The Michael Knowles Show - Daily Wire Backstage: Go Buy Ben's Book Edition
Episode Date: July 25, 2020Is America headed for full-on divorce? Can Trump claw his way back in the polls? Was Portlandia a documentary? Join this roundtable discussion featuring Ben Shapiro, Andrew Klavan, Michael Knowles, ...and Daily Wire god-king Jeremy Boreing as they get to the bottom of these questions and more. LIMITED TIME OFFER: Become a Daily Wire All-Access member for 15% OFF with coupon code: BACKSTAGE and get a SECOND LEFTIST TEARS Tumbler: https://utm.io/uqGw Get Ben Shapiro’s new book, “How To Destroy America In Three Easy Steps,” on sale now at Amazon and Barnes & Noble! https://utm.io/uHcC Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, Michael Knowles here. The latest episode of Daily Wire Backstage, Go Buy Ben's book edition, is right around the corner, and you don't want to miss it. Join me, Ben Shapiro, Andrew Claven, and the God King, Jeremy Boring, as we talk about the madness in today's culture, and as we do our best to sell you on Ben's new book, how to destroy America in three easy steps. Take a listen.
Politicians pander to protesters. As police persist in preventing perpetual pandemonium in Portland, the pandemic precipitates preposterous presumptions, and,
Go buy Ben's book. This is the Daily Wire Backstage.
Welcome to the Daily Wire Backstage, Go Buy Ben's Book Edition. I'm Jeremy Boring, known around
these parts as your friendly neighborhood God King, and we're glad that you have tuned in.
Is America past the point of makeup sex? Can Donald Trump claw his way back in the polls?
Was Portlandia actually a documentary? Ben covers all of this and more in his book,
How to Destroy America in Three Easy Steps. If you don't have one, I've said it twice. Go Buy Ben's
book. I'm joined today, of course, by The Man of
himself, Mr. Bench Spiro, also by Andrew Claven and Michael Knowles, one of whom has actually
written other books and the other who has outsold both. Also, by the lovely Elisha Krause, who is with
us, via satellite, she'll be taking your questions hot off the interwebs and giving us a chance
to dazzle you with our answers. See, I, jazz hands. That wasn't even in the prompter. I just totally
ad-libbed that. Say hi, Alicia. Hi, Lisa. Hi, guys. How are you? It's good to be back. And yes,
I will be taking those subscriber questions. And how can you ask the questions you want to
Well, you have to be a Daily Wire member, an All-AxSember to be exact.
And if you're not an All-Axist member, then you're definitely missing out.
And if you're like me and you like a deal, turns out we have one for you.
Because All-Axed members get to participate in our All-A Live where one of the Daily Wire hosts
hangs out with you via live stream.
It's way better than a corporate Zoom, I promise.
And All-A members also join us for real-time online Q&A discussions, like the one that we're all
going to have together after tonight's episode of Backstage.
and it will be available on both the website and the DailyWire app.
So tune in to get your questions ready.
That's once again if you're an all-access member.
And if you're not, then head on over to dailywire.com slash subscribe to get your two,
yes, two leftist tears tumblers with that 15% off coupon code backstage right now.
That's dailywire.com slash subscribe.
Use the 15% off coupon code backstage right now and join us for the discussion after the show.
So I've been trying to figure out.
I was on this trip down to Texas, and someone asked the question, you know, are you an Internet celebrity, as people will often ask?
And I thought about my Twitter following, which has grown but has still not gotten to the goal that I sat in life when I was a small child.
And my father said, what do you want to be when you grow up?
And I said, I want to have 100,000 Twitter followers.
And he said, your life is going to be filled with disappointment kid.
And he was, so far, it turns out that he's right.
And also what's Twitter?
Don't ruin my story, Ben.
But I've been looking for an answer to this question.
Does my life have any meaning?
And then I found Ben's book, How to Destroy America in Three Easy Steps,
and I realized nothing has meaning.
You too could be filled with the kind of optimism that I have if you were to read this book.
Ben, since I went ahead and named the whole episode after your book,
tell us just a little bit about it.
Let me tell you about this book.
So here's the deal.
The basic thesis of the book is that the battle in the United States,
now is not exactly left versus right, although it largely mirrors it. It's between people
who I call unionists and people who I call disintegrationists. Unionists are people who believe
that the country ought to remain one unified body, and they believe that there are certain ties
that bind us together, namely philosophy, culture, and history. The philosophy of the American
founding that is suggested in the Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal,
endowed by their creator with inalienable rights protected by a government of limited powers,
and that if that government should choose to exceed his powers, then it would lose its
reason for being. That was the core philosophy of the United States, and then that was
preserved by a system of checks and balances and federalism created by the Constitution.
That was the core philosophy. Then there was the core culture of the United States, which was a
culture that valued social institutions in collicating virtue like church and family, a culture
of entrepreneurship and adventure, the culture of the pioneers, people who are pushing over
Hill and Dale in order to open new vistas in the human experience, a culture of tolerance for
other people's rights, even though you may not agree with how I speak. You acknowledge that I do
have the right to say what I am saying. And also a culture of militant defense of those rights.
that if the government were to overstep its boundaries, they would get a stern warning.
And finally, a shared history, the idea that we are all part of the same history, the same historic stream,
even though American history obviously has victims and villains, even though American history has horrible periods,
even though American history has significant periods in which many people in the United States strayed from founding principle.
The actual story of the United States is not 1619.
The actual story of the United States is 1776.
The United States was founded on true, eternally good principles.
And the story of the United States is about how we have attempted to fulfill those principles,
increasingly well over time and extend the promises that were made in the Declaration of Independence
to more and more human beings over a period of time. So black and white Americans are part of that
story. Black Americans heroically overcoming Jim Crow and slavery, white Americans helping them do so
and overcoming their own innate sin in all of this and moving toward those founding principles.
So that is the unionist philosophy, culture, and history. And all of those elements are being
disintegrated purposefully by people I call disintegrationists. People who wish to see the country
fall apart who believe that America's philosophy is a lie, was a lie when it was written.
openly stated by the members of the 1619 project, people who believe that all men are created
equal is actually just a cover for power politics, because if we treat everybody equally under
the law, what about people who are not as well off? What about people who are not as well situated?
We have to have injustice under the law in order to achieve group or social justice.
The culture of the United States is inherently bad. The culture of adventure and entrepreneurship
is actually a culture of exploitation and cruelty to others. The culture that says that I have to
respect your rights is really about me wanting bad people to win, because if I really didn't
want those people to win, I wouldn't respect their rights. The culture of valuing social institutions,
churches are bad because they cram down social values upon you. Family is bad because family is an
exploitative institution. And finally, the history of the United States is not the story of triumph
over innate and universal human sin. The story of America is that America was founded in human sin
and has merely deepened and broadened that sin over time to the point where all the institutions
of America are so thoroughly corrupt that they must be torn down at the root. That is the battle
that is happening in the United States is not quite left right. There are some liberals who actually
believe in a lot of the things that I said are unionist. And there are some conservatives who may not agree
with all the things that I said are unionists. But that in large scale is the battle. And we're seeing
it play out in the streets of Portland and the streets of Seattle. We're seeing it play out in the
halls of Congress. We're seeing it play out every day in the mainstream media and in the halls of academia.
But could you have written something more topical, Ben? I think that's the question on everyone's
mind. That was good. Nobody needs to buy the book now. You heard the whole thing straight from
And now we'll get on to talk about what's going on in the country, which is basically just everything
Ben just said. In particular, so I haven't been in the news much this week. I've been traveling
quite a lot. You know, as God King, I'm Lord of All that I survey, so I thought I should go look
at some stuff. Turns out a lot of it doesn't belong to me. Really, the title is kind of giving me
a false sense of self. But on my travels, I wasn't able to be in the news much. But every time I did
log onto the internet, all I could see was the disintegration of one or another American city.
And what's going on in Portland the last few days seems to really be the giant story that no one's
actually allowed to talk about it. If I'm near a TV, I don't see anything about Portland.
If I'm on the internet, it's the only way I hear anything about it. Michael, tell us a little bit of it.
Catch me up. What's happened? So everything you think is happening, like if you were to have a
fevered nightmare, that's what's happening. It's happening in Portland. And there's this big
debate now because you've had these insurrectionists in Portland attacking a federal courthouse
and other places as well. They look like a truly an armed militia. And so federal troops have come in.
And by troops, I should be more specific. I'm talking about the Department of Homeland Security.
This has raised. Big debate. Should these federal agents be able to come in? There's a lot of lies
that are going on about this. The left is saying that the federal agents have no right to do this.
Of course they do. One of the reasons we have DHS in the first place is to protect
federal property. They're saying that the federal agents are not allowed to go, for instance,
arrest people who are committing crimes on federal property, but then leave that property. That's also
not true. It's very clear from U.S. Code that they are absolutely allowed to pursue those
individuals. They're saying that the federal agents are ununiformed. They're not saying who they are.
That is also not true. They're wearing uniforms. Clearly says they're in DHS and they actually
have agent numbers so you can even identify the individual agents. So typically, a lot of lies from the left
and a lot of insurrection that's going on.
And the biggest lie of all, I think, is they're saying that this is un-American.
You know, it's Hitler-esque to send in federal troops to put down this insurrection.
That is absurd.
There is an American history of putting down insurrections that goes back to 1787, goes back all the way to Shays' rebellion.
And actually, one of the reasons we have our Constitution is because the Articles of Confederation
were not strong enough to efficiently put down that insurrection.
And so one of the reasons we got the Constitutional Convention right after Shays Rebellion
was in order to beef up that power. And fortunately, finally, people are restoring a little bit of order to the streets.
So what about the politics of it, Drew? It seems to me that the president slow to act on some of the things that have taken place in America's cities during the sort of Black Lives Matter riots that have been taking place.
Now he is acting. He's sending in federal troops to protect federal property. But there's a risk, right? The risk is that going into the election, one risk is you look like you've lost control of the country.
the other risk is that you look like you're a totalitarian, which sort of plays into the narrative
that the left is painted of the president really since before he even took office.
How do you think this shakes out for the president?
I think the bigger risk is doing nothing, frankly, even though a lot of people on the right
are just saying, let these cities burn, they're Democrat cities, they're suffering from
Democrat policies, let him go. I think that's wrong. Trump has got to show that he's going
to do something that he's going to take care of the country and not let the cities go.
I think this has been one of Trump's best weeks.
And of course, obviously it goes unreported because anything Trump does that's positive goes unreported.
But I think if he can actually, he's very far back in the polls.
And I think he knows it.
And I think he acted to fire his campaign manager.
And right after that, he suddenly became a really different candidate.
Now we've got the question, you know, the $64,000 question, does he have the discipline to maintain doing what he did this week?
He suddenly took a new tone on the Chinese flu.
He suddenly took it seriously.
He came out.
He was very sober.
He was very direct. He actually had facts in front of him and he used those facts. And he started to move against these cities. You cannot have cities devolving into chaos. And if you really want to know whether this is good for Trump or not, all you have to do is look at the fact that the minute Trump threatens to act, the mayors and governors suddenly act before he can get there. So you suddenly have in Portland, they declare a riot after something like 56 days of burning and vandalism and violence. Suddenly it's a riot when Trump says he's going to send in the troops. The same thing.
happened in Seattle with their chas. The same thing happened in New York. They closed the chas.
It's been open in front of City Hall all this time. The minute he threatened. So the left knows
that this is not a good look for them, but they can blame it on Trump until he acts. And the minute
he acts, they've got to shut it down. So I think this was a great week for Trump. You know,
it's always a question with him whether he's just going to blow it all with a single tweet.
But right this minute, he looks very good. So it occurred to me watching the events unfold
that you really only have two options, right? You can either allow, you can either defend
federal property with federal force, or you have to pull all of the federal infrastructure out of
these cities, which in addition to being practically impossible, no one on the left would stand
for, right? Like if you just basically said, fine, we'll just shut down the Social Security
administration in Portland if you're not going to protect it, we're not going to have it be
there. If you're not going to do that, Ben, don't you have to actually defend this property and
defend these employees? Well, of course, I mean, under federal code, you do have to defend this property.
It is the responsibility of the Department of Homeland Security to do so. They have the power to
call from other agencies through the General Services Administration, other people to serve
in this battle against people who are, as Michael rightly noted, insurrectionists.
The fact that this is controversial at all is a testament to how much our media are just damned
liars. I mean, they are just damned liars. I've been very hesitant to talk about the media
is the enemy of the people, mainly because I just don't like the phrase, I don't like the phrase
enemy of the people because it brings up Stalinist sort of associations. But the way that the media
have acted over the past few months is just disgusting. I mean, the mask is now completely off.
If you thought it had slipped, you know, some with Kavanaugh and slipped more with the Covington
Catholic kids, it is just gone at this point. I cannot trust a single narrative, not one that
is being fed to me by the media. If you listen to the media right now, Portland is entirely
peaceful and the only people who are creating chaos are the federal agents who are actually
members of the Gestapo. Everything in Chicago is hunky dory, except that President Trump has
threatening me go in there, specifically because Lori Lightfoot is black and a woman. Everything in
New York is absolutely fine. The only reason that you're seeing any sort of uptick in violence
is just because Trump is president, not because they've decided to absolutely castrate the NYPD.
If you listen to the media on COVID, everything that's bad that's happening is the fault
of Ronda Santis, Greg Abbott and Doug Ducey in Florida, Texas, and Arizona, respectively,
or Trump, more broadly speaking, California just ceases to exist. Also, apparently Trump is at fault
for the second wave that we are now seeing in Spain, in France, in Japan. Apparently Trump is
in charge of the entire world. Literally every narrative that has been trotted out over,
over the past several weeks is not just a little bit wrong.
It's not just a little wrong.
It is overtly false.
It is overtly false.
I'm amazed that the media think they can get away with this.
And so far they have.
I mean, that's the sad truth is that when you have this blanket wall tsunami,
I think that I felt this way after 2006.
I remember after 2004, there was this feeling with Republicans after Bush beat Kerry
that we were never going to lose again.
And finally, the power of the mainstream media with Dan Rather collapsing in on himself,
like a dying, crazy, drunk old star, that he was basically going, that was the end of
mainstream media. Their power had been broken. The back had been broken. And then in 2008, it felt like,
oh, no, the media is still there. Then Trump wins. And then Republicans again are like, well, it looks
like the power of the media is broken. And now it doesn't feel like that at all again.
It feels like there is just this vast tsunami-like unified wave that has been rushing over
informationally the American population. And the best case I can see is not even about Trump.
It's about the approval ratings in Florida, Texas, and Arizona. Ducey, DeSantis, and Abbott are all
underwater. Gavin Newsom is still at 58 percent in the state of California, despite experiencing a
search exactly the same size as the other states and not having opened in the first place.
That's right. Drew.
You know, the most interesting person in the country to me right now is Kaylee McInney.
I call her the species girl because she's a hot blonde who rips men's spines out with her tongue.
But I think what makes her so fascinating to me is that she is incredibly prepared.
She knows exactly how to go after that.
She's kind of like you wish that she would use Trump, be a ventriloquist for Trump,
like Trump would open his mouth and killing the range.
He goes behind the curtain.
Exactly.
Exactly, exactly. She is doing everything that one wishes that a George W. Bush or a Donald Trump, who are not exactly articulate, you wish that they would do. And the media is attacking her for telling the truth and being prepared. They're attacking her for having effective notes. They're attacking her for using tabs in her notebooks. She can find things. Today, I think it was today. It may have been yesterday. She actually showed a movie, a video of what was actually happening in Portland, and they cut it off. It's like, please don't interrupt us while we're lying.
And I think that if she can do what she can do,
if she will actually accomplish what she wants to accomplish,
she could be a very, very powerful weapon
because Ben, I couldn't agree with Ben more about this.
This is an amazing, amazing desertion of any journalistic ethos
by the journalist.
Yeah.
I want to talk about that.
You know, today the number two podcast in the country
is this podcast by the New York Times,
hosted by a white woman, by the way,
suggesting that the problem with American public education
as white parents. So the fact that the media has gone all in for activism, I think, is one of the
most important stories happening in the country. But first, I want to talk about our friends over at Ring.
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I've actually had to start using a mail center across from our office to take deliveries.
You know, people are sending gifts to my home because my wife and I just adopted a child,
and they keep disappearing.
And, you know, you send somebody a gift.
They don't send you a thank you card.
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Hey, hey there, Elisha.
Oh.
What you're reading?
Oh, just this book?
I think it's by this guy we all know named Ben Shapiro.
How to Destroy America and Three Easy Steps.
And I really only wish that you'd written this a lot faster.
So I would have had something to read during COVID.
I took up needle pointing instead and really, really,
get into my eyesight. Anyway, you should go by Ben's book right now. Apparently, though,
you only get a signed copy if you, you know, co-host his live signing, because this one's not
signed to me. But anyway, this is also a reminder to join our most exclusive membership tier so
you can ask questions of the guys, and I will give them all the questions, and you will get their
pithy answers throughout backstage tonight. With that all-access membership tier, you can also join
us for the live online Q&A discussion that's right after this episode of Backstage. That's 15% off
a coupon using backstage right now at dailywire.com slash subscribe. The coupon code is backstage
to ask questions during backstage, ask us questions after backstage, and get not one but
two tumblers. Okay, first question, Ben, you ready to roll? First of all, it's a little insulting
to me. I'm just going to get this off my chest. You all have, when you do your shows, you all get
to use your own name as the promo code. So it's like, uh, promo code Shapiro, oh, KLAVA, and there
are no easing Claven. However, NOLS does say, I've never listened to it.
I can only assume he has one.
But anytime I'm around, it's either still Shapiro for some reason, giving me absolutely no credit,
or it's the generic backstage.
Why can we have promo code God King or promo code Jeremy's great?
Or promo code, could somebody give Jeremy a little more money?
I don't know.
Listen, it's hard enough to be a grifter.
To be a grifter and not get paid for it.
It's the absolutely worst thing.
What a waste of time.
Let's take some questions.
So do you want to take the first question, Jeremy, so you don't feel like a grifter?
or can I toss it to Ben, who we really know is the boss?
Wow, that hurt.
But yeah, better give it to Ben.
Okay.
He's looking right at me.
I mean, he did have, he's looking right at me,
and he did leave me an unsigned book in the studio to talk about.
So, all right, Ben, is America's position on the UN Security Council,
reason enough to stay in the UN, or should we pull out of the UN immediately?
No, we should, we should pull out of the UN immediately.
We should neutron bomb the building and salt the earth.
The UN is a horrific organization, always was a horrific organization.
If you look at the origins of the UN,
basically Stalin insisted that the USSR have a veto on the Security Council,
which ended any and all possibility that there would ever be anything good
that ever came out of the UN.
The UN has literally done, you can count the number of good things
the UN has done probably on one hand and maybe on like three fingers.
It's really incredible what a useless and awful organization in the United Nations is.
All you have to do, obviously, is look at what they pass in the General Assembly,
where every single resolution is about Israel or they're not condemning the United States.
All you have to do is look at the UN Human Rights Council,
staff by great nations like Iran and Sudan, all you have to do is look at the fact that every time
they can steal money and use it to enrich a local despot. They absolutely do it. The UN is garbage.
We should have a league of democracies instead, or we should just have a bunch of bilateral agreements.
Frankly, I think the President Trump's approach to alliance is in many ways closer.
You're never going to hear me say again. You're ready for this, guys? His view on alliance
is actually closer to the Washingtonian view of alliance than many of the people who have been
promoting he sort of, we're all friends and neighbors routine for a very long time, right?
Trump's view of alliance is basically your friends with the people you're friends with and you're
not friends with and you're not friends with. And that's exactly what Washington says in his farewell
address. It seems to me that we've strayed far from that. And the UN is the formalization of straying
exactly from Washingtonian principle. Ben, I agree. I've been waiting for you to say that
Donald Trump reminds us of George Washington for many years now and I'm glad that we agree.
No, that's right. He also has false teeth and funny hair. Benwig. Yeah. Funny hair.
Let's say her awkwardly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sorry, I thought Michael was going to go on, but, you know, okay.
It kind of petered out.
It was just like all of our shows, it just sort of came to a sliding hall right there.
All right, Michael, this next question is for the Michael Knowles, you know, illustrious author himself.
Will Republicans have to lose in 2020, you think, in order to win big in 2024?
I think that's for not just the White House, but the House in the Senate.
No, you don't win by losing.
You don't.
You cannot win by losing.
Sometimes people, we get very clever about this, and we say, like, okay, well, I'm going to lose.
this race, but then I'm going to win it this way 10 years from now. And that's just not how it works.
You're going to lose. I mean, sometimes it's inevitable that you lose, but you have to try to win
because politics moves on. Politics is about eternal principles applied to constantly changing
circumstances. And so in those circumstances, you can't predict what it's going to look like.
Forget four or eight years from now. You can't predict what it's going to look like in three months.
If the election were held today, I think a lot of people think President Trump would lose.
But who knows, who knows what's going to happen over the next 100 days. So no, you got to
win, you got to try to win. And if you lose, which is going to happen eventually, then you got to
regroup and try to win the next time. All right, Drew, this question is for you, it's kind of a two-part
question. Part one is, should schools that teach the 1619 project lose their federal funding
and what curriculum can be used to counter the 1619 project? That's great question. And yes,
a yes, I think that you should not be a public school teaching 1619. It's not true. I mean, that's
the first thing. It's not true. Plus, it's anti-American. If you can't teach your children to
the country you're in and what's beautiful about it and what's great about it, instead teaching
it that's inherently evil, I cannot see how that is in any way an education. What we need,
what we need is a history of freedom. We need to follow the train of freedom through Western
history so that that really takes us from Greece to Rome to the formation of Europe and to America.
It's an idea, you know, it's the idea that really lights up Western history, makes it different
than everybody else, and really it shows you, you can trace then when it falls off, why it
falls off when it surges, when it rises, and what keeps it alive. And I've always thought that the
history that hasn't been written, and I'm just not equipped to write it, unfortunately, is a history of
freedom, a history of how this idea has stayed alive. Really, all we have are Lord Acton's letters,
which kind of are interesting, but they're just not the same thing as having a textbook that
traces this idea. And that's what I think we should be doing on the right. And of course, we never do
anything on the right to fix the culture. But that would be one of the things, a project that I think we should be
fronting and paying for.
All right, Jeremy, the God King.
Not that many people.
I mean, actually, they follow you on Twitter.
They're one of the 100,000 people who do follow you on Twitter.
They probably know that you're a big baseball fan,
and that you usually take the whole Daily Wire crew to see a Dodgers game once a year
on the anniversary.
But with that in mind, what do you think about the guys at the MLB caving to the woke mob
and promoting these players kneeling?
Yeah, well, first of all, it's one of the horrible things that's happened is the loss
of sports.
You know, the point of sport is that it allows us to.
to work out our sort of baser instincts.
You know, everybody is a little bit tribalistic.
Everybody's a little bit jingoistic.
And what sports allow us to do is root, root for the home team
in an environment where the struggle has no meaning beyond a sort of local regional pride.
This is why I sometimes argue with Ben.
He's obviously a big White Sox fan.
And sometimes when we go to Dodger Stadium, he'll wear his white socks cap.
And I'll say to him, you know, it actually is important that we root for the home team.
Like, it's good.
It's fine when we have a team that we love.
But then I'd be rooting for Los Angeles.
And Los Angeles is a bag of garbage, dude.
They would have taken it all this year if they were actually baseball anymore.
They've got such a great team.
But it's just the case that that's part of what sports are supposed to be.
That's why team sports provide something that boxing or like the Red Bull kind of individualistic sports don't actually provide.
You know, I like to watch UFC or I like to watch sometimes the extreme stuff from Red Bull.
But you can't root for that.
You're not a part of that.
They don't represent your community.
they don't represent your, they don't represent your, they're not your team.
You know, they're not in any way representative of you.
You're supporting them and what they do.
When we support a baseball team, they represent in some way us.
And if the Dodgers are a terrible bag of garbage, then that's because Ben is chosen.
The city of Los Angeles.
It's been as chosen to be part of a bag of garbage community.
Or as parents did, I don't know.
All of that to say, the laws of sports right now in our country is going to have
it's going to have a real impact.
It's one of the few things left in our social fabric
that would bring us together in, you know,
a sort of shared struggle, a shared celebration.
That's what sports is for.
We don't have that now.
Obviously, they've made them political.
COVID is also part of this.
They've destroyed sports.
Apparently, the one place where you can't be in an outdoor environment
shouting is at a sports arena.
Anywhere, if you're in a town square, you can do it.
But if you're in a sports arena,
it depends what you're shouting.
You will definitely get the,
COVIDs. I think it's a huge mistake to insert the kind of politics in it the way that the owners
are right now. My hope is that they will lose enormous amounts of cash as a result. I think that
that's what's going to happen. I suspect that people will just turn it off. That's not what people
watch sports for. I may be wrong because the entire country is shut down. It may be that we're so
desperate for any kind of distraction that people will go ahead and watch sports sort of in spite of
this. That's not what I hope happens. I hope they lose 40% of their ratings and are forced to
correct because we need them to correct because we need sports. Listen, I'm blind in one eye.
I'm horribly uncoordinated. I've humiliated myself at almost every sport that's popular among
America's youth. Nevertheless, I think sports are incredibly important. And I think that the entire
idea of sport, sometimes people will say, America puts too much emphasis on sports and not enough
emphasis on reading, writing, and arithmetic. Right. But we invent everything. We have the military
that defends democracy and freedom all across the globe and we're the greatest economy in the
history of the world. Our love of sport and the fact that we inculcate love of sport into our
children is part of the reason for our success because sports actually teach you the values
of capitalism. They teach you that hard work, that perseverance, that overcoming adversity
can lead to success. They teach you that you can't rely on rigged rules. You have to, at the end of
the day, rely on yourself and on your team. That is an important part of what we teach our kids.
I think that it's an enormous loss if it continues down the path that it's going right now.
Can we stop on this topic for a second? Yes, please. Because it really is devastating.
For those of us who are like major, major baseball fan. So I am a diehard Chicago White Sox fan.
I wrote an entire book about the Chicago White Sox 2005 championship season with my father. Both
of us have united over baseball. Singular. Championship season. Singular.
Well, they had one. It was all the way back in 1918.
though, in 1917, actually.
But the basic kind of destruction of all common areas of American life is so horrifying.
And it's happening everywhere, right?
I mean, it's not just sports.
It's happening in entertainment.
It's happening that basically it is now dictated to you that when you buy an HVAC part,
you have to make sure that the CEO of the HVAC company agrees with you on politics.
You have beans.
You have to make sure that the head of Goya agrees with you about Donald Trump,
even if he's already done a different press conference with Barack Obama just a few years beforehand.
on everybody has to agree on everything.
And the corporations, I mean, I'm going to sound like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren right now.
The corporations are to blame for this.
Corporations have not stood up for principle.
Corporations have decided that the easiest way out is to cave to the woke mob.
And they can make a quick buck by caving to the woke mob because there are enough conservatives
who aren't going to boycott them that they feel like they can just grease the squeakiest wheel and get away with it.
And it really is short-sighted.
It's quite disgusting.
And again, when MLB decides they're going to put out like this vague Morgan Freeman's social justice statement
where he talks about Tim Robbins going through 500 yards of foul-smelling stench like you can't
believe, and everybody's kneeling, and it's all about empathy and equality. And the statement, by the way,
meant nothing. I mean, if you actually listen to what Morgan Freeman said, it made no sense at all.
Like, it really didn't make any sense. But the basic notion here, they knelt the footage that
you're seeing right now is the nationals and the Yankees, both kneeling before the national anthem.
And this was their compromise, right? We're not going to kneel during the national anthem,
because that might be perceived as disrespectful. Instead, we'll kneel before the
national anthem to signify that America is systemically racist. I don't feel particularly
respected now. As a member of the systemically racist American public, apparently, and systemically
a racist American system, I don't feel particularly not insulted by a group of largely diverse
millionaires and 10 millionaires telling me how racist the American system is. And if we don't buy
that, then what? We're not patriotic? What, we're not allowed to watch sport? The corporate owners
who are doing this kind of stuff, they don't understand they're cutting off their nose despite
their face and they're ruining the country in the process.
And it's gone everywhere, right?
Because if you even say this, that's political.
If you say you don't like politics and sports, now you're being political and you trend on
Twitter for saying, I like my sports without politics, even though, as my friend Clay Travis
says, the root of the word sport, the etymology is disport from the French, meaning literally
distraction.
The whole point of sports is to distract you from real life.
There's plenty of crap happening in real life.
When I turn on a game, the last thing I want to see is a bunch of vague social justice
messaging that is semantically overloaded and could mean everything from support Black
Black Lives Matter as an organization to American.
systemically racist to the completely inarguable principle that black people matter, which of course
they do. You know, this is a very good point. We obviously don't want these kind of partisan
distractions. But there is, I would push back and say a political element to sports going all the
way back to ancient Greece. And it's a very basic one. And the basic political element is patriotism.
Sports have always been patriotic. They've been about celebrating, as Jeremy says, the home team
or celebrating your country. And one of the virtues that they inculcate, among all the others that
Jeremy, you mentioned, is loyalty, loyalty to your teammates. If you're playing the sport,
loyalty to the home team, if you're going out and watching the sport, loyalty to your country
when you stand up for the national anthem. And Ben, as you say, the common areas of American life
have been completely eroded. If we cannot even recognize one another as fellow Americans,
if we cannot even agree on the star-spangled banner, there is nothing left. That is the most
basic level of American unity and solidarity.
So much for that loyalty.
By the way, Anthony Foucher can't throw, right?
I mean, we've established this, right?
I mean, I feel bad for me. He's 80, but he's the one who chose to get out there on the
mound. I get to make fun of you if you throw that out as the first pitch, right?
Yeah, I'm just going to say that if you're ever invited to throw out the first pitch in the
baseball game, just say no.
Just don't do it.
Yeah, if you didn't play college ball, do not get up there and try to throw him out.
Oh, you threw an out, right?
Do you?
He thrown a baseball team.
One assumes he had thrown a baseball a few times in his day.
if you get the opportunity, Ben Shapiro or Michael Knowles or Andrew Lavin.
But even Donald Trump has a good throwing motion.
Internet celebrity.
Well, yeah, that's because he's never exercised.
I feel like I'm pleasing Trump so much this episode.
If you had never exercised, you could throw out a baseball too.
You keep picking these guys for the example.
That's true.
He does have all his life force.
There's all this life force.
And therefore he's able to.
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So before we went to break, we were talking, Drew, about this idea of the media, having
completely taken off the mask, has been said and revealing that they're partisan activists.
I referenced this podcast, this second biggest podcast in the country today, in which the New York
Times says that the problem with education in America is white parents. Of course, this comes right
on the heels of the 1619 project and some great reporting done by the Daily Wire.
discovered that the New York Times spent over $3 million promoting the 1619 project and was able to obscure the specifics of how they spent that money.
Just three ads from the 1619 project.
Just three individual ads by exploiting a protection that was afforded them because they're not activists,
because they're supposed to be straight journalists. Of course, then they behave as activists.
The very fact that they're printing curricula now to put into elementary junior high high schools,
doesn't this evidence that they aren't in fact journalistic institutions?
anymore at all? I mean, are we really seeing not only sort of the reveal, but aren't we seeing
a shift happen where these organizations are now directly engaging in politics in a way that
maybe has not been the case in the post-war consensus? Yeah, it's the, it's the Trump effect in a lot
of ways because Donald Trump hasn't caused any of this to happen. He simply lanced the boil.
I mean, it really was this bad. Everybody has this myth that suddenly with Donald Trump,
the journalistic community lost it. But that's not true. You go back to George W. Bush. He was Hitler
every day. Every word he said was a scandal. And the system is, as I explain often, the system is not
each individual story. It is to create an attitude and atmosphere of chaos so that when something
actually happens like Hurricane Katrina or the Chinese flu, suddenly you think like, oh, yeah, it really
has been chaotic all this time. It's really been a disaster. So all this happened now is the full
reveal. And it's not just journalism. It really is across our institutions, we have let our institutions
get hollowed out. I mean, we have a legislature that doesn't legislate. We have a court system that does
legislate. We have journalists that don't cover anything, academies that don't teach. And I think this is a
genuinely serious problem. And it's one of the reasons you should probably buy this book.
By the way, I want to say, I want to say, I saw this title, How to Destroy American Three Easy Steps,
I thought I was going to open up and say, oh, my God, it's a cookbook.
It's not for that.
No, but I mean, I think this is, we are actually seeing something quite, quite serious,
which is the hollowness of our institutions.
And as long as Trump is there, everybody can sort of point to him and say, oh, look,
this is the problem, but it's just not so.
I mean, Trump is an effect of this.
And the press, our entertainment system, all of this has been hollowed out for years.
I've been talking about it for years, and suddenly, suddenly my phone starts ringing and people say, you know, gee, what are we supposed to do about this?
And I say, well, about 20 years ago, you're supposed to start building, you know, news agencies, you're supposed to start building movie studios.
You're supposed to start building academies and teaching institutions.
And look, the right has not done this.
And one of the reasons the right has not done this is it because I think our philosophy has been emptied out by fusionism, by basically saying we're going to put together libertarians.
religious people, and capitalism.
And it all kind of comes, it's all sort of been about money.
I mean, all we've ever said to people is like the pursuit of happiness is about money.
Capitalism is the greatest thing ever.
And now one of the things that Ben was talking about, about the fact that corporations are
signing on to this racist, Marxist, disgusting Black Lives Matter philosophy,
it shows you that capitalism won't save you.
You've got to start with the values.
It has to start with the values.
And unless we become a values party or a values movement, we can't stop this.
because we have no message.
Until we have a message, we can't do the messaging.
And I think that it really is a problem that has finally just kind of come open, like I said,
like a boil being lanced.
I think that I'm a little bit more pro-capitalism.
I'm maybe the last-
Totally pro-capitalism, but.
I actually think there's a slightly nuanced distinction that I would make.
I think one of the problems that happens with the right is that we don't profit off of the culture
at all.
And so we abandon the culture entire.
If you ask why do conservative billionaires not fund film or music or technology, it's another.
Conservatives famously don't get involved in any major way in technology.
The answer, I think, is because conservatives tend to be fairly conservative in their approach,
and therefore rich conservatives tend to be people who got rich through very conservative practices.
So, for example, while I was in the DFW area over the last week, there's so much
real estate wealth. There's so much energy wealth that goes on in those places, right? I mean,
famously, if you make your money in real estate or in energy or in oil, you're in Texas.
And think about how those guys make their money. If you make your money in real estate,
you can put on a spreadsheet the steps to allow you to prosper over time. You could start
now with very little money in your own bank account, and you could build your way to being
an extraordinarily wealthy person in a very meat and potatoes, very predictable, one step in front
of the other way. And so if you become a very wealthy conservative real estate person, you probably
have spreadsheets that tell you if I increase the rental rates in my skyscraper by 10% over the next
three years, I'll be able to afford to do a remodel of the entire structure, which will allow me
to increase my rate by 20% over the three years after that, which will allow me to buy a second
skyscraper. And if I raise my rent 10% over the next three years there, I can do a renovation,
which will allow me to, and they can very one step in front of the other see these ways to build well.
With the exception of wildcatting, a lot of the energy industry functions the same way.
If we fraccess many wells, there's a ratio to understand.
And so you might make two, three, four, five, twenty billion dollars in those businesses,
but you always know what the next thing to do with your money is.
If you make a billion dollars in real estate, you put the billion dollars back into real estate
so that you can make $2 billion.
Now, imagine that you're that guy.
You know what to do with every dollar that comes your way,
and how to turn that into another dollar,
how to turn that into a better downtown in your community.
Those don't pretend it's just money.
How to turn that into better jobs for the people in your community
and all the things that come with that kind of growth.
And now a kid walks into your office with a backpack,
and he says, hey dude, nobody calls me dude.
He says, yeah, man, listen, I built this app.
What's an app?
Well, it's this thing on the computer.
I built this website, and basically I put up a bunch of pictures of hot chicks from my college,
and I let people vote with a thumbs up or a thumbs down.
And if the chick gets a thumbs up, then she moves to the second ranking,
and more people can vote on her.
Please give me $10 million.
I think I could grow this into something where people can really talk to each other, man.
You'd be like, how did you get in here?
And you would kick that kid out of your office.
And you wouldn't even know, 15 years later, that he's worth $75 billion.
And that that app that he built for voting on how hot chicks are became the most important
communication platform ever devised in the history of man.
Because you knew meat and potatoes, how to take your money and put it into the next thing.
So we now imagine some beatnik kid walks into your office with a backpack, and he's got an idea
for how he can tell a story that's kind of funny, and he thinks maybe people will laugh.
And he tells you a couple of jokes that he wrote into scene three about a bong hit.
And you're like, what on earth?
But it turns out that guy goes on to be Adam Sandler or something.
And he creates one of the most profitable film franchises or film companies in modern Hollywood.
He has a deal with Sony for years.
He's the most popular film producer on Netflix for a number of years.
In other words, there's nothing in the experience of the kind of people who have excess cash on the right to help them understand why they should back these cultural plays.
Meanwhile, guys who made their money in technology, like Silicon Valley guys, they see many.
completely differently. They make a billion dollars, and there is no next apartment building
to buy. There is no community in which they have invested in. They didn't pick downtown Fort Worth
to be the place where they were going to build and grow. They made their money in these very
abstract ways, and so they're willing to take bets on other people who think abstractly.
I think that there is just a culture. It's funny, a cultural difference for how the culture is
perceived from people who made their money in abstract ways and people who made their money
by renovating apartment buildings.
You know, I have to tell you why it's not that I disagree with what you're saying,
but I think that you're seeing something, you're saying that something is built into the system
when I think that it's actually a matter of values.
This is one of the reasons you and I always disagree about Ayn Rand, who I just hate.
And I think that if you take the value, if you put values first, you can have capitalism
and it will be the wonderful machine that it is for raising everybody up.
But if you don't put the values for it, you know, when Jesus said you can't serve God
and Mammon, he wasn't just whistling Dixie, which,
would have been racist. He was actually saying you have to put one thing before the other.
And I think the thing is when we see Amazon sending me on my web page saying, oh, if you like
the collected poetry of William Wordsworth, you might like white fragility. And you think like,
I'm sorry, what? He has got to be making a calculation that somehow that's going to help him
financially down the road. And he may be right. When Oprah takes the 1619 project, that's an I'm
Randian success. I mean, that's everything that Ayn Rand supports, except that it's destructive
of the country. If you don't put the values first, if you don't put the values above the money,
and we fail to preach this as conservatives, if you don't put the values above the money,
you really hollow out what capitalism is. And you have China, basically, where they have free
markets and no freedom. Well, I think that there is a problem that you're diagnosing, but I think that
I'm not sure I agree with the exact diagnosis. So I totally agree that conservatives have failed to talk
about values and markets. They've talked about the values.
of markets, but not values in markets. And that makes a huge difference. As soon as conservatives
made the moves to talk in terms of utilitarianism, they lost. Conservatives are not utilitarians.
As soon its conservatives started to say, the reason that markets are good is because they
produce prosperity and wealth. It was over because it's so easy for somebody else to say,
right, but prosperity and good for whom, right? How about this group? This group's been left behind.
Why can't we just capture the value of the market? And then we can turn it and twist it and we can do
X, Y, or Z with it. This is the sort of language that both Tucker
Carlson uses on the right about markets, right?
Markets are just a mechanism and we can chain them to anything we want, so why don't we chain them
to things that we like?
And Elizabeth Warren, who will say things like, the markets are just a mule that you can hitch
to your wagon, and it will take you exactly where you want to go.
The point of markets, and this is something that I've been focused on for a very long time,
the reason that markets are good is because markets are a reflection of a truth about
human nature, was that human beings are free and deserve to own their own labor.
And so people have asked me, okay, so what if a market was less efficient than a fascist
economic system?
I would still believe in the market.
I would still believe in the market because I think that there is an inherent goods, the belief that human beings own labor, that they are individuals created in the image of God.
And as Locke argued, if you're an individual created in the image of God and you mix your labor with the earth, you then own that labor.
That is an inherent good.
And that is not reliant on the effect of the capitalist enterprise.
It just turns out that this also happens to create most wealth in the history of humanity.
But you have to argue that people actually own their own labor and that they ought to own labor.
It's as a moral matter, not as a utilitarian matter.
So I think reading values in capitalism and opposition is incorrect, except in that people
have started to discuss capitalism only in utilitarian terms.
And very often when they speak about capitalism in utilitarian terms, they don't mean long-term
utilitarian terms.
The problem with Ayn Rand is she assumes that everybody who engages in capitalism is going
to think more than five minutes down the road.
She assumes that people are going to forego the immediate profit margin that is to be found
in doing the wrong thing in order to preserve the system that is going to allow.
Right, I'm Rand actually does assume that there is a value that you are assuming in your own life, your ownership of your own living, right?
This is why, as much as I disagree with her sort of values on capitalism when applied to your personal life and your treatment of family, when she talks about selfishness is a value, is a value-sus of value.
What she really means is that you ought to own your own labor.
There is a value in owning your own labor.
There is something good in the creative human spirit, right?
That is a value-laden argument, and that's been left behind by a lot of the people who tend to speak about capitalism purely as a utilitarian creator of wealth.
But there's also this issue.
I mean, Ben, I agree with you exactly on the utilitarian point. And Drew, I agree with you on this point, that you need values.
We've made this mistake, especially Republicans have, you know, a Republican fundraiser for the last 30, 40 years, which is that the Republican Party fundraiser speech was always schizophrenic.
It began with, we need to maintain strong communities and family values and conserve all of our wonderful rituals and traditions.
And by the way, we need to destroy all of that through creative destruction that is constantly ever progressing and is always making people moving.
all over the place and not even just all around the country, but all around the globe,
isn't that great? We're all going to make a lot more money. And the latter part of that
argument undercuts the very values that you're talking about at the beginning. So I agree entirely,
Ben, that you need to make a moral argument for not just markets, but for so many other fascists
of our economic system. But you also, you have to begin with the human person, what we want,
an authentic politics, which since ancient Greece means a lot of people coming together and
deciding how we want to live, debating ethical questions, ranking our priorities, and only then
will you be able to even have an economic system that doesn't completely undercut itself,
as we're seeing right now, with the woke companies who are chopping off at the knees the very
country that allowed these markets to flourish.
So, yeah, I think it's possible. I mean, I always make the moral argument for capitalism.
I agree with you 100% on that, Ben, but you're looking at it from one side,
which is if fascism worked better, was more efficient than capitalism, would fascism be all right?
And of course, the answer is no. But if capitalism starts to sell fascism and make a bundle, would that be all right? And the answer is also no. I think when you're using corporations, for instance, when you have corporations that are silencing free speech, that are cutting down free speech. To me, that is a value that actually supersedes all kinds of capitalist rules. If your company is in any way harming the right of Americans to speak freely in an effective way, your company's got to go.
your company should be just shut down.
You know, your rights, if you don't start with the fact that your rights come from God,
then there's always going to be different kinds of power centers that can take away those rights.
And I think those rights have to be defended because they are holy,
because they come from the source outside ourselves.
And capitalism, listen, again, I'm a total capitalist,
but capitalism has to rest on that pedestal.
It can't create that pedestal itself.
And if you want to defend that pedestal, you need to go talk to our friends over at the company, manufacturing.
When the founders created the Constitution,
that was so beautiful.
Ah, yeah, I appreciate it.
Listen, I'm the true capitalist.
You all give a lot of lip service to it.
I'm the only one who make sure you all get paid.
When the founders crafted the Constitution,
the first thing they did was make sacred
the rights of the individual
to share their ideas without limitation by their government.
The second right they enumerated
was the right of the population
to protect that speech
and their own persons with force.
You know how strongly each of us here
believes in these principles.
Every one of us here, a gun owner
and owning a rifle in particular is an awesome responsibility.
Building rifles is no different.
Bravo company manufacturing, BCM built a professional-grade product,
which is built to combat standards.
That's because BCM believes that the same level of protection
should be provided to every single American,
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People at BCM assume that when a rifle leaves their shop,
it will be used in a life-or-death situation by a responsible citizen,
law enforcement officer, or a soldier overseas.
With that in mind, every component of a BCM rifle is hand-assembled
and tested by Americans.
The people at BCM feel it's their moral responsibility as Americans
to provide tools that will not fill the end user
when it's not just a paper target,
but someone coming to do them harm.
BCM also knows that making a reliable, life-saving tool
is only half the story.
The company also works with leading instructors of marksmanship
from top levels of America's special operations forces,
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These top instructors teach the skills necessary
to defend yourself, your family, or others.
We love the guys over at Bravo Company Manufacturing.
They make a great product,
and they actually do believe it's based on the values,
as Drew was saying.
They make a great product.
They are great in the marketplace,
but they also believe that that product serves the ideals
that are ensconced in the Second Amendment to the Constitution.
Bravo Company Manufacturing, Ben.
To learn more about Bravo Company Manufacturing,
head on over to bravo company mfg.com.
You can discover more about their products.
Special offers, upcoming news.
that is Bravo Company, MFG.com.
If you need more convincing, find out even more about BCM
and the amazing people who make their products at YouTube.com
slash Bravo Company USA.
Here, we imitate masculinity by having men smoke cigars.
There, they just do masculinity by making firearms.
And smoking cigars.
And smoking cigars.
YouTube.com slash Bravo Company USA
or Bravo CompanyMFG.com.
Alicia.
Does that code work for people that work at the company?
Just asking for someone.
All righty.
A reminder to join our most exclusive membership tier.
Are you like me? You like exclusive things? Well, it turns out even at the Daily Wire, we have a very exclusive membership tier. It's our all-access tier. And you can join us for a live online Q&A discussion right after this episode of Backstage using that code that Jeremy doesn't love because it doesn't have his name in it backstage. It's the name of his show, though. And that code will get you 15% off using the code backstage with two tumblers. So dailywire.com slash subscribe. Code backstage for 15% off for the very exclusive, all.
access membership, go and do it now because we still have time to ask the guys your questions
and get answers from them. First question goes to Ben Shapiro, New York Times. I just want to say,
I mean, I know it's our show. It's just that you guys also have your show. That's the problem.
It's my show. I guess in a way they're all my show. Yeah, you're the executive producer of all of the shows.
I mean, your name pops up on every single one. Oh, that's something. Yeah, there you go.
The bend behind the curtain. All right, Ben, how would you handle the concentration camp situation
in China and should there be more sanctions from the United States? And when is the world really
morally culpable without taking direct intervention and why hasn't more action been taken?
So it's like a four-part question, but I think it's a really good way. Yeah, that was a lot.
So when it comes to when is a country responsible for taking a direct humanitarian intervention,
my general rule of thumb is if the risk is low and the benefit is high, then you should do it.
The risk obviously is not low. If you're going to talk about bombing China over this,
then the question becomes, are you really willing to basically start World War III?
at this point in time. And the answer there is no for pretty much everybody involved. I mean,
China is the world's most populous country? Has India passed them? Right? China may be the second
most populous country in plan. In any case, a billion people over in China with an incredibly
large army and significant capacity to do Americans harm. Starting a war with China would be a mistake.
Does that mean that you have to abandon people to their fate? Absolutely not. We should be
engaging with the Chinese government exactly the way we engaged with the USSR, which is to say we
should cut them off at the knees economically. We should recognize them for exactly the
threat they are, globally speaking. They are an evil dictatorship, a full-on evil dictatorship,
not merely for what they're doing to the Uyghurs, shaving heads and sending people on trains
to concentration camps where they force them into slave labor and or sterilize them.
But what they've done to Hong Kong in subjecting a free people to the predations of absolute
communist tyranny and the rest of the world shrugging and yawning is an unbelievable chastisement
of the idea that the West was ever willing to stand up for the freedom of anybody in that region.
And the next people who are going to take it directly on the nose of the folks over in Taiwan,
which is why the United States should immediately recognize Taiwan as an independent country.
They shouldn't wait more than five seconds.
China ain't going to start a shooting war over it.
They might get mad at us.
Tough.
The United States should immediately declare Taiwan a sovereign country, no more of this two systems,
one country nonsense that China insists upon.
The United States should immediately sanction pretty much any business that is currently run
by the Chinese government.
And if the United States wants to take measures to prevent people from doing business with China,
I'm not against it.
I mean, right now the problem is that you have a collective action problem,
which is that if business,
is don't do business with China. They're immediately undercut by other businesses that do
do businesses with China. But that is exactly why governments should get involved and they should be
sanctioning China on a full scale. One of the great mistakes, I think, in history, and maybe it was
excusable at the time because we were at war with the Soviet Union. But one of the great mistakes in my view
was the opening of China. The idea that economics was ever going to overcome values has been
thoroughly rebuked by the presence of Chinese dictatorship, which has strengthened, become more
powerful, become more deep, more tyrannical, with the advent of more capitalism. They've just taken
all the spoils of a state-run, basically, fascist economy, and then they've dumped it into
their own dictatorship. The entire Western world should be united against China right now. Whether they
will or not, is anybody's guess. But as the leaders of the free world, it seems to me that we should
be doing whatever we can to make it known to the Chinese economically, that we are simply not going
to abide by their intellectual property theft, their human rights predations, and their expansionism.
All right. Next question is for Jeremy. This is a pretty interesting take, too. It says that we've
seen this week. I know that you guys have seen that poll that Frank Lent and other.
have tweeted out that shows that 62% of Americans are afraid to share their political views.
But does this mean that the recent polls showing that Trump is down double digits are then meaningless?
So I'm not one who believes that we can just write off polls as meaningless.
Very often when conservatives say, well, the polls were wrong. The polls actually weren't that wrong.
You know, we like to say the polls showed that Hillary Clinton was going to win in 2016.
But she did win more votes in 2016. And basically by the same numbers that the polls,
that she would. The polls were very useful at helping understand human behavior. They were not
very good at specifying what was going to happen in some of the Midwestern states, which came down
to some fairly, very small and very anomalous things that occurred that allowed Trump to win. Listen,
I'm not saying he didn't win fair and square based on the system we have. He did. What I'm saying
is that the polls also were not wildly wrong about what the outcome was going to be in terms of the
human voting behavior at that time. That said, one other thing, there is no silent majority of
conservatives. There's this sort of idea harkening back to Nixon that there's this silent majority
that all think the way that we do is going to rise up. It's very comforting, I think, for conservatives
to believe that. But it is not true. The left has won. Their opinions are the more popular
opinions by and large in the country, in particular among the young. If the election were held today
and only millennials were able to vote, Donald Trump would probably win zero states. At most, he would
win one state. And lest you roll your eyes and say, ah, who cares what the millennials think?
You're wrong about who millennials are. Michael Knowles is a millennial. The 20-year-old who you just hired
to work at your factory or the 16-year-old kid, who you're still trying to get out the front door,
you've got a couple more years of raising them. They aren't millennials. They're a whole new generation
that's coming up behind the millennials. The millennials are closer to 40 by and large than they are
to 20. And they are, for the first time in our history, the largest voting demographic
in the country. So the idea that you could have the largest voting demographic in the entire
country utterly despise everything that we believe, and yet somehow we're still a silent majority
and secretly everybody agrees with us. It's absurd. And it's going to be cold comfort when
to tell ourselves, oh, well, there's still a silent majority. They just didn't show up to vote
when we start getting pummeled in elections. Instead, we better stop lying to ourselves
and do something about the problem.
So with those two caveats in mind, are there a lot more people who agree with us than are willing to admit it?
Of course, are you out of your mind?
You could lose everything by agreeing with us on even the most benign topics.
Men are not women, right?
Men are not women is banable, boycottable in our society today.
Even more benign things than that, saying, I agree that Black Lives Matter, but I don't agree with Black Lives Matters,
would cost most people working in most companies in this country today to lose their job.
So you bet you're rear-in there are a lot of people afraid.
They should be afraid to speak their mind.
I want to, though, tell you what I think the answer is,
and not just leave you with a sort of despair.
You know, Ben said that the government needs to get involved in China
because one of the good things that capitalism does is it creates competition,
and competition creates efficiencies.
We produce a wonderful tumbler, the leftist here is hot or cold tumbler.
The leftist's hot or cold tumbler is manufactured in China.
You might say, why don't you manufacture it in America?
Because there are zero companies in the United States of America that manufacture still tumblers.
It's not that it's more expensive to do it here.
It is that it is not possible to do it here.
We've looked into it.
Maybe we've missed one and somebody will correct me to our ability to search it out.
trade with China has been going on now for over 50 years.
There are consequences of that change.
We have moved a lot of our manufacturing overseas.
And I know some of you are going to write in, pissed off at me now, and say,
you're a hypocrite for buying your tumblers in China.
You're going to type to me, of course, on your iPhone, which was also made in China,
or your Android, which was made in China, or your laptop, which was made in China.
And I'm going to ignore you because you're only actually proving the fact that manufacturing happens in China.
You don't stop that by Daily Wire saying we're going to start a Tumblr company.
There's no reason why you would need to make millions of tumblers.
We purchased tens of thousands of tumblers.
We can't start a Tumblr factory.
Someone should start a Tumblr factory, and they will do so when there's incentive for them to do,
when they can do it competitively, when they won't lose by doing it.
One thing that I've discovered is everybody says that they want to buy American
until they see the price tag for buying American,
and then everybody just buys China or buys India.
Jeremy, this happened, my wife said at the beginning of all the craziness with China,
you know, even before the pandemic, how they're cheating on the trade is.
She said, we're just going to buy American.
I said, okay, that's fine.
Buy dresses, buy shoes, buy American.
There are only, as you say, like three companies that do this.
And even they get a lot of their stuff from China.
Right.
But the price, I'm actually willing to pay it.
I am actually, like, I am stubbornly American enough to pay for it.
But it's not just 20% more.
It's like 3x.
is so much more expensive.
So thanks a lot.
We looked at what it would take to actually manufacture the Tumblr,
and our cost on manufacturing the Tumblr wouldn't be 3x.
It would be 20x if we were to manufacture the tumblers directly.
And the machines that we would have to install in order to do it are themselves made in China.
So the only way that you deal with a problem like this is to take some sort of collective action
where the people who do what we don't want aren't the ones who succeed
at the expense of the people who try to do the thing that we do want.
This is why capitalism actually does, there is a value component to capitalism, which is that competition makes it to where the people who do the best make the most.
When you start interfering with that in a bad way, I think you create some per person incentives.
The same thing holds true, though, on this question of the silent majority, the people who are afraid to speak out, it is a collective action problem.
If every single person in America today who thinks that it is egregious that Major League Baseball is kneeling and condemning our society before the game would just turn off the game, 100% of us, you would see change.
If every one of us who is afraid that we might lose our job for speaking mainstream, traditionally middle of the road American opinions, like, for example, segregation is bad.
Equal justice under the law is good. Hard work is not only for white.
people, which the Smithsonian literally said last week, hard work is a white value that is,
or the nuclear family is only a white value system. If we would all just say bull crap,
men or men, women or women, everybody can and should work hard. Black people are not inferior
or superior to white people. They're just people who should be held to the same set of standards.
Yes, some people are born in circumstances that are worse than others. Some of those people are
black, some of those people are white. Some people are born with circumstances that are better than
others. And some of those people are black and some of those people are white. And the best we can do
is make a fair society and leave each other the hell alone. If we would all say that, they couldn't
fire all of us at the same time. The problem is we don't. And then we let one or two brave
suckers stick their necks out and they lose their jobs. And we all go, well, I wish somebody
would stand up to the left. And we go hide in the corner. It's collective action issue. When the day
comes that we're all willing to stand up, they will have to stop, even if we're not the majority.
A significant plurality is enough to put a stop to this. And rant. Next question for Andrew.
All right. Drew, this comes from a Daily Wire, All Access subscriber, by the way. That's why they get to
ask you a question. And they say that they've been rereading 1984. And is it not so very concerning
how similar the structures that seem to be being built currently are to the structures and the
procedures of this fictional book? Drew, you didn't write 19.
No, I did actually. I used a different name then.
No, no, listen, 1984 is a perfect description of Soviet Russia, and of course, the left always
works the same way. It has to work the same way. If you don't have, you know, the thing about it
is, is there actually is a moral order. There actually is moral truth and spiritual truths.
And in order to erase these things, you have to erase every form of logic and information
that can be, that is available to people. It's not enough.
It's not enough to lie to people.
You have to stop people from telling the truth.
That's why you have cancel culture.
There's no reason to have cancel culture if you're right, if you're actually telling the truth.
So everything in 1984, the famous scene in 1984, where they torture Winston Smith, and they say to him, it's not the two and two is four.
It's not the two and two is five.
It's the two and two is whatever the party says it is.
That's the system that you have to install in order to overcome reality.
And so whenever you have a movement like Black Lives Matter, like Antifa, like anything that comes from the far left, that is actually in opposition to reality, those same systems for silencing the truth, for silencing people's, even their own thought processes, have to come into play.
1984 is prophetic.
You know, they always used to say that he got it wrong in 1984 and it was Brave New World that got it right.
But no, I think the two of them hopscotch over each other.
Brave New World is a technological tyranny.
but 1984 is the face of tyranny in a technological world, and it always will be, and it will always remain.
And when you look at what's happening in our media, when Ben talks about the media, that's 1984.
That's exactly what we're talking about.
When you talk about cancel culture, that is 1984.
I wish people would read it because it is an absolute exact and precise case study of this kind of tyranny.
By the way, here I will, again, stump for a movie that everybody should go watch right now.
If you're looking for a good piece of entertainment, that really does have,
excellent values and has something to say, go check out the movie Mr. Jones on Amazon.
You should go rent it. It is the story of Gareth Jones, who is the journalist who uncovered
the Ukrainian Haladamar, and the villain in the piece is Walter Durante, who is portrayed
clear-eyed as the villain. I'm astonished the movie.
Yeah, I'm amazed the movie was ever made. It's really clear-eyed and accurate and worth
the watch. Well, you know, speaking of the New York Times and 1984, when we were talking about that
podcast, Jeremy, earlier, that basically said the whole problem in American education,
is white people. I reacted to that jokingly, and I said, yeah, white people are terrible,
and every other kind of person is better, and they're better particularly because of the color
of their skin, hashtag anti-racism. And obviously a little bit of a joke, except it actually
makes sense from within the framework of the New York Times and the left, because what they have defined
racism as is anything white people do, right? They say all white people are racist, and racism
is exclusively white. So you can't be any other kind of color or ethnicity and be racist because
blah, blah, blah, I don't know, because they've come up with some definition of that. And so
it actually does make sense that you have to just say that white people are the problem for everything.
If you live in a world where the definition of words is not what it was today, it's not what it was
yesterday, it's not even what it will be tomorrow. The definition of words is what the party says
it is. And where can we read that? You read that in the New York Times and every other cultural
institution the left took over.
Michael, this question is for you.
If you could construct an art to preserve man's greatest works of art and literature,
what would be the first three things that you'd put in there after the Bible, of course?
After the Bible, it would be Dante.
It would really be Inferno, Purgatory, and Paradise, the three parts of Dante's Divine
Comedy.
Or if you get rid of that, I would do Dante and then I would do Shakespeare and then I would do,
I don't know, let's throw like a coravaggio in there just because how to destroy America
in three easy steps.
I, like, left it hanging there for you, you do.
It was so obvious.
Like, just pick it up and be like, here you go.
Is that not in Dante's Divine Comedy?
That was the fourth canticle of Dante's.
You know, I am rereading Dante right now.
Man, that guy, I am.
I actually haven't really read it in my 10 years.
It is, it's so great.
Well, no, but this time then I'm reading it in English.
So I haven't done that before.
And, you know, initially it was in the Italian, of course.
You read the Milton in the Italian.
It's so great.
This is the thing that drives me the craziest about how the left has destroyed education.
It's not even that they teach us just stupid nonsense, like, you know, feminist dance theory or all these other kind of crazy things.
It's what they don't teach you.
Because the whole point of education is you're supposed to get to enjoy all of these great works of your civilization that you are simply not exposed to anymore.
And even at, like, top colleges, if you, if you, you're supposed to enjoy.
get an English degree, you're no longer required to read Shakespeare. And so I think actually,
after the educational institutions completely deteriorate, we are going to have to go to that
desert island. And I hope we bring good books. All right. This question comes from a daily wire
subscriber, also All Access, which don't forget to use that code for 15% off backstage and two
tumblers that are made in China, apparently, who know? But Ben, this question is, where should...
I mean, it says right on a made in China. I mean, we weren't really heightened it.
Ben, where should this Daily Wire subscriber get all of their COVID news?
I mean, other than the Daily Wire.
So there are a couple of websites that are really worth checking out.
There's one called COVID in Markets.
It's run by guy named David Bonson, who writes for National Review.
And every day he puts together kind of the most relevant charts with regard to COVID.
And it really is as objective as objective can be.
He looks at the data with a skeptical eye.
He is not alarmist in any way.
But he is realistic about sort of where things stand.
He'll look internationally as well as domestically.
So that's very good.
In terms of mainstream media, frankly, there's the Washington Post
Health 202 blog is actually quite good, and shockingly nonpartisan in a way that the rest of the
newspaper just is not. The political pages cover COVID, which is insane. The political pages
should not cover COVID. Only the health pages really should cover COVID because it's a health
issue. And that's why you see kind of idiot reporters who don't know the first thing about even the
coverage of epidemiology, pretending they know what they're talking about. But those would be a couple
of of really good sources. There are a couple people on Twitter who are sort of skeptics that I sort
to balance with people who are not as skeptical. I'll say something controversial. I'll take a look at
Alex Barronson. I'll take a look at Eringen. I'll take a look at, you know, and Weiss, right? These are all
three people who are kind of skeptical of the mainstream media narrative on this stuff. But then I'll
also follow people like Scott Gottlieb from the FDA. I'll try. One of the big problems here is that
there are no experts on a brand new pandemic. So when people say listen to the experts, no one is
an expert on a thing that has never happened before. It is impossible to be an expert on that,
which means that basically what we've been left with is a piece of expertise that is not expertise at all.
Stay away from other people. Don't breathe on them.
Wear a mask if you're going to be in close proximity to them and wash your hands a lot.
Okay, which is all crap that we knew in 1918, right?
Literally nothing has changed except that we pretend that we know things that we absolutely don't know.
And then we blame Trump for all the things that we don't know.
Trump is the God of the gaps for so many of these reporters.
It really is amazing, right?
They're constantly talking about religious people.
Well, you know, in the areas where science doesn't have an answer yet, you say, oh, there's where God is.
Well, that's exactly what they do with Trump, right? Once the science has made clear that lockdowns may not have worked all that great, once the science makes clear that California does one thing and Massachusetts does another, New York does another, and Florida and Texas, they all do different things. And yet the result seems kind of similar. So we don't actually know what the hell is going on. I mean, except in New York where everybody died.
Well, yeah, that's different. That's because Andrew Cuomo is horrible. But the go-to is a god of the gaps. You don't know what's happening, Trump. Right? It's unbelievable. The religious fervor with which they dedicate their lives to sussing out the various doctrinal, intracist.
of Trump's mind, when, as we all know, it ain't that intricate guys. So, like, it really isn't
by the way, just a quick note on this. I know it's off topic. Have you been following Andrew Cuomo
and his fascist quest to outlaw buffalo wings while making restaurant serve sandwiches? Everything
that they say about Trump and COVID, that he's a fascist, that he's incompetent, that he's
running everything into the ground, that he's micromanaging and that he wants to control your life.
Every single one of those things is true about Andrew Cuomo, except 83, except 83,000 times more.
including the number of deaths, and Andrew Cuomo is building freaking paper machet mountains of the dead,
and then standing in front of them like Richard Dreyfus with a fork in front of a giant sculpture of Devil's Tower,
explaining to people that he has actually saved thousands of lives.
How that guy has a 60, 70% approval rating in New York.
I don't want to hear about how New Yorkers are smarter anymore.
I just don't.
I'm not willing to hear it anymore.
You've blown your opportunity to prove to me how smart you are by telling me that Andrew Cuomo is a good governor.
And Bill de Blasio is a good mayor.
What the hell is wrong?
Two months ago, California has taken COVID more seriously than many places.
Two months ago, though, if you walk around my neighborhood in the evening outwalking a chief
executive dog, Jasper here, you would see that most people had a mask, but they weren't
wearing a mask.
Why were they not wearing the mask?
Because they were outside, and it was 90 degrees, and they were walking.
And they would go out of their way to avoid you, you know, and everybody gave each other
a wide berth.
Today, you walk out on the streets, everyone is wearing a mask.
Why?
What's the reason?
The reason is the same, the answer is the same as why Cuomo has a 65% approval rating.
It's because COVID has become decidedly political.
And the mask, it's not a mask against getting COVID, it's a mask of being in any way perceived to be rejecting the narrative that you must believe in order to be a virtuous person.
And so you will see people jogging in the now 90 degree Sherman Oaks Heat wearing masks.
It's not to keep them safe from the virus.
It's to keep them safe from the mob.
And that's the same reason Cuomo.
It doesn't matter how many people die on Cuomo's watch.
Cuomo has been determined by the party to be the great responder to the pandemic.
And therefore, he is.
No data required.
All right.
This question is about health care.
Speaking of COVID, somebody wants to know broadly, how can we improve the system?
And is it possible to unlink insurance from work or create privatization to encourage better
competition like across state lines, et cetera. This question is for Ben. Well, okay. So let me put down
the popcorn for just a second here. So here's the deal. It didn't seem like it was going to be a
bin question. Right. I mean, I just answered one like one second ago. Anyway, this around the horn has
really stopped dead. So the answer is it is actually quite difficult to delink employment and
insurance at this point in time simply because so many people are dependent on it. If you threw
people back on their own personal insurance, people would freak the hell out. They would lose their
minds, even though that is really the only step that could be taken to really heavily privatize
the insurance industry and link your level of cost with your level of risk, which is what is
necessary in order to have a transparent and functional market.
So with that said, there are certain things you can do around the edges to make the markets more
efficient. You can certainly remove a lot of the regulations that are placed on insurance
companies, which are, by the way, not earning money hand over fist. This idea that insurance
companies are just raking it is not true. That is a 2% industry at best. That's like a good year
for the health insurance industry is they make a 2% margin. They're not raking it in.
the tune of billions and billions. If they are raking it in, the reason they're raking it in is because
the government is subsidizing them, which is one of the reasons that so many insurance
companies actually supported Obamacare, because in the short term, it mandated that people
buy insurance, which meant that the insurance companies in the short term made a lot of money,
even though on the back end they were going to lose a lot of money when Obamacare's regulation
started to kick in, and all of a sudden you have to cover all these people with pre-existing
conditions who'd never joined before. There are certain things you can do that Avicroy has
talked about this over at the apothecary and the Forbes blog. He's written full studies on
what could be done to make health markets more efficient. Getting rid of regulations on state
lines would be an easy one. Getting rid of a lot of the regulations with regard to how insurance is
done would be an easy one. If you actually want to make health insurance cheaper, then what you have
to do is get rid of all the provisions that nobody is willing to do politically, namely pre-existing
conditions. Health insurance is never going to be cheap so long as it's not insurance at all.
If I'm insuring myself and I already have a disease, that's not insurance. That is me buying the same
coverage at a discount, right?
In the same way that if I set my house on fire
and then buy insurance, that's not me
buying insurance against the fire. That is me attempting
to game the system by having the insurance
company pay for the damages that I
have already incurred. You're stealing from
all the people who are actually paying the whole time.
Right, and that's not true for people with preexisting conditions who are just
desperate to get care, obviously. But what we're talking about
here is how you lower cost. So,
the framework I always use in discussing health insurance
is very easy. You can have two of the following
three. You cannot have all three. You can either have a
universal system, or you can have a quality system,
We can have a cheap system.
You cannot have all three of those.
There's no such thing as a universal quality cheap system.
They do not exist.
If you want a universal system that is quality, it will be expensive.
If you want a universal system that is cheap, it's going to lack in quality.
If you want a cheap system that has good quality, it is probably not going to be universal.
Andrew, is it possible for you to name a member of the media or just in general that's a liberal,
that you follow a read that actually has some well-thought-out arguments that make you think about their perspective?
Is that one for me?
Andrew.
Oh.
You know, that's a really good question.
I read the New York Times every single morning, and it has become consistently, it is consistently gone from being a fair statement of what the left believes to being Crazy Land.
I mean, you really feel, I always, I was called the op-head page knucklehead row, but it's almost more like an asylum at this point.
And when I think of liberals who are thoughtful, you know, I can't, when I think of liberals who are thoughtful, I'm now thinking of conservatives.
I'm thinking of conservatives who are a little bit more to the center.
I think I live a little bit more in the center in most things.
And I think that almost, you know, a long time ago, Lionel Trilling, the famous literary critic,
said that there is no such thing as an intellectual conservative movement.
Conservatism is just a kind of emotional gesture.
I think that's true of the left now.
I don't think that there is an intellectual left.
I think that there is only an intellectual right, which goes from middle of the road guys to the far right.
And I think that this is where the debates are happening.
It's where nobody's afraid to speak.
I mean, I always say, you know, I said to Barry Weiss when she left The New York Times,
I said, you know, you're on the wrong side.
You know, I keep saying this to all these people.
You know, you're on the wrong side.
Barry Weiss would be an example of a thoughtful person who considers himself liberal that I do read.
My sister, Caitlin Flanagan, is a very fine writer who frequently says really interesting things,
and she tends to trend toward the left a little bit.
There are these people.
but they are fighting a system that really wants to shut them up.
So if you want to go to places where you can argue with things,
if you want to live in the sort of Dave Rubin world
where we're all talking to each other,
you really have to be on the right.
This is where the conversation is taking place.
Quick note here.
So I want to just say about that Harper's Weekly Letter,
so there's Harper's Weekly Letter,
where a bunch of people who are sort of liberal-minded
said we're done with cancel culture.
And there wasn't a single Trump voter on that list.
I'm very happy that that letter exists.
And until one member of that group is willing to have a conversation publicly
with a person who did vote for Trump,
it means nothing.
That's right.
Because that entire statement was designed to open the Overton window just enough for them.
In other words, like, we want to escape the cancel culture ourselves, but how many of us are
willing to actually cry?
Now, here's the truth.
I know a lot of people on that list, and I know some of them are willing to have those
conversations.
But that letter is only going to matter when that letter includes people ranging from
Noam Chomsky to people like you, Drew, and ranging from people like Ann Applebaum to people
like Knowles and ranging from people like Thomas Chatterton Williams to people like Jeremy.
Right, that's the only time that's going to matter because either there's going to be an alliance built between the old school liberals who are not hardcore leftists and people on the right who are committed to free speech or there will be no alliance and all and the left is just going to eat this entire, this entire steak piece by piece.
You know, on this point of the where to look in the apparatus of the mainstream media, I don't think there is any place to look.
I mean, you met like I love Caitlin Flanagan and a couple other people, but I don't think that's really where you look.
I think the interesting, far-left-even stuff, and certainly right-wing stuff you see, is on Twitter.
It's on these accounts that are named.
They're like puns on old philosophers or there are other kind of meamy kinds of names.
And, you know, you can actually find some accounts there that are anonymous because if these, even the leftists,
if they say things that are contrary to the approved views of, you know, the liberal establishment,
they'll get killed.
So they, you know, they hide their names.
You can find some interesting debates happening there.
But, you know, as you mentioned, Ben, these people are so afraid to even come out and speak to anyone who may have voted for Trump.
They're so afraid that those conversations, unfortunately right now, often have to happen anonymously.
I just want to point one thing out about that Harper's letter, too, which is really interesting, that it started out with this big kind of liberal throat clearing about how the right is so much worse, but we're going down this wrong road.
And there was a line in there saying we know that the right is really the censor.
censorious side. And every time I see them make that statement, I think, name one time,
name one place where right-winger censor people. Just please, where they cancel people,
where they get people fired. It is really impossible. And this, I feel this way about Trump, too.
I love, by the way, Ben, I got to tell you, I love Trump of the gaps. I think that that is
the only original thing anybody said about Donald Trump the last year. But I think every time I
hear that Trump is a unique threat to our way of life, I think, name one thing, name a thing he's done.
And the New York Times, as Barry Wye said, when you read their op-ed section, it's one op-ed after
another saying, what a terrible threat to our way of life is Donald Trump.
And I think, okay, name a specific thing.
And they never can.
It really is amazing.
And the reason for that is they don't listen to anybody but themselves.
Well, and that people like Barry and people like, we've got, I won't name them to this unfair,
many of our friends who are part of the either intellectual dark web movement or the sort of online,
moderate centrist, self-described centrist movement,
even they, they're like people who used to be Republicans,
but call themselves libertarians because maybe they wouldn't get made fun of at work.
This movement is a group of people who cannot acknowledge,
even to themselves, that both sides aren't equally bad.
The only way that they're able to criticize the left at all is if they first denounce the right.
And I don't think they're just doing it.
Barry's letter didn't do that.
So to be fair, Barry's letter didn't.
But the Harper letter.
The Harper letter certainly did.
And I don't think that they're just posturing in their own minds.
They are just posturing.
But I'm sure that in their minds they've actually carved out some way in which they believe that that's true.
Because they're still looking at a right that doesn't exist.
And many of you, Michael and I were actually talking about this before the show,
about someone with whom we're all friendly, who the right they denounce is not the right that actually exists.
They don't know what people on the right actually believe.
And so they want to say things like, well, you know, yes, on the extreme end of the left,
you've got people who are tearing down statues and calling for segregation.
But, you know, on the extreme side of the right, you guys have a lot of people who want to tear down statues and go back to segregation too.
And you're like, well, no, that's not on the extreme side of the left.
That's on the very mainstream side of the left.
Like literally not one person in Congress will denounce either of those ideas if they're a Democrat.
And on the right, there is no one in the Republican Party in Congress who wouldn't denounce anyone who believe that.
And they look at you like you're crazy.
Like, well, that can't be true because in my mind, that's what the right is.
It's very comforting to believe that there's sort of equal evil on both sides or they're both the problem.
But it just ain't the case.
Sorry. Sorry, folks.
And, you know, the funny thing is, is when people get red pill, they first get red pill and they start to associate with conservatives, the first thing they say is, gee, people are so nice.
And when you consider the four of us, if they're saying that about us, people on the left must be awful.
Terrible.
No, but that's exactly right.
Because every time I was on Joe Rogan's show this week, and I'm very friendly with Joe, I think Joe's a great guy.
We have a lot of fun together.
And all the comments are like, I didn't know that Shapiro was such a nice guy.
He's such a human being.
And it's like, I'm the exact same human being on my show as I was on Joe's show.
It's just that nobody on the left really wants to have an open conversation.
If they do, it's extraordinarily rare.
What they actually want is to browbeat people or not to have them on at all.
That's right.
That's really the goal. And it's really, it's quite disheartening because I really believe that if there is to be a future for the country that lies in rights, there is going to have to be a liberal part of the country that stands up on its hind legs and says, I would rather associate with these people I disagree with about nearly everything when it comes to policy than you people, with whom I agree with on policy about a lot of things. But you guys want to tear down the entire system. I'm not going to do that. I'm not going to give away my rights just because you and I both agree that America should move toward a more progressive tax system. Like, that's not.
something I'm willing to do. Until liberals are willing to actually cross that aisle and shake a few
hands and, more than anything, just recognize that we're human beings, too, on this side.
I mean, it's what I've said a thousand times. It's the happy birthday problem. Every time I have a
birthday, I will get 20 texts from people who are on the left inside mainstream leftist organizations
with whom I am friendly, who I've offered a public shoulder to when they have been ripped on, right?
I'm the guy out there defending Frickin Madaglaclias who I've called the Ralph Wiggum of the Internet.
When he's being assaulted by the members of his own publication, I'm out there defending Madaglacias.
I'll get a bunch, I'll get, you know, letters from inside major organizations on the left.
Happy birthday. And then on Twitter, nothing. Because the minute you acknowledge that people on the right are human beings,
then you have humanized them. And you must never, ever humanize anybody on the right. It's more important not to humanize anybody on the right than to preserve the rights for everybody.
Yeah, that's right. And we all know that Ben's really a robot. And he just put on a different mask when he went on Joe Rogan. It was a very enjoyable interview, by the way.
I finally get to curse. I mean, with Joe, it's almost, it's in the water.
It takes you a while to warm up, though. Like the first 10 minutes.
you're like the effing, and then you like eventually got there.
Eventually you're dragged down into Joe's world.
That's the way that that works.
Speaking of being dragged down, Michael, do you think that Gisleine Maxwell will make it to testify
and other thoughts?
I was under the impression she had already committed suicide in the future.
What day is it?
Is it not, no, you're right.
I'm sorry, the Clintons haven't scheduled that until at least next Monday.
I actually do think.
I mean, all sort of Clinton, Epstein didn't kill himself jokes aside,
I do think she probably will make it
because if this woman ends up dead in her jail cell,
like the conspiracy theorists will take,
they will march on Washington, they will take over the country.
Because, by the way, it will be evidence of a conspiracy.
So you can't call it a conspiracy theory anymore.
It seems as though she's already cooperating with the feds.
It seems that she's given up some names,
which I'm sure will remain redacted, you know,
for the near future because they, you know, implicate so many powerful people around the world.
But this is the real problem. I don't particularly care about Elaine Maxwell in particular,
but on this issue generally, the left is always, and some people on the right complain about
conspiracy theorists. Why are there, and you know, the left will even label sort of mainstream
ideas, conspiracy theories. But they never ask themselves, why do conspiracy theories take hold?
They take hold because we have no faith in our institutions in the media, in the administrative
government, and we have no faith because they have squandered that faith.
They have squandered that credibility.
You can't believe what you read in the papers or see on cable news, and you see obvious
incidents of incompetence or corruption in the federal government, or very often both.
So, you know, I'm sort of sick of hearing the left complain about the conspiracy theorists.
quit
creating the breeding ground
on which those conspiracies crop up.
Also, Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself, man.
I mean, come on.
I've said a lot of warm words
about President Trump. He made it into the same
sentence as Washington, in the same sentence
as God from me on this very podcast.
Let me just say, it's real weird that he went
into a press conference and wished
Jeline Maxwell, Maxwell, the best.
I love you. I don't know what... Of course you loved it.
I loved it. What other answer was he going to give?
Was he supposed to... I hope she fries in hell.
She was procuring...
unraged prostitutes for overage men.
Like, how about that?
That would be a good answer.
No presumption of innocence?
What the heck?
We need due process, even for the madam of the most notorious monster that we've seen in the last
30 years.
Listen, I think that if we can't even agree on whether or not Donald Trump was right to approve
of Maxwell, then it's probably time to call this show off and engage in our inner...
Internet.
Yeah.
Well, we have no unionist tendencies left.
Go buy Ben's book.
the name of the episode, and it's also a good note on which to conclude.
Also, become an All-Axcess member if you're not already one.
You can keep hanging out with us right now over yonder at DailyWire.com, where we'll be taking
even more questions.
If you haven't been over to one of these, because you're not an All-Axcess member, you're
really missing out.
We answer, I think it's fair to say 100 questions probably get answered during the course
of this All-access discussion that we're going to go out.
92 by Ben, because he typed so fast, but the rest of us get in there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Come over and see us.
Thanks for hanging out with us.
We will see you over at dailywire.com.
Bye Ben's book.
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