was what 10 seconds between his very deep thoughts.
I think, by the way, the Don Lemon thing, I feel bad picking on Don Lemon because he obviously has some some, you know, cognitive issues.
And the decline is pretty, pretty, pretty significant.
But I think we first saw that with his interview with Elon Musk. And I am watching this and thinking like,
how on earth did they keep him at CNN for that long?
From the black hole,
swallowed up the Malaysian flight.
Gee, what could it have been?
Let me really try to think what it was
that kept him in his spot as long as they did.
Hmm.
Oh, I've got it. He's black and he's gay, kept him in his spot as long as they did. Camille seems to have frozen.
He's black and he's gay, as he said repeatedly
when he was trying to get them not to fire him.
I remember.
I'm a black gay man.
Cable news prime time.
Every time we try to fire Camille, he says that too.
So annoying.
He's saying that he's open-minded suddenly.
He's like gay adjacent.
No comment.
No comment.
Camille, you used to be spelled differently.
Because my team is so competent, they have pulled the clip that really sums up this entire thing. And this is really what Joe Biden is doing. And the media is either
shocked, horrified or making excuses for him. But here's Joe Biden. Come on, flounder.
Can't spend your whole life worrying about your mistakes. You fucked up. You trusted us. That's amazing. Still, still works.
All these years later.
I think there's one point that's worth reflecting on for everybody of all political persuasions, including those who are enjoying lapping up everyone's tears.
It's that as soon as you get yourself in the position of this is the vessel through which I can smite the person I hate.
So that's what Chuck Todd thought Joe Biden was on inauguration day.
I'm sure he called him Joseph Robinette Biden the second, uh, to show it.
Um, then you are going to tell yourself a fable about how on a honorable he is and how
swelled with emotion and honor America was in doing that.
And you see people invest Donald Trump with the same kind of hopes as they're using him
to beat back the left. Don't place your hopes in politicians, people. They're going to lie
to you. That's what they do. That's how they got there. Don't start. You're going to embarrass
yourself. It's a very good point. They will disappoint you and they will all lie to you.
One hundred percent. Unlike the guys from the fifth column, they are staying with me. That's
no lie. Don't go anywhere because we will finally get to the Kamala Harris message from Thanksgiving that I haven't had a chance to discuss with anyone.
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Well, we almost missed all the fun while we were having our turkey. And that was another
turkey took to the airways and gave her a farewell message. I don't know what it was, but it was
glorious. Kamala Harris decided to give us an early Christmas gift and to speak out on camera
yet again with a little Thanksgiving
Day inspo, which I really appreciated because, you know, I'd been missing her a little and gave a
little message to her supporters. We've pulled a little so you can hear how, if at all, she's
changed her messaging. The outcome of this election obviously is not what we wanted. It is a coalition where we
bring people together based on a deep love of our country and our understanding that the strength
of our country will be a function of our willingness to put in the work and that we will
do that work with a sense of joy. Yes. With a sense of work ethic and understanding that it's going to be hard.
But it's good work.
It's good work.
To be engaged in a collective fight for America's future.
That we're all in this together.
And that work continues.
The work must continue.
So look, we still have a lot to fight for. Okay. A future
where every American can pursue their dreams, ambitions, and aspirations. I just have to remind
you, don't you ever let anybody take your power from you. Look, this, this mission that we have,
it takes hard work. As you've heard me say many times we like hard work
you just said that good work hard work can be joyful work
is that boris yeltsin that that is late 90s boris yeltsin slash the person i was across the bar
from the other night it was like let me tell
you something we got don't let anyone ever tell you anyone says that you know that they're drunk
don't let anyone ever tell you okay she's obviously either having a stroke or she's wasted
and i prefer the first one do you's amazing to watch her like...
Go ahead, Matt.
Just asking the two fellas if you have any experience
of talking with someone late at night
when they're slurring a lot and trying really hard
to act like they're not.
Oh, Matt Welch.
Yeah, it's me every night.
Oh, Matt Welch.
Game knows game.
I mean, wow.
Just the trying to make
understanding be really just four syllables. Like you could see the mental concentration. I'm going to do it. I'm going to understand.
She reminds me of this woman, Doug and I were at some party. This is years ago. And she was at our preschool and she comes up to me drunk, very drunk at this bar. And she's like, I need to talk
to you. Apology. And of course you're like, you're forgiven. It's fine. We're good. Right.
She's like, no, I never liked you. I never liked you. And it's always very confusing
because Doug is very very nice person.
But I never like you.
Kind of the opposite of Moynihan, strangely.
Is there anyone who can come get me out of this?
Of course, all my friends were over there like, ha, ha, ha, laughing.
Anyway, finally, my love Christina came and got me and rescued me from the convo.
But my point is, that's who she reminded me of.
Like, I used to talk to you.
Like you said, don't you ever let someone take your power.
Hard work is good work.
It's good.
It's joyful.
It is the opposite of the Katharine Hepburn
mid-Atlantic accent of that clear Christmas.
She's like, I don't even know.
But you have to realize something about this.
There is one important political point here.
Someone watched that.
A whole team of people watched that.
Yes.
Yeah, that's good.
And they're like,
your friends across the bar laughing like,
oh shit, Megan's dealing with the drunk mom here.
That's her staff.
They're like, you know what?
Print it, put it out.
Let's put it out.
Like, no, no, no. Should we cut it? No, out. Let's put it out. Like, just no, no.
Should we cut it?
No, no.
Just fucking put it out.
Yeah.
The DNC was like, check this out.
This is why we lost.
That should have been the caption.
Good Lord.
It wasn't our fault.
That's exactly right.
And it was just, she hit it all, right, Camille?
It was like, ambitions, aspirations, dreams.
And that thing about like, she keeps using that line.
She used it in her concession speech
or whatever that was after she lost.
Like, don't you let anybody
take your power away from you.
Don't you ever let,
meanwhile, it's like,
we're literally taking your power away from you
on January 20th.
You're losing it all.
How much did you take her keys away from her?
Look at the lighting of it too.
I mean, like they set that shot up. was that shot up yeah curtains in the back like
that you're matching her jacket matches her jacket yeah she looks like she's hiding in
the woods hunting like the whole thing is weird like all blending her hair her jacket
is i know people listen to this on audio only so i should probably describe the best is when
she puts her hands together like this and puts it under her chin for a
moment.
Wait, let's show Moinihan.
Yeah, this is...
Stand by.
Here we go.
Get her off the camera.
There it is.
No, that's how she did it.
Go ahead.
Don't let anyone ever do the thing that they shouldn't do.
Because doing the thing that they shouldn't do is bad.
Never, ever.
Never do it.
It's so... it's amazing.
We're going to do a full like breakdown later
as a separate episode of that Pod Save America
interview of her campaign team.
Yeah.
But have you ever heard so much denial
and so many excuses?
And they knew enough to say,
no excuses, no excuses.
And then they just deliver excuses. You're just making excuses. Tough they knew enough to say, no excuses, no excuses. And then they just deliver excuses.
You're just making excuses. Tough political environment.
Making excuses, pointing fingers while insisting you're not doing it. And of course,
not taking any responsibility for any of the mistakes made because there were no mistakes.
It was amazing. You ran a great campaign.
Well, you listened to it, Camille, and you were like, I actually, I'm starting to feel sorry for
her. Like she, she had a terrible team behind her. It, as it turns out, it wasn't all her fault.
Yeah.
Although I don't actually feel sorry for her,
but I do kind of get,
get a little,
but I don't feel sorry for her at all.
Not,
not you had a Don desperately wanted that.
She didn't want to figure out if you felt sorry for her.
Yeah.
She didn't want to,
she didn't want to compete for the,
not for the nomination at all.
She didn't want there to be some sort of open field.
No,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, just, just give it to me. Give me all of there to be some sort of open field. No,
no, no. Just give it to me. Give me all of the things. Hand me the baton. Same way I got the VP nod from Joe Biden. It's not really a competition. Just give me the things. So yeah, I can't feel
sorry for her. I will say, though, that my favorite Thanksgiving message was Donald Trump's
Happy Thanksgiving post, which has become something of a tradition for him.
Like every single one of them begins with a happy Thanksgiving to all, including is always, always like the most deplorable people in the world who actually want the bad things.
Like I still want good things for you people too. No matter how terrible you are.
Unbelievable. I, I, Camille, I'm glad that you pointed out that I just want to point out that he did this in 2013, way before he was running for president, where he said, I'd like to spend my best wishes to all on 9-11 on this special day to the haters and losers too.
On 9-11.
The haters and losers.
Which I took as a swipe at al-qaeda to be honest so i'm on his side on this one yeah i'm gonna interpret that way as well truths his post on truth social he
did have a hell of a one yesterday uh it reads as follows everybody is talking about the hostages
who are being held so violently inhumanely and against the will of the entire world in the Middle East.
But it's all talk and no action, exclamation point.
Please let this truth serve to represent that if the hostages are not released prior to January 20th, 2025, the date that I proudly assume office as president of the United States, there will be, in all caps, all hell to pay in the Middle East.
And for those in charge who perpetrated these atrocities against humanity, those responsible
will be hit harder than anybody has been hit in the long and storied history of the United States
of America. In all caps again, release the hostages now. 63 hostages are believed to still be in the captivity of Hamas. Of the some 250 who were taken,
71 have been confirmed dead. So we don't know, we don't exactly know the precise numbers of
who is alive, but we believe it's some 63. And this is what he said when he was running too,
that those hostages better be released before I even get sworn in.
And it's a very interesting situation because the Trump base, the MAGA base, is non-interventionist, interventionalist.
They really are not very pro-American power and might being exercised militarily. Trump, I've said this before,
is a little less that way than I think many in his core base. But this is Trump clearly
threatening some sort of, I think, military action. I mean, maybe I'm overstating it. Maybe
it's just some sort of sanction I'm not reading. But in any event, what if they don't release the hostages before he gets
inaugurated? Any thoughts? Yeah, cut or screwed. That's what I'm hearing. They're not going to be
a major non-NATO ally anymore. They're going to be running into the bomb shelter,
is the implication of what he is saying. I kind of agree with you, but maybe I would
stand off some of the edges on his base being
non-interventionist or him being non-interventionist.
I think some non-interventionists did vote for him, but he's always been a Jacksonian,
right?
So he doesn't like nation building.
America doesn't like nation building, if we're being honest.
A lot of our interventionist and neoconservative pals still are kind of in denial about that,
but it is just true.
We don't like
Americans soured on Afghanistan. We soured on the Iraq war and we had reason to. So we don't want to
go and put boots on the ground. But doesn't mean we don't also want to avoid like punching someone
in the face if they take some of our people. So Trump is a Jacksonian. He's in the Andrew Jackson kind of mold of I will absolutely threaten. I mean, this is the biggest military strike in the history of the world. So he's going to go like a little bit more than Hiroshima and then see what what you do. I think you will see a lot of scrambling on the part of Qatar, perhaps of of Turkey as well. And Iran, we're seeing all kinds
of weird things happening in Syria right now, which is too complex for my little brain to even
understand. But I think people are moving on the chessboard very fast because he has a clear
difference, not just in the sort of Jacksonian, I'm going to punch
you in the jaw with my whole hand, uh, kind of approach, but the Biden approach, which I think
is often misunderstood has been mostly like, Hey, if we give money to everybody, maybe we just tell
everyone to kind of cool it. Just don't get too out of hand in whatever you do. So he tells that
message to Israel. He also tells that message to Iran. And he tells that message to this guy and
that guy, he's sort of like, we want, want we want to just kind of can you please contain it?
Like we're going to support Ukraine, but only until after he lost the election or after Kamala
Harris lost the election, do we allow them to shoot with long range missiles? And I would imagine
that came after having a conversation with Donald Trump. So it's a different thing. It's not
containment anymore. It is like,
no, don't rile us up. If you rile us up, we will absolutely hit you in the face,
which has never been Biden's message, but it's definitely Trump's.
I think that's absolutely right. And, you know, there's a lot of people that project their own ideas of foreign policy on Donald Trump because of the sentence that you heard,
like ad infinitum, that he didn't start any new wars,
that that somehow translates into the fact that he's kind of a pussycat on the global stage.
I think there's a few things about this. I mean, you think of, you know, Kash Patel,
for instance. I mean, this is the most MAGA guy that you see on on Bannon show. And, you know,
a week ago, he's like, we have to prioritize our relationship with Israel.
And it's making so many of those people, Megan, that you're referencing, you know, on Twitter and
there's a little upset, a little exercise like this is not what we want. It's like you do remember
the Abraham Accords, right? You do see the the polling in Israel when it came to Kamala Harris
versus Donald Trump, who they preferred by an enormous margin. It was Donald Trump.
And they would not prefer that in the middle of a war, in the most brutal war in its history,
if they thought Donald Trump was soft on these issues. I mean, it doesn't matter what, I mean,
Donald Trump is obviously has a flair for, you know, going big and saying, you know,
since the founding of the Republic, nothing like this has ever been seen. As Matt points out, I guess that's Hiroshima and Nagasaki together on one day. You know, he's
doing the Donald Trump bluster. But I talked to an Israeli yesterday after this thing came out,
after this truth. So someone sent it to him and we were talking and he is a very moderate kind of guy
and had this kind of glow on his face. And we were
talking about how Joe Biden, Joe Biden never said that. He never came out and said, and keeping in
mind that of the hostages that are there, there are Americans. And I know that people don't consider
them Americans because they're dual nationals. They served in the IDF and they're Israeli
Americans, but they're American citizens there. And has there
been a constant drumbeat or any drumbeat coming from that podium that Joe Biden's never behind,
but I suppose it would be Kareem Jean-Pierre saying, give them back and give them back now,
or there are going to be enormous consequences. No, we've seen a lot of fiddling with Israel and
like, well, maybe we'll have a weapons embargo.
I mean, does anyone think in the non-interventionist universe that there's going to be a weapons embargo on Israel through Donald Trump? You got to be kidding me. No, that's not going
to happen. I mean, Ukraine thing too. I mean, the Russians responded to his ideas about a peace
settlement saying, no, this is ridiculous. And you don't you say this is ridiculous to Donald
Trump. He's not going to like go away into the night and say, well, you know, I don't believe
in intervention. I think that, you know, the Russian reaction in the last couple of days
towards the Kellogg plan of what will happen in Ukraine was one of total contempt. And he's not
going to appreciate that. And I think that he is probably telling in Zelensky in the calls with him,
you know, yeah,
you know, amp it up and then we'll come in and we'll solve it. He's not somebody that's like, just lie down your weapons and let's take what is happening to you right now. That's just not who he
is. You raise a good point about what Trump is about to inherit, right? So we not only have,
yes, the hostages still in the custody of Hamas, but the Ukraine war amping up to a dangerous level right before he takes the office.
And then, of course, the thing in Syria is just it's almost hard to get your arms around that Bashar al-Assad could fall, that this sort of dictator, strongman, you know, villain in the eyes of America for decades now. How about he's been in the news forever? I mean, since I feel like, I can't remember not having it be Bashar al-Assad
as the boogeyman of Syria
and the chemical weapons and the whole thing
with the civil war there spun out of control.
And now it's like he could go down, you know,
one of the major cities in Syria fell to these rebels
and one of the presidential palaces, but not his. But he
could be forced to flee. I don't know where it's going to land. But then you look at who's rising
and you're like, huh? Right? The dictator, you know, because these groups who are sort of
storming the palaces and taking over the cities don't look all that friendly to the United States or,
you know, Christians or peace lovers. And yet they're trying to sort of say, we've reformed,
you know, you could work with us. Like stability is what's best in the Middle East. That's not
what Donald Trump is walking into. No, it's not. And on the Syria thing, just quickly,
that, you know, the group that is taking over vast swaths
of the country and, and, and, you know, took over Aleppo, which is a city that used to have 50,
60,000 Christians and is down to about 10,000. And they say now, and there's been some reporting
on the ground, we'll see how this pans out that this group has been, you know, broadly ecumenical
on their way in. They were surprised that they weren't being executed,
arrested, whatever. There hasn't been some sort of ethnic or religious cleansing.
But keeping in mind, Megan, to your point, these are people, you know, one of these commanders was
in U.S. custody at one point in Iraq. I mean, these are people that have denounced their
association with both ISIS and al-Qaeda. I mean, do we believe that? I very, very highly doubt it.
But we get back to that situation that people came to in 2006. It's like Saddam Hussein was a bad guy.
He was a scumbag. And he was the butcher of Iraq for so long. And as Assad, you know, keep in mind
that he was granted that position from Hafez al-Assad, his father, who was also a butcher in Syria. But the Syrians, of course,
have been supported by Hezbollah and by Russia. Russia's carrying out airstrikes in Aleppo today.
They hadn't done that since 2016. So, I mean, this is a chaotic situation that Donald Trump
is inheriting. And this is not one in which you can make a deal. You can't make a deal with these
people. I mean, these are people that don't give a shit about America. These are religious extremists on one side. A country like Syria has
been America's enemy and Hezbollah has been America's enemy for a long time, too. But they
saw the opening and that opening was because of what Israel was doing and what Ukraine was doing.
Ukraine had their Russians bogged down and the Israelis had taken out almost the entire Hezbollah
leadership. And so the vacuum is being filled. And that's the Middle East. And that's what Donald Trump is inheriting. when, you know, it wasn't really for a while. Anyway, yeah, we were like all the forces came
together to make things a bit of a powder keg, not a bit of like an actual powder keg right now.
And so Trump, as much of a dealmaker as he is and a negotiator and, you know, yes, I think
instinctually non-interventionalist, but also he doesn't fuck around. You know, he's not afraid to
drop a bomb on Soleimani, that kind of thing.
He's going to have to play this just right, you know, because we actually do have a number of conflicts that are begging for our intervention and an American populace that doesn't want it.
I don't think the American populace wants to get involved in anything involving Iran or Syria or Russia.
I think they'd like to see us out of the Ukrainian conflict, Camille.
Well, I was just going to say that we haven't even talked about the situation in Asia.
I mean, there's a weird Ukrainian connection with the North Koreans sending troops to Russia
to participate in that conflict.
The news today about martial law being declared in South Korea.
And then there's China.
There's always China.
And there's certainly the
conflict that's roiling with respect to tariffs and the likely implications for China there.
But we're always watching China and Taiwan. So there are so many broiling conflicts at this
point and potential conflicts. So Trump is really going to have his hands full. And to the extent he
does have some dealmaking savvy, it would be wonderful to see him deploy it. I do wonder what kind of conversations he's having with the Saudis
at this point where the Middle East is concerned. I mean, to the extent there were things to
celebrate with respect to foreign policy during the Trump administration, the Abraham Accords,
and the progress that seemed to be made there was something. And it almost certainly helped to precipitate the horribleness that Hamas unleashed on October 6th.
But I do wonder what kind of conversations are happening there, because if they can get the Saudis back to the table in a more meaningful way, perhaps that can help to unwind things.
But I certainly don't have any expectation that Hamas is actually going to comply with the request. Certainly the early statements don't suggest as
much. But Matt Welsh, that raises such a good point because think about it. We started the
show talking about the media like, oh, he's damaged his legacy. You know, Joe Biden has
with this pardon of his son. He's tarnished his perfect legacy. And, you know, you were saying this is
so absurd, like, look what he did during COVID and so on. And look what he did in the Middle East.
Look what happened with respect to the U.S. foreign policy during the four years between
Trump leaving and Trump returning. You know, things are on fire and there's been no accountability.
And by the way, the media doesn't hold Joe Biden accountable for any of this. There's no talk anymore about the disastrous
Afghanistan withdrawal and how provocative it was, or just, I mean, the abandonment of the Abraham
accords and the road that we were on, not toward solving everything in the Middle East, that's too
grand a goal, but towards stability there, like I said, stability.
So Trump goes back now. It's like one step forward, two steps backward. It's going to take a lot just to I don't even know if it's possible just to get back to where we were in 2020 when he
was voted out. One thing to think about is that the Abraham Accords are still in place. They're
still strong. They haven't really backslid. One of the first things that
Biden did upon becoming president said, yeah, okay, we're keeping the embassy in Jerusalem and
the Abraham Accords are still with us. He saw the point of it, which is not surprising.
I think that we have as Americans a tendency with some understandable reason, but we do it to excess of always casting ourselves as the major player in every conflict.
Can I just say one thing? I'm going to let you finish your point.
But the thing, yes, okay, fine, to your point.
But one of the very first things that happened with Joe Biden was he humiliated himself in front of the Saudis.
Remember? He embarrassed us and himself when he went over there.
Right, after saying he didn't actively pursue.
After saying he wasn't going to.
Yes, after saying he wasn't.
And then he tried to strong arm them.
And it was a humiliation.
It was another Barack Obama type of humiliation for the United States on an international scale.
I am nobody's fan of Saudi Arabia.
It's a very mild way of putting it.
I think they've had a very malign influence
on American foreign policy. To me, the most humiliating thing that's ever involved Saudi
Arabia is George W. Bush walking hand in hand in his ranch in Crawford with, I forget which
member of the House of Saud that was, but it was just gross to see that happen within,
it wasn't Bandar, Bandar whose nickname was Bandar Bush because he had been so friendly with the Bush family stretching back decades. But this was the country where 15 of the 19 hijackers single administration, Democrat or Republican, but to different degrees, has been overly reliant. Saudi Arabia always puts itself in the middle of any peace process. Sometimes that works well, sometimes it doesn't. One of the things that they were asking for by administration is that they want to become a major non-NATO ally as well. That's the thing. They want security guarantees from in addition to the many uh scores of billions of dollars worth of hardware that they pay for um and i don't and
they've been holding up a lot of normalization with israel uh dependent on that i don't want
us to give them that security guarantee i don't like the fact that we gave qatar uh that security
guarantee they don't deserve it um and it's part of the like, let's have our fingers in every in every little pie.
There are better ways and worse ways to do the Middle East.
None of them are going to guarantee that the Middle East is going to work out well in the end because it almost never does.
It would be great if it did better. curious to see whether the Trump approach to Iran in particular, and also to Israel, that is much
different than the Biden and kind of democratic approach, Obama approach writ large. I'm interested
to see what kind of fruits that yields. And it's also interesting to observe that some of the
incoming Trump administration people, including the guy who's the head of the transition team for foreign policy, has said pretty upfront, we're not interested in regime change in Iran, right? So that's playing
to your kind of non-interventionist side. A lot of the people who worry about neocons or American
interventionism are always worried about, you know, Lindsey Graham is going to try to topple
yet another regime somewhere, maybe in Tehran. And I think it's good and right that Trump coming in says not interested,
but also laying down the kind of thing like if you transgress against us, it's going to turn out
very, very badly for you. I think that's more in keeping with what American appetites and
attitudes are. And I think that'll also become true of the Syrian civil war ongoing. I mean, it's more than a decade now. I can't
imagine American intervening in any meaningful sense. Do you remember even like when John McCain
would go there and he's like posing with guys like I found the moderate militias and like,
you know, the next day we'd find out that they'd like dismembered somebody on live television.
There's not going to be a moderate partner in Syria. It's just not going to happen.
No government there is going to be good. It's all going to be a mess. And hopefully,
Trump has the wisdom not to get in there and meddle. I think what he might do is sort of
draw a cordon around it and say, don't spill your borders. Whatever you do, be savage to one another,
but don't let that spill over here or else you're going to get punched in the jaw.
Just a quick addendum to that of the things that Trump is inheriting. I mean, obviously, it's never monocausal. There's a number of reasons that
October 7th happened, but one of them is upsetting that relationship with Saudi Arabia. As Matt
points out, there was a Saudi-U.S. defense alignment treaty that PIPA was going to have to pass the Senate that was about 90,
95% done, but it required that the Israelis say that we recognize a two-state solution is in the
future. And then it would require Saudi Arabia to recognize Israel. And what happened after October
7th and the upset within the country of making any sorts of deals with Israel has made that nearly
impossible. Trump has a very good relationship with Mohammed bin Salman in the Saudis in general.
So we'll see how that goes. I mean, that that I think is one of the biggest foreign policy
challenges in Iran, too. And that's right. You can say that. I mean, there's no idea that we're
going to invade Iran. This has been a conversation since 2003. Iran's next, Iran's next. No, but I think that the Trump administration, and I know a number
of the people that are involved in the kind of Iran areas of this and know what they believe,
I mean, and they will make Tehran hurt, particularly with like oil exports and things
like that and make the economy hurt.
And the Iranians are rational. They're very sensitive to things like that. Because remember,
I mean, the Israelis just hit, you know, at 100 some odd Israeli Air Force planes going into Iranian airspace and bombing things in Iran and nobody really even noticed it.
That if you had said that five years ago, that's going to precipitate a regional war. It didn't.
It's a very delicate situation. But Trump really, really has his work cut out for him in the Middle East.
It's crazy when you think about it. All right. So we've got Hezbollah. We've got
Hamas. We've got our hostages in Israel. We have got civil war in Syria amounting to a potential
deposition of Assad. We'll have to see whether he
withstands this and who's ruling Syria in the next year. And we've got Ukraine fighting Russia.
And as you point out, North Korea now sending its troops to help the Russians.
And we've got China and Taiwan. And I mean, I think almost no American appetite to do much if China goes for
Taiwan. I mean, they're in a, other than like the most neocony of neocons, nobody wants to see
Americans get involved in a proxy or direct war with China over Taiwan, chips or no chips.
There's just a lot. There's been, I don't know. You could make the case that it shouldn't be handled by
Truth Social, but right now it's the way the president-elect communicates, and we'll see.
We'll see whether he gets any results. All right, stand by. We're going to take a quick break,
and then we're going to come back. Yet another attack drops on Pete Hegseth,
and we will go behind it. The October 15th deadline has come and gone. Are you prepared for what's coming?
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A couple of things to go over in our last block together. Pete Hegseth, for Pete Hegseth,
the hits just keep on coming. The latest is from CBS News. The headline is GOP insiders sought Hegseth's removal as leader of veterans group in
2016. They go on to say, one of those who led the effort to oust Hegseth as the head of concerned
veterans of America in 2016 was Jessie Jane Duff. That name may be familiar to our audience because
she was at some point a Fox News
contributor. She might still be. She's a Marine veteran. And she worked for this group at the
same time Pete was running it. Let's see. They say this is according to multiple Republican
insiders familiar with the events. Duff sought Hegseth's removal from leadership roles in the
veterans group. According to CBS News, Duff,
a Newsmax analyst, served as an advisor for Concerned Veterans for America while he helmed
the organization from 13 to 16. CBS has learned the allegations contained in the seven-page report,
first reported by the New Yorker's Jane Mayer, originated with Duff. So now we know that the
so-called whistleblower, who was in the New Yorker report that we got to yesterday alleging that Pete went to a strip club and allegedly stormed the stage.
A source close to the situation tells us he was not at the strip club.
This is not true at all that he admits to drinking and, you know, having drank too much here and there.
But that there are specifics in there that are not true and that were said by a disgruntled employee. And now we know who we're talking about. It's Jesse Jane Duff,
who does not like Pete. And it's probably safe to say he doesn't like her. The report also reveals
he fired her from Concerned Veterans for America, according to two sources. And it is believed by
his supporters that she's been out to get him ever since,
filing reports like this one, trying to get him ousted at the veterans organization where he was ultimately let go,
and raising questions about improprieties when it comes to the money at this group,
saying that they had tons of dough in the coffers he raised, according to this CBS News report. Let's see. I want to get
my numbers right. That. OK, first, it was Veterans for Freedom. That was one of the groups that he
became a director at in 2006 and executive director in 2007. In 2008, filing show the
organization raised over eight point seven million in revenue, but spent nine million.
By 2010, tax filing show revenue had dropped to just under 265,000.
Then they say he started Concerned Veterans for America in 2011.
By 2016, the year he resigned, so five years later,
the organization raised 15.9 million and listed 16.4 million in expenses.
The following year, after he stepped down, the nonprofit reduced his
expenses after major programs developed in the last fiscal year were paused. Okay, so what we
have here is it appears Jesse Jane Duff getting fired by Pete. She doesn't like him. We don't
know why. It could be this financial stuff as she's allegedly claiming, or it could be
something else. It could be because he fired her as it appears his side is claiming. Uh, but it's
another hit, right? It's that he's, he can't manage financial money, finance finances. And
in this CBS news piece, they quote Margaret Hoover, who's now host of PBS's Firing Line, who was a former advisor to Vets for Freedom.
And she tells CNN that Hegseth managed the organization, quote, very poorly,
expressing doubt that he could run the sprawling Defense Department when he had struggled with a
staff of less than 10 people and a budget of under 10 million. The staff at the Department
of Defense is almost 3 million. And we have 750 military installations around the world in a budget of, I didn't realize it was quite this large, $842 billion.
Which understates it, actually.
Billion, yes.
So where does that leave us on the latest with respect to Pete Hegseth?
I mean, as soon as the Jane Mayer story came out, I went instinctively to the usual place of like, oh, there's a Jane Mayer hit piece about a Republican nominee to a thing.
So I probably can safely discount a lot that comes from there.
Margaret Hoover, I know and I think is an honorable person.
So I will listen to her testimony with interest for me, the, the baseline with Pete,
who I know a tiny bit, um, uh, green rooms. I'm sure we all kind of know him similarly.
Uh, Megan, you probably know him a little bit more, um, uh, is that does the sloppiness of his personal life, which normally I don't care about. Uh, yeah, I would don't care about that with, uh, RFK junior, for example, heroin addict
for 15 years, whatever.
Um, you know, my complaints with him are separate from that, but it's the DOD.
So, uh, like, do we have a different standard for that kind of sloppiness?
I'm old enough.
And Megan, you're almost old enough, uh, to Tower days back a long time ago, whereas like, oh, is he, you know, his drinking issues?
Is it big enough to maybe make us think that we shouldn't have this person in this sensitive job?
Pete sounds like he's been cutting a swath out there, which, you know, hats off.
But do I want Michael Moynihan to be the head of the department of defense as opposed to hhs um um well because i don't want to say compromise is it because when
megan said the thing about forming the strip club stage wasn't true i was disappointed
i was like oh exactly i was on his side and then it turned out not to be true that was a source
that was a single source uh so we've all been there come on i think i think i
haven't been there moynihan uh i think so that's a legitimate question worth asking um uh regardless
of the hit piece-ness of the stuff that's coming at him and then just managerial experience i'm not
totally impressed with like oh he's they spent 16 million dollars and only raised 15.6 i mean
welcome to nonprofit world.
Those are kind of normal.
If it was really, really lopsided, then we can talk.
And I haven't gotten to the weeds of it.
But it is legitimate to say to someone who's going to manage a gigantic organization, what is your experience with managing organizations?
Is it good?
Is it bad?
How big is it?
What do people who saw you manage those organizations say?
And I have seen a couple of people have said, hey, it's great.
There's no problems.
So, but I think those are legitimate things to ask about.
And also, I mean, just the thought that it's like Pete sitting there with his little, you know,
visor on and his pencil and his pad
figuring out the budget at DOD is not what's gonna happen.
You know, he's being hired to do other things there
that Trump prioritizes and that, you know,
the electorate prioritizes, like de-wokifying the military,
taking out these generals who just wanna see their names in the paper and putting in somebody who
cares more about the enlisted guys and isn't so, you know, trigger happy that they push for, you
know, the first response being military engagement. You know, somebody who's actually served, who
understands that that's actually very risky and what it's done for the United States and for the guys involved and gals over the past 20 years. I mean,
Pete knows that firsthand. So I do think that like, he may not have the managerial skills on
the dough, but he's not going to be doing that. But you, you said something that was interesting
to me, Matt, which is like, do you, do you hold the guys like personal foibles against him? And
we've been having that debate on the show.
I subscribe to Ann Coulter's Substack.
She's always entertaining.
And she was, she had just interviewed Heather McDonald.
And I've interviewed Heather many times.
And Heather has said this to me too.
Heather has absolutely no use really for the Me Too movement.
And for like deposing men based on their personal conduct
when it comes to, you know, office romances or male libido.
You know, she basically says that's something that's biologically engineered in men from the dawn of time.
And we shouldn't be hiring and firing guys based on it.
I mean, I'm sure you could find the most egregious case that Heather would find upsetting, too.
But just as a general rule, she's really not into the me too thing. And Anne's point was actually the more traditionally conservative point saying character matters. And, you know, saying Anne was like, I don't know about this rape allegation against Pete, but I'm concerned enough about all three. And that matters to me. And like these allegations about
how he's treating underlings, you know, women in particular. And, you know, she would not approve
of the stripper story, even though they're denying it. And so like and it really does like
it reminded me of 2010 at Fox News. That's exactly the angle we would have come into the story on
had it been a Republican or a Democrat. And have we have we changed so much in those 14 years? Maybe it's
Trump's ascendancy, ascendancy, but all the bullshit that's been done to the country that
leads us to be like, we don't give a shit any longer. Where do you guys stand on it?
And I mean, of all of the departments, of all the appointments, I mean, for it to be
the Pentagon, for it to be the Defense Department, I mean, they actually care about that sort of
thing there. Like that kind of conduct amongst enlisted persons is a problem, a huge problem.
It is not a small thing that folks are going to wink at and say, it doesn't really matter here.
To the extent Pete is going to be the guy, he has to actually be an exemplar on those things.
And his conduct, personal, private conduct, the extent it becomes public, certainly, it's
consequential and it's relevant.
There aren't a lot of things that we can kind of measure this up against.
I think it's correct, Megan.
He won't be responsible for being the bean counter there.
Although I imagine some of his decisions and the focus of his particular leadership and leadership team are going to have an awful lot to say about whether or not the Pentagon becomes actually worse, which is hard to imagine with respect to its kind of fiduciary unseriousness as an institution. Finding someone who is more disciplined, who has fewer skeletons in the closet is perhaps a good look for the Trump administration.
One wonders if they're if they're not actually going to move away from him at this point.
I share Matt's skepticism of the more recent revelations, like a single source who is kind of complaining, who turns out to be someone who has kind of some personal animus towards you. That's not so exciting to me. And it's not at all surprising to see that kind of thing, scoring headlines with someone this controversial, but against the backdrop of
all of the other things, your mom writing a rather impassioned note to you about your
horrific personal conduct. It's not a great look. And it's the sort of thing that one actually has
to address and address pretty forcefully. The mom note didn't get to me at all. I was like, my, you should hear the way my mom talks to me, but love you, love you mom.
But it got to Doug. Like my husband was like, that's not good. He was like, you know,
having heard what she said, he's like, it's really not great. But I was like, come on.
Like the mother saw a son back from the combat tours, treating his wives badly in the midst of a contentious divorce, calling the soon to be ex-wife who he had cheated on names and said, knock it off.
You are not only abusing this woman with those words, but you're a serial abuser of what you cheated on your first wife.
This is exactly how, God forbid, I ever found my son in this situation.
I have two.
I would hope I'd speak
to him. Like, get your shit together. I do not approve of one thing you've done in the past two
years when it comes to women or whatever years. That one, I don't know. I wasn't as moved by it
by you and Duggar, Camille. I would say, by the way, there are a number of Senate Republicans
who aren't just Susan Collins who are dismayed by this and worried about it.
And, you know, Wall Street Journal did some reporting on this of like, you know, we're going to wait for we'd like to see the FBI investigation into this.
That's not the Jan Jane Mayer investigation, who's somebody who obviously took shots at Kavanaugh, did some shoddy reporting there.
I think did some shoddy reporting back when she did a book about Anita Hill. And, you know, then ran to the defense of Al Franken, who, by the way, I think deserved defending. But she's very partisan in her defenses. But to Anne's point, I mean, it shows you a lot of things. I mean, I disagree with Anne on about 70% of things, but I do find her wildly entertaining and funny.
She's amazing. She's very
smart. She's very smart. She's very consistent on this, on this issue from the Clinton. I mean,
we knew of Ann Coulter because she wrote a book called High Crimes and Misdemeanors about what
Bill Clinton was doing. She's very consistent on, on these issues. So, but the one thing that gives
me some pause is I think that it starts in a lot of ways with these movements
that go way overboard. The reason so many of us are reticent when these charges come up was
because of this kind of fanaticism of the Me Too movement that had some real honest targets that
deserve to be taken down. And I could, you know, list off 10 of them, but we started lumping
everybody into the same thing. You know, Louis CK was the same as some guy was weird to you at work.
And, you know, at the, on the other side of this, there's so many people you have to like
these people who are responsible for these movements. I mean, I know you talk a lot,
Megan, about trans issues. There was a article in the New York Times last week that trans advocates
saying, maybe we're going a little too far with this. Maybe we're pushing a little too hard
and there's no grace in what we do when people disagree with us. And that's JK Rowling, that's
you, et cetera. But that's the same thing in the Me Too movement is that when you have a movement
like this in your hands and you sort of control it and you deploy it and you just kind of ruin people's lives or try to get them kicked out of their company or whatever it might be, get kicked out of politics.
There is a backlash eventually if you go too far, if you're weaponizing something for political purposes.
And that's why I think when I saw the rape allegation and I read a little bit about it, and I might be totally wrong about this. I have no idea what the answer to this is. But when I read that, I was like, oh, I'm just kind of conditioned at this point
because there's been so much politicization of these charges. And it's no surprise that it's
Jane Mayer coming out and saying, and again, people who are hyper-partisan, people who have
access to grind can be right. Jane Mayer can be right about all this stuff. I do not know.
I have not done the counter research. Let me tell you something about that.
Yeah. In that same CBS News report that I was reading from with this
latest, you know, Jesse Jane Duff and financial issues, they summarize that rape allegation on
the last page just to make sure you didn't miss it. Last month, it was revealed that Hegseth had
secretly paid a financial settlement to a woman who had accused him of raping her in 2017 at a
Republican women's banquet at the Hyatt Regency in Monterey, California. The city of Monterey
released its 2017 investigation into Hegseth. The accuser, who has not been publicly named,
reported she felt as though she had been drugged and recalled repeatedly saying no while in a hotel
room with Hegseth. She alleged that he prevented her from leaving and was on top of her. CBS News
does not publicly name individuals who have reported an alleged sexual assault
unless that person chooses to publicly identify themselves.
That's it.
It's a very strange story.
I mean, and I think we talked about this on the podcast as well.
No, then they say the allegation, according to his lawyer,
the allegation was investigated by the police department
and they found no evidence for it.
They did, then they point out that they did not bring charges
and that Pete denies it and says it was consensual.
There's not, this audience knows the details of this case better than anybody right now because we've done, we've gone in depth on this multiple times.
None of the exculpatory facts that are laid out in that police report, none is in there, not a one.
And so this is what happens.
And my little note reads so unfair. This is what happens
to men in particular, right? Like somebody drops a bomb of a report, the original reporting,
and then the police report comes out. You know, honest reporters will go through it and report
the stuff that's bad for the person who's accused and the stuff that's good for the person who's
accused. And a fair report would tell you both. But what we have here is let's just summarize.
And all we'll pick is the stuff that's terrible for Pete. Oh, he was by the door. None of the
stuff that she was seen. She didn't look drunk to anybody at any point, including her own husband.
Her alleged period in which she could have been drunk, drugged was only two hours long.
That's not how the date rape drug works. She refused to participate in a pretextual phone
call where she called him with police on the line after the fact to ask him about the alleged crime.
I mean, on and on, like there, there's so many, three witnesses saw her. She was totally sober.
She was on camera, totally sober, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. That's not, none of that's in
there. Her, her story, what Pete said was consensual.
She told me she was going to tell the husband that she fell asleep and the husband at the same
time telling the cops she came home and told me she fell asleep. No, it doesn't get mentioned.
It's just not not this person, by the way. It really screws up the incentives. You have no
incentive to not attack somebody who you really don't like. Or if you made a mistake and you want to get out of it, there's, there's no negative repercussions for you. Even if there's
exculpatory evidence on Pete Hegseth's side, because you can never be named because we don't
do that as journalists. If you release the name of the accuser and that's how she should be referred
to, not as the victim. We don't know if this person's a victim. This person's claimed she's a victim. The police were not persuaded. She should be the accuser. That's a fair term until there's been a jury verdict. So the accuser, we don't know her name. And therefore, what if this person has accused someone in the past? That would be a massive development. And so what if you are a man who is out there
and knows that you've been accused by Jane Doe,
and you know her by her proper name,
but you have zero clue
that she is now the person accusing Pete Hegseth?
And maybe if you heard this person's actual name,
you might come forward to say,
this person accused me too, and it was total bullshit.
Now, I don't know whether any of that could happen here.
I'm just saying the fact that we protect the identities of these, quote, victims is entirely
unfair to the person being accused.
And that's just one way in which it hampers a guy from offering a full defense.
Yeah, there's like an appropriate level of sensitivity that you
have to have when dealing with these cases. We all know people who have had their lives decimated
by erroneous charges personally. In some cases that happens in the pages of the New York times.
And it's, it's awful and terrible. And one, I think the most generous thing you can presume is that they're attempting to protect these alleged victims by kind of treading carefully here. But when you only do that in one direction and you hide or obscure anything that might be exculpatory evidence for the accused, then you're not doing them a service. Once it hits the headlines and it becomes obvious that
there are details here that complicate the situation. This is a married woman.
She has every incentive if she was actually just having an affair to continually and consistently
misrepresent it as something else, because obviously it's beneficial to her, especially
if she starts to ask for money. Now, is it also the case that an honest victim would do precisely
the same thing? Sure it is, but it still matters. And actually being serious and nuanced about this,
as opposed to having a hypersensitivity that gives all of the deference to the accuser and
presumes essentially the guilt and culpability of the accused, especially if it's someone who
happens to get around a lot and might be more likely to stumble across someone who is a nefarious actor in this way, that's wrong.
And we really do actually still need to correct the scales with respect to that.
Guess what else is not in this report, Camille, summarizing the alleged rape allegation.
The fact that she was married at the time, as you just pointed out,
and that the husband was asleep in their hotel room with their two children down the hall, which might give somebody some pause about coming clean on what looks like a booty call and not a rape.
Omitted.
If you want to summarize that there's this alleged rape allegation against him, you may as a news organization.
But part of the pain in the ass of summarizing a complex case and believe me, I've been there many times is you have to pick and choose which details to use and which to leave out in order to be fair to the person you are besmirching.
And CBS News, it's a fail.
And it does lead me to say this is what I think of everything else you just
reported. What else is in there about the fucking finances that you didn't print? What is there
about, Jesse Jane Duff, I like Jesse Jane, but I'm just saying, what are you leaving out on your
latest allegations, you and Jane Mayer? And this is why, okay, we know that he cheated on the three wives. Maybe that's enough. But everything outside
of that, I'm like, no, this can't be the reason he doesn't get confirmed because this is a corrupt
system. I want to point out that the media on this issue, this is not just a kind of close
judgment call. When you have something like, well, we don't know. They didn't choose to,
to the police didn't choose to prosecute or arrest him. This is not just for close calls. I want to point out somebody
that has really, really had their lives ruined in a false accusation. And Matt knows this person
because he's a huge baseball fan. Trevor Bauer was a pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers and
he was accused in 2021. In 2020, he won the Cy Young Award. This is not a
slouch. This guy has not pitched in the major leagues since. And I want to read you just the
first paragraph of an AP story after this whole thing blew up. And it blew up not like it wasn't
close anymore. He had video evidence that this woman was lying. An Arizona woman who accused
former major league pitcher Trevor Bauer of sexual assault has been charged with defrauding the baseball player.
An indictment unsealed Monday in Maricopa County Superior Court charges the woman with fraud, theft by extortion, both felonies, but doesn't provide blah, blah, blah.
The next sentence, the Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they have been victim of sexual assault unless they come forward publicly.
He was,
they didn't name her and she was charged with fraud.
He went to play in Japan.
And then I think he just,
he just refused a,
a,
like a Mexican winter league contract.
He didn't play baseball in the major leagues and he was,
life was destroyed.
This woman was charged and they don't
name her oh my god we covered the trevor bauer we covered that and how it fell apart and it was a
nightmare but i did not realize that that there was an ap report after she'd been charged refusing
to name her holy she said she was accused of sexual assault and not only the charges are not
only that she wasn't that she wasn't and she tried to extort him and they still wouldn't name her it's it's sickening the lessons always are that uh that
incent people always respond to incentives it's the basic uh economics idea um and also that
behavior that gets rewarded gets repeated and for a long time in the in the sort of apex of the me
too movement there's a lot of people
who are rewarded either through making allegations themselves or participating in social media pylon
that had to do with allegations. And you're just rewarded simply by like that rush of excitement
when you kind of popularize the takedown of a person that you think is bad or is famous or something that you sort of
suspect is guilty of wrongdoing. And the behavior that gets rewarded, that gets repeated also refers
to the way that the media handles themselves. It refers to the way that Jane Mayer handles herself,
not just with Kavanaugh, but also in her really bad reporting on the Koch brothers back in the day
and the way that it's completely the opposite, how she reported on George Soros about the exact same stuff, basically, but it looked all saintly
when it came to him. When you have sort of like a partisan coded reward structures for people who
engage in very one-sided partisan journalism that isn't particularly good journalism, then you're going to do it again. It's going to be a single source story that is throwing someone like Mark Judge under the bus and and whatever, you know as individuals or people in the media to call out obviously bad and bad faith behavior as it happens.
But it also depends on consumers.
Like, don't reward people who do this, who pass around things they don't know is true, whether or not something happened.
They're participating gleefully in the social media pylon, et cetera.
Got to stand up and say, hey, look, you don't know this and you might be ruining someone's life.
Maybe like slow your roll a little bit.
The this is why I look at this.
Like I think about when I practice law and if you try a case and you introduce a bunch of evidence against somebody and then you introduce some sort of a bomb against them, and it turns out that bomb was
inappropriately admitted, your verdict is going to get thrown out. Even if you had a bunch of
other evidence that was valid and could have persuaded the jury to reach a verdict that was
in your favor, it's going to get thrown out. Because if there's something that was introduced
and it shouldn't have been, that is prejudicial against the defendant that could have affected the outcome of the verdict, your verdict is going to go away.
And that's why like this whole process is so corrupted, not just against Pete, against,
you know, the election against Trump was, it was perverted. Like a lot of these nominees are
having this done to them right now. And with Pete, I feel like, okay, we know about the infidelities.
Let's deal with that.
Like I'm perfectly willing to have a debate on whether that is a game changer for the department
of defense head. But I am, I, I can't have an honest debate with anybody who's going to raise
this stuff with me and say, well, I saw it on CBS news, like, or any Senator who hasn't done his or
her homework that wants to try to cross examine Pete in a way that will undoubtedly be very unfair. And that's why I keep winding up with like he has to be confirmed. He has to be in the same way Trump had to be elected. He has to be confirmed. The middle finger must be put in place. And if he sucks, he will be fired. I do believe Trump will fire him if he does any of this shit while in that position. I think he'll be well supported right underneath the top level as well.
I also think I've said this yesterday, I think at the top of DOJ, at the top of FBI or at the top of DOD, we could look to Ron DeSantis.
I say it again. We really like he could be of great help to us.
This is another guy. He would fit in perfectly here.
He knows how to bust shit up and fight.
He doesn't
care what people write about him in the media, but he's an extremely competent executive and he
happens to be a Navy man. So, okay. That's, that's where I stand. I think he should be confirmed,
but if he can't be, or if we're looking for alternatives, you know, DeSantis' time in
Florida is limited thanks to term limits and we could do, we could do a lot worse than him.
That's not about the final word. I'll give you guys the final word you have a better choice i we've ruled out
moynihan but anyone else we did i'm not ruling him out i like it i like i'm willing to forgive
on this stage i just got up there because i thought i had left a dollar bill there that i
tried to give one and i gave two so i had to get up and get it back. Fair. That's totally reasonable.
My answer is disqualifying.
Yeah.
But OK.
This is really unfair.
OK.
Very, very unfair.
I do like that recommendation, though.
It is frequently suggested that there are no serious people who like Donald Trump who
could possibly be appointed.
And he's got these kind of rogues gallery of people.
I think he's just decided that
he doesn't really care about the vetting process, but he's not doing himself any favors either by
going about things this way. There are almost certainly better appointments that he could make
in a couple of instances. People who are less controversial would still potentially,
presumably, be loyal to him and not undermine him personally, but would also just be better
at governing these institutions, these really important, massively consequential institutions
who have more, let's say, more evidence on their CV that they're actually well-suited for the job,
as opposed to combat experience, obviously important. Like your educational
pedigree, obviously important, but it matters if you've worked in and around these institutions
in some way, shape or form, because they are bizarre and strange. You don't want it only to
be staffed with creatures from the inside, but there are almost certainly some better choices
here. And I think the Trump administration should probably give that some consideration.
I think the person you need
for this job um i don't like i think it's a it's kind of a gimmick to focus on dei and if anyone
listens to the fifth column they know that this is not stuff that we appreciate in any way as a
matter of fact we loathe it but i think that's a kind of small percentage of what needs to be done
at dod obviously i think what you need is i I mean, some of the combat experience, of course.
I mean, all of this stuff makes sense to me.
But Megan, you have been doing the show for a very long time.
You've been a journalist for a very long time.
Your eyes popped out of your head when you read $850 billion, as Matt pointed out, surely
an undercount.
The person who goes into DOD needs to be the
person that goes in there and trims the fat and says, there's a lot of bad spending here,
and we need to kind of make this a leaner machine. I think that's the thing that, and I don't think
Pete Hegseth is the guy to do that. No offense to him. I mean, my pick would be not somebody who wrote a book that, you know, excoriates DOD for, for being, you know, too woke or something. I think it's
just somebody that needs to go in there and stop the never ending growth of that department. It
just, it gets bigger and bigger and bigger every year. And now we have Republicans actually,
because Republicans always say we want to cut government, but not DOD. That was always the military was always a piece apart.
And now we have a Republican Party who doesn't think that way.
So someone going in there with a with a scalpel or a sledgehammer seems like a better choice to me.
He would never do this for reasons that will become immediately obvious.
But an actually good pick would be our friend and former guest in the
fifth column,
Peter Meyer,
former Republican Congressman.
He did vote for Trump's second impeachment.
So Trump is never going to do anything except have him taste his boot.
But a young guy who has served,
has spent a crucial time in Afghanistan,
including he did some heroic stuff with seth molten if i'm not
mistaken um in afghanistan trying to get people out during the during the debacle uh myers done
somebody on the democratic side who's kind of coming towards your position don't be mean to him
no he can f right off no he isn't first of all he created all the conditions that he's now
complaining about he voted for all the shit that mandated
the boys and the girls sports. It's thanks to him that
he has to worry about his daughter's situation. Maybe he was out on a
walk in Nantucket and he was like,
I see the mistake of my ways.
Seth Bolton,
you're not forgiven. If you want to
come on the Megyn Kelly show, it's on.
Let's do this, my friend.
Under pressure
from the left, he's already walking it back being like i
didn't say that we should change anything i just said we should be talking we should be talking
about it he lost all his courage when he left the battlefield i'm sorry that's i uh don't be wrong
steph moulton come on uh not just so you should come on but that we all should go together uh
because we have some friends there to Salem, Massachusetts.
Yes.
Let's do a live witch trial with Seth Moulton, Megyn Kelly and the Pissed Collin.
Yes.
The trial of Seth Moulton.
Just so many bad Moynihan accents.
Oh, my God.
You could do weird.
I'm going to start it just like this.
I'm going to start it with, I never liked you.
Never liked you.
Yes.
Honestly, Meg, the next time we record together
in person, now that we know this is a thing,
we're drinking.
Yeah, yeah.
We're very offended when you drank with our friends
from Red Scare and not with us.
Yes.
We should have brought a bottle.
We owe you an apology.
We'll have the Doug Brunt special.
He loves to make the martinis.
I gotta go.
It's good.
We'll see you in Salem next month.
All right.
Bye.
Thanks, Megan.
Bye.
And thanks to all of our listeners
for spending the time with us today.
We appreciate it.
Don't forget to tune in tomorrow
where we're also going to have some amazing guests. We'll find out together who it is.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.