The Michael Knowles Show - Daily Wire Backstage: "The Squad" Edition

Episode Date: July 18, 2019

As President Trump and the Fresh-Face Squad battle it out over Twitter, who will be left standing in the end? Is Trump's online rhetoric part of an overall strategy or is it just a big mistake? Do the...se fights help or hurt his chances at a 2020 win? 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. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, everybody. This is Michael. You're about to listen to our latest episode of Daily Wire Backstage, where I join Ben Shapiro, Andrew Plavin, and the man who will one day fire me for real, Daily Wire, God King Jeremy Boring, for a great conversation on politics and culture, and where we answer questions from Daily Wire subscribers. Without further ado, here is Backstage. Fake laugh in three, two, one. Some of our best work. Welcome to Backstage, the So. Squad edition. Howdy, folks? I'm Jeremy Boring, known around here as the God King, lowercase G, lowercase K, and joining me this fine evening, Ben Shapiro, Andrew Claven, and Michael Knowles, this, my friends, is my squad.
Starting point is 00:00:56 There are many like it. This one is mine. My squad is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I master my life. Without me, my squad is useless. Without my squad, I am useless. I must fire my squad true.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Nol's fired. I don't know. Now, if you're still with us, I implore you to get your keyboards and submit your burning questions to us in anticipation of our dazzling answers. Also, submit your resumes because we'll need to replace Nulls. Let's do this thing. Yowsa! That's already a gas. So we got a bunch of things to talk about. Apollo, we're at the 50th anniversary of mankind, stepping foot on the moon. Mankind. Not woman kind. And only white mankind. We must face that. We must face that. We must face it. I'm actually, I'm really glad it's a hoax because otherwise it would have been so racist and sexist.
Starting point is 00:01:46 We're going to go up there. We've got to take down the flag, man. We've got to give the moon back to the Chinese. That's the only way to make this happen. We're going to talk about the president's tweets and the response from the Democrats in Congress. And of course, we're going to talk about the squad. So fresh, so face, man. So fresh. So face. So squad. So squad. I made a little something to commemorate the squad. And I can't take full credit.
Starting point is 00:02:11 I mean, I will think most of the credit for this. There's artists, I'm not crediting them. For the sake of their careers. Animators, I'm not crediting them. But I am going to credit our friend Adam Baldwin, who is one of the great Twitter follows. Yep. Who observed on Twitter only yesterday
Starting point is 00:02:28 that this squad, the JV squad, the Fresh Face Squad, the Dem Squad, calls to mind another famous squad, which would be well known to those of us who are in the oft-overlooked generation. We're not boomers. We're not millennials. We're Gen Xers.
Starting point is 00:02:46 And Gen Xers had a little something-something-something in the early 2000 called Teen Girl Squad. And I'm going to play for you the original Teen Girl Squad video now, and then we'll see what we were able to do with it here. So, guys, could we play Teen Girl Squad for the folks at home? Teen Girl Squad! Cheerleader! So-and-so! Watch a face!
Starting point is 00:03:10 The ugly one! Let's go get ready to look so good. Let's start looking good. Boim. Kristen, you look burnt or dead. I miss Christine. I'm a crush on him. Dad, you know.
Starting point is 00:03:50 I look so good. It's over. That was strong bass. That was strong bass. Our friends, Homestar Runner, one of the great, before there was YouTube. There was Homestar Runner. Absolutely. And I wasted many, many.
Starting point is 00:04:05 hours of my life. You know, those guys, I read an article about them back in those days. They were running a merch business primarily. They made these great flash animations, which we all loved at the same time. And then they sold merch out of their garage. And I can't remember the number. Obviously, this has been almost 20 years ago, but they were doing like six figures a month selling merch out of their. I was so, and I was legitimately inspired by them early in my Hollywood career. I thought these are entrepreneurial, enterprising guys. They figured out a new way to communicate what they to communicate to the world, they bypassed all of the gatekeepers, and they were hilarious. My son was eight, and he used to sit and watch them, and his old father used to
Starting point is 00:04:45 stand the back of them just in stitches, strong letters. Strongbads emails. Strong bads emails. Oh, that's the email. I can remember this. So, Adam Baldwin makes the point that there was a girl squad, team girl squad, for four women, and now there is a four women's squad in Congress. known as Dim Girl Squad, and I thought we should take his joke as far as we could. And so I present to you now the world premiere of Dem Girl Squad. Dim Girl Squad! Cheerleader! So-and-so! What's our face?
Starting point is 00:05:22 The other one! Heckhals, let's get ready to Fresh Soface! Word! Word! Okay, let's start freshen face. I hate, I hate, I'd drummed. Pillhand, you look fascist, did. I'm Miss I'm Miss I'm every Jew. How, my gender.
Starting point is 00:06:01 Tweeted. Dad, yo. MP! I'm saying that the video was impeached. I'm saying the video was impeached. No wonder you were verified. What, this is, you're talking about this little thing? I haven't even noticed.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Now I can actually be demonetized. Okay, so now I feel the necessity to break down behind the scenes for just a moment how this all went down after Jeremy came up with his brilliant idea. So the way this went down is that Jeremy talks about this video, and we thought to ourselves, Media Matters will watch this show. Right? And because Media Matters will watch this show, this means, that we have to take precautions.
Starting point is 00:06:45 So, for example, we will play the original cartoon so that people know that this is a parody of the original cartoon, a shot-for-shot parody of the original cartoon. So there can be no mistake. Jeremy Boring, the God King, does not actually believe that Ilhan Omar was, quote-unquote,
Starting point is 00:07:01 concentration camp in her gender by the president of the United States, a robot. Although he might. Yeah. Okay, so that was number one. Then, Jeremy, we changed, as you'll notice, a lot of things from the original video because the original video has, right, no one dies in this one, because we didn't want media matters to get the idea that anyone is interested in threatening the lives of any of these people.
Starting point is 00:07:24 We wish no violence on the DEM Girl Squad. No one's trying to incite violence. In fact, I would gladly condemn anyone who attempted to do violence to the DIM Girl Squad. As opposed to the Dem Girl Squad, which apparently will go silent about like terrorist attacks on ICE facilities. And then also, there was, you'll notice that the Dem Girl Squad in this iteration is different than the DEM Girl Squad, the original Strong Bad squad. We have cheerleader, check. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:50 Yeah, okay. So and so. So and so is there. What's her face? Check. The ugly one. There is no ugly one in this version. There's the other one because we didn't want anyone to assume that we were actually saying that Rashida Tili is ugly.
Starting point is 00:08:04 We wouldn't want anyone to assume. No, she's not ugly. And even if she were, which she's not, then we wouldn't say that because it's mean and cruel because we don't want to get boycotted by media matters. So all of these deliberate changes were made. To tell a freaking joke. To tell a joke. Because this is the idiotic world we live in. Or if you tell a strong bad joke, then you will get boycotted by media matters.
Starting point is 00:08:25 Whereas if, let's say, you're a rabid anti-S-S-S-I-N-O-Han Omar, then you are a victim of our patriarchal evil society. So I just felt like it was necessary to give that backstory right there. I appreciate that. Also, Jews is spelled J-E-W-S, not J-O-O-S. That's true. As it properly spelled. That is, by the way, the best line in there. I hate every jesus.
Starting point is 00:08:44 That part is fact check true. But even though we've explained the joke, I bet that Ilhan Omar, when she watches that, she won't even giggle. Now, if maybe we had talked about al-Qaeda or Hezbollah, then she would giggle, but she's not going to giggle at our video. She doesn't find it funny. That's right.
Starting point is 00:09:02 Okay, well, we're all children. But if you were an adult, you might think about, you know, adult things, like the fact that one day you're going to die. Now, one thing we did today is we put out the pictures what we'd all look like on the face at. And some of us are closer to death than others. And what that means is that Jeremy look pretty old, I look pretty old, and those look decrepit
Starting point is 00:09:19 because he's younger than all of us right now. But he smokes like a chimney. And Drew looks exactly the same. But this got us all thinking about death, as you should, if you're responsible as all, which means you should get life insurance. And this is why you should go over to policy genius. Policy genius is the easy way to shop for life insurance online.
Starting point is 00:09:35 In just two minutes, you can compare quotes from the top insurers and find your best price. Once you apply, the policy genius team handles all the paperwork. and the red tape, no sales pressure, no hidden fees, just financial protection and peace of mind. PolicyGenius does all sorts of insurance, not just life insurance. They do home insurance and auto insurance and disability insurance. So if you need life insurance, but you don't want to deal with all the legwork, head on over to policygenius.com, write this very instant. It is the easy way to compare all those top insurers, find the best value for you. Be a responsible adult. Don't
Starting point is 00:10:02 be buried in a pauper's grave. Make sure that if you plots your family is fine. They may miss you, but they won't miss the cash. Go over to policygenius.com right now. Delegate what you hate, especially if you hate getting life insurance. And for God's sake, the children here at the Daily Wire encourage you to be an adult. Go check over PolicyGenius. Don't be like us. Because I'm not like you guys, I don't have a daily show, and I don't do ad reads on a regular basis. I actually do sometimes before the show go check out our sponsors, because I'm not as familiar with them.
Starting point is 00:10:27 The ease with which you can shop for insurance on Policy Genius is actually pretty shocking. And it's a reminder that we live in the greatest time in all of humans. And by the way, I just took out a bunch of life insurance, and I then sent a picture of my sister. in 50 years from the Face app to my wife. And I said to her, if this is not appeal to you, then I've just made a horrible horrible thing. By the way, I also will note, that is what a, since you don't have a daily show, that's what a professional transition into an ad sounds like.
Starting point is 00:10:56 I think that's how that is good. I don't think I'd say anything, but I really feel like you were in the show. Okay, so what should we talk about? Well, I think that we should talk about Apollo to begin with, because this week, our friend Bill Whittle, launched a new podcast about Apollo 11 called Apollo 11 What We Saw to commemorate the 50th anniversary of people sometimes call it mankind's greatest achievement. I don't think it's mankind's greatest adventure, mankind's greatest sort of achievement of the will.
Starting point is 00:11:26 And it happened 50 years ago. The Saturn 5 took off 50 years ago yesterday, and the landing itself will have taken place this weekend. And one of the amazing things, as you watch Bill recount this, So you can pick this up anywhere where you can find a podcast, right? It's on iTunes, it's on... It's terrific. It's really first-ray. I mean, it looks beautiful. The set is great.
Starting point is 00:11:43 Bill does a great job with it. Yeah. And the story is so riveting because you think you know the story, especially for those of us who weren't already old when it happened in 69. The amount of detail and the amount of care that Bill takes it telling the story, the personal side of the story and the technological, I think is really fascinating. And it brings up this question. I don't recall if we've ever talked about.
Starting point is 00:12:07 about this question on the show. Why do people subscribe, especially on the right, there's actually a tendency toward this kind of thinking on the right to conspiracy theories. You know, there are more people today who believe that mankind never stepped foot on the mood than there were a year ago, more than the year before that, every year since 1969, the number of people who doubt the event has increased. I have a couple of theories about it. I figured the three of you would have some theories about it as well. I think it's an interesting thing that's a conversation because of, you know, exactly the moment that we're commemorating right now. I think it's an important conversation as well because a lot of our audience, obviously young,
Starting point is 00:12:45 male, conservative leaning, right of center, they're on the internet and it is very easy to find yourself tripping down a trail. And these guys will make very compelling cases for why things like the moon landing couldn't have and therefore did not happen. There's this phenomenon. Why the moon doesn't exist, actually. Why the moon doesn't exist. That's the new one. It's only a paper Yeah. But there's this phenomenon that I call the preponderance of false evidence. And when you talk to people who buy into one of these conspiracy theories, they'll say, you know, why are there two shadows on the moon when there's only one light source, the sun?
Starting point is 00:13:22 And you say, well, there's two light sources, the moon. And they'll say, aha, but the moon doesn't generate light. You know, well, no, but the moon reflects so much light that you can read a book at night, 200,000 miles away on Earth on a full moon night. That's a lot of light to create shadow on the moon. And then they'll pause for just a second because they never considered that there are actually two light sources and they'll say,
Starting point is 00:13:42 why does the flag wave on the moon if there's no... And you realize that they've been duped not by a single piece of evidence, but by the preponderance of false evidence. And because there's so much that isn't true, pointing out individual instances of truth isn't enough to change their thinking. And if you knock down too many of people's
Starting point is 00:14:02 of the lies that people believe in a... in a row, they want to abandon the conversation altogether because you're expecting them to accept too many of their own mistakes in their process of logic. So I think that's part of what motivates it on a very technical level. But on a philosophical level, what is it? I think you have a few theories on this, which I'll let you go into because you say them better. But I think one reason conservatives and right-wingers in particular are attracted to these ideas
Starting point is 00:14:31 is it's one of conservatives' best attributes. being turned against them, which is that we're skeptical of most of what we see in the mainstream. We are contrarian. If you're a conservative in 2019 America, you're pretty contrarian against the pop culture. You are distrustful of the government. You're distrustful of what your history teachers tell you. You are distrustful of what you read on the Coke can. And so you couldn't possibly, this fantastic story, this great achievement of mankind,
Starting point is 00:15:00 you just don't believe it could happen. And so you're attracted to every single conspiracy theory, whether it's that we couldn't have survived the Van Allen radiation belt. We couldn't, the flag wave. We filmed it in Culver City right by my old apartment. We, you just, it doesn't matter which theory gets you to that destination, even if the theories contradict each other. The thing that can't be true is the mainstream narrative because we get lied to by the mainstream narrative all the time. Right. I think that is fair. And there's this sort of conflation that happens between different types of lies. So there are the lies that we're told in the media that we all know our lies and that we can evidence our lies. The next step is the things about which we are skeptical, that we strongly suspect our lies, but which we can't prove her lies.
Starting point is 00:15:45 And then there's the third, which are things that aren't lies, and we can actually prove they're true, but we approach them with that same skepticism from the very beginning. And so we don't give credence to the actual evidence when it's... I take issue with the conservative part of this, though. I mean, the thing that always strikes me about conspiracy theories is how unnecessary most of them are. If some, if Ben were to disappear, it would be fair to construct a conspiracy theory, what happened to Ben, you know? But that, although who wouldn't get rid of them, but most conspiracy theories, like Islamists say we're going to take down the World Trade Center. They take down the World Trade Center. They say we took down the World Trade Center.
Starting point is 00:16:23 And suddenly there's a conspiracy theory, who took down the World Trade Center? I'm always struck by how unnecessary it is, which says to me that it's performing a function. And I think the one function that conspiracy theories perform is they keep you from changing your mind. And I think any time, JFK, perfect example, this was from a generation that supported communism. They thought the Soviet Union was the future and it works. And here was this guy who killed the president because he was a communist and JFK. The assassin was a communist and JFK was a cold warrior. And they just thought it couldn't happen.
Starting point is 00:16:56 The day that he was arrested on the front page of the New York Times, there was an editor. editorial saying hate killed JFK referring to bigots who hated JFK and there were bigots who hated JFK they didn't kill them they didn't it didn't happen same thing with the Islamists it destroyed multiculturalism it destroyed irony it destroyed all the things that the left had been living with so I think it's whose ox gets gored with the moon it's a little strange because what I think that people don't want to change their minds about is that we have been in decline yeah and I think that it's it's much easier to believe that all those
Starting point is 00:17:30 you know, crew cut guys smoking cigarettes. With slide rulers. With slide rulers, couldn't put a rocket on the moon than to believe that we haven't done it in all this time. Well, that does bring you to a kind of weird conspiracy theory of the left about the moon landing. Not that it didn't happen, but that it was the overt product of evil. Which is what you're starting to see in the Washington Post
Starting point is 00:17:50 and the New York Times, two articles in the last two days. One claiming that it was the product of an evil white male culture and the other claiming that it was the product of an evil white male culture. The only difference was focused. One time it was white, one time it was male. And the New York Times were in a long piece today from a lady basically saying that the shortcomings of the space program, and the reason we haven't put a woman on the moon now is because we put a man on the moon then.
Starting point is 00:18:13 Meaning if it had been more gender neutral back in 1969, then there would be a woman on the moon right now. And the article makes no sense, and it backs off its point about seven different ways and seven different times. No, no, no, no. I think I see their point. That's how he got verified. I mean, what they failed to understand is that if the patriarchy really were in charge, all the women would have been on the moon. Exactly. Right.
Starting point is 00:18:32 But you could put a woman on the moon, white game. Apparently, apparently not. So there is this attempt to decry the history of the United States as inherently bad. So even if you accept that good things happened, they were the product of bad things, which means they weren't actually good things in the first place. And you're starting to see that merge with what is not really a conspiracy, but just a historical inaccuracy. The left going through and taking one-by-one American-sacrifice. symbols and turning them into symbols of white supremacy. So you saw this fake story that went around
Starting point is 00:19:00 from Yahoo News today about how Chris Pratt was wearing a don't tread on me t-shirt. You know, the flag that was the first symbol of the U.S. Navy and that has flown at everything from Metallica concerts to Second Amendment rallies. And the idea was that he had, this was a white supremacist symbol. We know that the Betsy Ross flag in the last two weeks became a white supremacist symbol. From people who don't know what the hell they're talking about. Why? Because they went on Gab. and there were like three trolls who said, you know it'd be hilarious? If we take the symbol, like the okay symbol, then we say the okay symbol or the three points of it was actually white power because WP, see how it works? And then the entire left goes, wow, it's probably true.
Starting point is 00:19:38 And the question isn't why the white supremacists do that. They do that for attention. They do that because they're trying to hijack the symbols. They've been doing that. It's going all the way back to the American Nazi party, flying American flags with giant pictures of George Washington and Madison Square Garden. The question is, why did the American? left decide to go along with this. And the answer is because their agenda is basically the same, which is to take all of the aspects of American history and paint them with the worst possible brush
Starting point is 00:20:01 in the same way that white supremacists are doing. So white supremacists sees the symbol. A normal person would go, no, I'm sorry, that's BS. This is not a white supremacist. You guys are a joke. Instead, the left goes, maybe you're right. Maybe it was a symbol of white supremacy. And so you're seeing that with their take on the moon landing now, which is sure the moon landing happened, but was it really that great? I mean, it was the product of it's a society in which segregation had only recently been banished. It was the product of society where men were disproportionately staffing NASA. Could it really have been that awesome if all that happened? And I said, well, you're missing the actual news part of us landing on the moon. I pointed this out
Starting point is 00:20:36 on my show today. One of the parts of the word news is the word new. It actually has to be something new. One of the things that was not new is the patriarchy. One of the things that was not new was racism. The thing that was new is when we put a dude on the moon. That was new. So if you're So if you're talking about the part that's different, the question is not what kind of terrible society produced a man on the moon. The question is, what did we do right to put a man on the moon? And because the left doesn't want to assume we ever did anything, right, it becomes, just putting a man on the moon really all that important.
Starting point is 00:21:04 And it does raise the question, like, what have they done? What is the left produced? What have they created? They keep telling us, you know, you don't want to be replaced by brown people. And frankly, I don't care what color Americans are as long as they're Americans. But my question is, don't people have to do something before we? They put a man in the ladies' roll. That's pretty good, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:21:24 It's impressive. It's one small step for a man. If it is a man, it's a... Yeah, I think this is right. If you can't point to achievement, to accomplishment, then all you're left with is tear down the accomplishments of others. And this is the fundamental issue with the left, right? Since equality does not exist in a vacuum,
Starting point is 00:21:45 what they want to do is penalize success, because penalizing success is much, much, much easier. to accomplish than turning failure into success. Right. So if, you know, the obvious example is if one runner is fast and one runner is slow, there's only one way you can get them to be, to run the same, that's to make the fast guy slow, right? Yeah. So they have to tear down what they see as all the spikes of human accomplishment because
Starting point is 00:22:12 they don't like who accomplished them and they don't like that they were accomplished by only some people. So you have to crush all that. And I think, I get these questions in the mailbag. They say, why do they hate Washington? Why do they hate Jefferson? Why do they... Is it because they hate men?
Starting point is 00:22:24 Is it because they hate white people? Is it because they hate Americans? And I think it's because they hate themselves. They hate exactly what you were saying, that we can't do that today. We can't put a man on the moon right now. We can't do it because our culture is in decline because those old people in the black and white old-timey days who didn't even have... They didn't even have iPads. Can you imagine?
Starting point is 00:22:45 And they put a man on the moon, and they hate that we are in decline. that we actually, maybe we're not so perfect. Maybe we can't judge and hold in moral approbary in every past person in history. Well, but this is our, the accomplishment of their age was putting man on the moon, splitting the atoms, saving the West from Nazism and from Imperial Japanese fanaticism. And by the way, destroying segregation in the United States. That's what I was going to say. That's that same generation.
Starting point is 00:23:10 The same generation. The accomplishment of this generation is declaring itself morally superior to that. That's right. That is the one thing that we can all do. And it is quite an accomplishment considering the morals of our generation. But it really is true, though, that everything they have, everything that they fight for, everything that they believe in was created by the people who came before them. You think just a little bit of gratitude, a little bit. By the way, and by Democrats, I mean, mostly by them, right, it was JFK's mission.
Starting point is 00:23:40 That's right. This happened right after an eight-year stretch in which Democrats were president. So what exactly are, like they could just take credit for it. Have you ever gone back? Of course you haven't. He listened to JFK's speeches. He sounds like us. He sounds like, he's an anti-communist.
Starting point is 00:23:56 I'm going to say my freaking Kate Winslet point. I forgot. Oh, this is the Kate Winslet wealthing? Yeah, yeah. She said today she was pleased to find out that her ancestors were peasants and poppers in Britain. She would have been ashamed and humiliated to have discovered that she descended from wealth. because they don't, they can't handle the people in the past accomplished anything. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:20 It would actually, it would actually be a shameful act to be descended from the people who accomplished something. I do love the fact that Kay Winslet said that, and we're supposed to appreciate her bravery for saying that she's so appreciative of the fact that she came from poverty. How about her kids? Yeah. I mean, so I presume that she's going to give away all of her wealth, and she's going to tell her children to live in absolute penury. And, and by the way, she doesn't have to wait to do it. Her kids are there right now. they're growing up right now.
Starting point is 00:24:46 She could just give away all that wealth right now. She could put all that money to good use fighting global warming. And she could go play whatever Oscar bait part she's going to play with seven viewers. And I mean, she's a great actress. But anytime she wants, she can give up that money and go right back to the virtuous poverty she seeks. One of the nice things about the left is they're always talking about virtuous poverty. And yet so few of them actually want to live in it. And so little virtue exists in poverty.
Starting point is 00:25:10 Well, I mean, this is one of the great myths. It drives me up a wall. And you see it from every presidential candidate, by the way. you know, the way you can tell I'm a good person is I grew up in a small house in the prairie. It's like, I can't tell anything from that. You know, what I can tell is that you grew up in a small house on the prairie. You know, and it drives me up a wall because then the assumption is if you disagree with them, then it's because you came from inordinate wealth, right?
Starting point is 00:25:29 That's always the assumption. I never talk about the fact that I will right now. I never talk about the fact on my show that when I grew up, we were like middle, middle class. When I say middle, middle class, I mean, we had a 1,100 square foot house in Burbank with four kids in the house and one bathroom, and I shared room with my three younger sisters. And my parents worked their asses off, and they paid so that we could eventually not go to public school, and I could start going to private school.
Starting point is 00:25:52 Even then, it was only for a couple of years at a time. That is not absolute wealth, but that doesn't make me virtuous. It makes my parents virtuous for making good decisions. I'm so tired of the... And, you know, when I was in England, and I was among all the mystery writers, you know, there was a big, big controversy about P.D. James,
Starting point is 00:26:07 one of the great ladies of British mysteries, who said, I like to write about the middle class, basically because they have more moral choices, so it makes them for a more interesting story. And they started calling her all kinds of unrepeatable names. And I was on a panel once. I said, this is P.D. James. She underwrites your industry with her success.
Starting point is 00:26:24 The least you could do is listen to what she's saying, that people in poverty don't have as much moral leeway as you do as you get wealthier. That is why societies as they get wealthier get more moral. They start to think about more things because they have more choices. All of that is built by the people who come before us, and all of it should inspire gratitude. There's also this idea, and it actually takes some,
Starting point is 00:26:47 you find it in religious settings quite often, where not only is poverty virtuous, which is obviously an evil thing to say, but sort of asceticism generally is virtuous. It occurred to me the other day that it's actually just the reverse side of the same coin, of there's a belief that the purpose of religion is to bring order to chaos.
Starting point is 00:27:08 And so the Bible thumphing, and rule the Biden, don't look left, don't look right, graceless, puritanical religious person, believes that the... Keep Buttigieg. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Believes that the way that you bring order to the system, you take energy out of the system
Starting point is 00:27:26 by stopping movement all around you. So you know, when you heat up a bathtub and the molecules in the water get moving fast, that's energy, right? They want to cool it off. So they're constantly telling people, slow down, don't, you know, do this, don't do that. The reverse side of that is the assessment.
Starting point is 00:27:41 who says, I'm going to bring energy out of the system by slowing me down, and I'm going to become at peace. I'm going to become an inert object. All the chaos can happen all around me, but I'm contributing to the chaos on behalf of God through not pursuing anything, sitting under the eucalyptus tree and contemplating my naples. And it occurs to me that the reality of God is that if there is a God, he must surely be the God of what is, not the God of what could have been or what might be. He's the God of what is. And therefore he's the god of the dynamic molecules that are bouncing around. Creation. This is incredible thing. Life, yeah. So what God wants from us is not that we stop the energy in the world and not that we not participate in the energy in the world, but that we trust that he is guiding the energies of the world. Maybe we try to align ourselves with his chosen direction for the energies of the world,
Starting point is 00:28:33 but we could have theological debate about the exact Nate relationship that we're supposed to have with him. But surely it's not to stop it. You know, that's another great point. I had no idea we were this intelligent. I know. You're good. We're not, I have no idea what you just tell us. Wait, wait, wait, wait.
Starting point is 00:28:48 Hold on. I'm going to start over. All right. Wow. Amazing. Well, when the founders crafted the Constitution, the first thing that they did was protect our right to share our ideas, which it turns out may not have been a good idea, even what we're doing here tonight. Without limitation by the government, that's the First Amendment. But then they created the Second Amendment so we could protect the First Amendment and indeed all the other amendments.
Starting point is 00:29:10 All of us in the room here, our gun owners, all of us not only want to protect our rights, but also want to protect our safety. Believe it or not, I think all of us in the room have gotten death threats. We certainly have security. And one of the things that we always want to make sure of is that we are armed. Well, you know who agrees the folks over a Bravo company manufacturing. Owning a rifle is an awesome responsibility, and building rifles is no different. They were started in a garage by a Marine veteran more than two decades ago, and BCM builds a professional grade product which is built to combat standards. BCM, not a sporting arms company. So I don't hunt. I'm not really a target shooter. I own a gun because it's a
Starting point is 00:29:40 someone comes into my house, I want to kill them. And BCM understands this. They design engineer, manufacture, life-saving equipment. The people at BCM assume that when a rifle leaves their shop, it will be used in a life-for-death situation by a responsible citizen, a law enforcement officer, or a soldier overseas, to learn more about Bravo Company manufacturing. Head on over to Bravo Company, mfg.com. You can discover more about their product, special offers, upcoming news.
Starting point is 00:30:02 That's Bravo Company, mfg.com. If you need more convincing, find out even more about BCM and the awesome people who produce their products at YouTube.com. slash Bravo Company USA. We know the folks who run the place. It is a great company, and their product is similarly awesome. Go check them out at Bravo Company, MFG.com. So I do want to move on from the conversation about conspiracies, but I think before we do, because of the anniversary of Apollo, we should talk a little bit about the specific, most widely circulated conspiracies about the moon landing and just knock them down quickly for our audience. I'm sure we each have kind of
Starting point is 00:30:35 a favorite one, maybe a couple. I'll pick up some at the end. Does anybody they have one that they're... Yeah, I mean, I've got a great conspiracy. There's one that in 1969, three men actually went into lunar orbit and then took a lunar module and landed on the moon, which is obviously impossible, because it's a flat disc.
Starting point is 00:30:54 So could you knock that one down with it? I want to bring up a point that Bill brings up, which I think was a brilliant point, was that you can trace every step of the moon landing from bottle rocket. This is the best part of his name. It was such a great point. And that there's one,
Starting point is 00:31:10 step after another step after another step if they hadn't landed on the moon you would have had to come up with a conspiracy theory for why not why did the chain suddenly stop where does he says where does the miracle occur yeah yeah was it apollo 11 so Apollo 10 not a miracle right Apollo 11 completely could not be a that's right Apollo 8 went to the moon yeah yeah and it's what that was fine it's also it's also a matter of such brute force that it's just like real life you know it's just a matter of throw weight how hard can you get something to go off so that it gets to the moon. That really is what it is.
Starting point is 00:31:42 So that's a great point. There was a Saturn 5. Millions of people saw the Saturn 5 the biggest rocket ever made. Go into orbit or go into space. The entire country had been enthralled with Sputnik when the Russians put a satellite that would zoom over our head and we could hear it on our little radios. Well, not we, you.
Starting point is 00:32:02 We're quite young. I remember well, I do. And yet somehow the Russians, I guess if we sent the Saturn 5 and all it did was sort of hang out in orbit, because it couldn't go through the radiation belts and it couldn't go 200,000 miles to the moon, that means it would have been up there.
Starting point is 00:32:14 Wouldn't our mortal enemies the Soviet Union with whom we were in an existential crisis and who had radar stations all over the earth have been aware that the biggest thing ever launched into orbit was spinning around up there and not going on. This is the biggest defeater for these conspirators. The biggest defeater is the existence of the Soviet Union. Correct.
Starting point is 00:32:31 Because it's obviously they're tracking these things live. By the way, it's not just the government's tracking them live. There were just individuals tracking all of these rockets, all of these satellites. And it's not also like we aired this footage after the fact. Everything is happening in real time. But the Russians, because they're so nice and honest, and they always want to do a favor for the good old US of A,
Starting point is 00:32:52 they decided to admit defeat falsely. You know one of the false things that people think, that people think that Americans got bored with the space program. That is true. But it's also true that as a kid, I mean, I was a little kid when we landed on the moon, it never occurred to me we wouldn't land on the moon. The president said we would.
Starting point is 00:33:10 We had all these astronauts who were my heroes. The astronauts and baseball players were my heroes. Yeah. It never occurred to me we wouldn't land on the moon. So when we landed on it, I remember my father sitting there going like, there's people on the moon. And it wasn't like I thought, oh, so what? I didn't think that.
Starting point is 00:33:24 I just thought, of course. Of course. There is something, too, about the fact that maybe one of the reasons that we've lost a bit of purpose is the lack of the oppositional, meaning that the entire moon program was based on the fact that we were going to defeat the Soviets. And the Soviet Union, Soviet Union disappears and suddenly it's the end of history. What do we have to go to the moon for? Soviets aren't going there. What difference does it make? And you feel the same thing when people
Starting point is 00:33:44 talk about Mars like, oh, that's cool. They're kind of talking about Mars. I guess that's kind of a neat thing. That'd be cool if we did it. But there's no drive like, well, if we don't do it, the Soviets are going to do it. You never know what they're going to do with Mars. But that's a shame, you know, one of the things that really pains me is whenever anybody in a debate and a political debate, a political setting, starts talking about space, they sound nuts. And I remember I remember listening to Dan Aykroyd, who is a nutty, you know, a comedian actor. But I remember years ago saying, you know, we've got to get off this planet. And of course that's true.
Starting point is 00:34:12 I mean, of course that's true. We're here because we got out of Europe just before Europe went down the drain. That's kind of the way human beings are. We sort of move on to the next place. We need, we need territory. You know, we need new places to go. Well, this is the other thing that is going to be fascinating. I mean, it was governments that got us to the moon.
Starting point is 00:34:28 But it's going to be private industry that gets us to ours. I think so, too. And I think government, in a way, sucked a lot of the energy out of the program by taking all those guys out of the private sector. I mean, it's a great achievement, but at the same time, if we hadn't had to do it in such a hurry, it might have happened through private industry. The motive of the government went from defeating the Soviet Union
Starting point is 00:34:47 to working with the Soviet Union? Yeah, yeah. That became the du jour thing. We can't defeat the Soviets. We have to coexist with them. When they originally built, were conceiving of the space station, the ISS, what became the ISS. They wanted a space station.
Starting point is 00:35:03 that would make it easier to mount missions to the moon and beyond. A place where you could go up to the station, then you could take off from the station and go further out into the solar system. But then they decided that it needed to be an international space station, and the Russians were going to kick in like three cents on a dollar. And what they came up with was because Russia is a northern hemisphere country and all their holdings were very far north, Russia could not get to an orbit that would allow
Starting point is 00:35:33 for a station from which you could proceed out to the moon and other places in the solar system. And so the entire reason they designed the station was so that we could go back to the moon much more economically so that we could go to Mars, so we could go to Saturn by 70 or whatever they had all these ideas, right? So we want to build a station so that we can go back to the moon and Mars. Cool, we also want the Russians to be involved. Are they going to pay for it? Barely at all. Okay, can they get to it? No. All right, well let's move it. Will we still be able to go to the moon and beyond? No. So what will we do? We'll work with the Russians. And literally, right? Literally, for 30 years after that, the only purpose of NASA, of the manned space component of NASA,
Starting point is 00:36:11 was basically so that we could build something together with the Russians. So we designed the space shuttle to build the space station so that the space shuttle would have a place to go. And that was it. Well, this is like during the Obama administration, there were those news stories that the mission of NASA had become to flatter Muslims about their own scientific history. It went to happen to that. I missed that. Well, it actually did begin earlier. It began when we fundamentally changed the purpose of the International Space Station and the U.S. space program. And surprise, surprise, we haven't done very much in the last 30 years.
Starting point is 00:36:43 You know who's tired of talking about space? Who? Every woman watching backstage currently. Not one of them wants us to keep talking about space. They want us to move on to just any other topic because they're exactly like men. This may explain why the patriarchy went to. of the move. So here's a fun thing to talk about. We're taking this show on the road. I know. I can't wait. I'm so excited. Fun for whom.
Starting point is 00:37:10 So Backstage Live is on its way. It's coming up in August. We are going to be in Long Beach, California, and it's going to be awesome. The four of us are going to be there. There will be cigars. There will be whiskey. Whatever fruity thing chooses. It's going to be on August 21st at the Terrace Theater in Long Beach, California. Lots of politics, lots of pop culture, lots of insights and laughs. Absolutely no more talking about, man, Spaceflight. Your questions, though, live from the audience, that's the most important part. It is the only time in 2019 that there will be a live daily wire production for people to attend.
Starting point is 00:37:48 Now, I say that. What if we have another one? I'll apologize at that time. It's like when the Eagles go on their farewell tour like three times a year. Did Jeremy just, did he just gender spaceflight? when he's a manned spaceflight? No, no, no, no. This is, as far as we know, the only live
Starting point is 00:38:04 Daily Wire event of the year. Last year, we had two great events with Ben Shapiro Live in Dallas and in Phoenix. People flew in from all over the country. People flew in from Canada. They were terrific. We wanted to do the same thing this year, but we wanted the whole gang to be able to be there.
Starting point is 00:38:17 There's a VIP experience. People can pay a little bit extra, come back, meet the four of us, get their pictures with the four of us, get a little bit of the dump tank for Knowles next time. We have to have a dunk tank. But imagine the swimsuit is the real trouble. That's the rough.
Starting point is 00:38:30 Tickets are available at dailywire.com slash backstage, and there are some VIP ticket packages still available. Wherever you are, L-A-X is a mediocre airport, let's be honest. But it is in close proximity to the theater. So please fly out, drive out, come on out and see us. You can have some great photos at the meet-and-grit with each of us and a gift of swag from us. You may think this is a cold and calculated ploy to get you to turn loose of some of your money. DailyWire,
Starting point is 00:38:59 Backstage. Come get your tickets. Come visit us at Daily Wire Backstage Live. If you pay a little extra, they don't have to meet us. These are the best events, by the way. We do some of these college events all the time. And they're great. I love meeting the students and talking to them. But when we went out for your last year, those two events,
Starting point is 00:39:20 it was so cool talking to everybody. It was really an incredible experience. So I'm very much looking forward to it. One of the things that really amazed me at the event in Dallas, because that was the first one that we did, was how much interaction we got to have with the fans. Oh, yeah. I thought the VIP thing might be kind of lame. It might move too fast. I really got to meet a ton of the people who support the Daily Wire.
Starting point is 00:39:44 It's a blast. It's the best thing about going out. I love it. One of the best things is going to college is just meeting people and getting to the – because, you know, we're in this business where you can listen to yourself a lot. And if you don't have the little input coming in, you start to just. repeating yourself and it's great to hear what people are thinking about. Also, you're super old. I know you don't remember why you said like five minutes ago.
Starting point is 00:40:04 Where am I? What are the best things about being on the relevant? So the topic, that we have to address, that we've not gotten to yet. The racist elephant in the room. The president of the United States had... Why? Why God, why? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:26 So to review this story. story. Please. As of last Friday and last Thursday, and it hasn't even been a week, guys, because time has stopped. This is interstellar. We have entered the water planet
Starting point is 00:40:37 where all time is meaningless. Well, just last Thursday, we were all laughing to ourselves because AOC and Nancy Pelosi were clubbing each other with sticks, and it was great. So, because Nancy Pelosi was saying about AOC
Starting point is 00:40:48 that she is basically just a glass of water in her district and doesn't really matter very much. And the true power lies with Nancy Pelosi, so why are you listening to these numskulls and their stupid policy proposals. Fact check true. And then AOC returns by saying,
Starting point is 00:41:01 that's because you are a racist. And Nancy Pelosi was like, what? And AOC was like, yeah. And Nancy Pelosi was like, what? And AOC was like, racist. And Nancy Pelosi was like, how dare you? And AOC was like racist. And it was great.
Starting point is 00:41:16 Right, I mean, we were all having ourselves a ball of a weekend. It was just terrific because this is what they've had coming for so long. Nancy Pelosi and every Democrat and playing the race card incessantly against Republicans. And not only that, AOC has been lying about playing the race card against Republicans. Nancy Pelosi bought into the lie that the definition of racist is anyone who disagrees with the left
Starting point is 00:41:39 and didn't understand that the actual definition of racist is anyone with whom, who disagrees with the person to their left. This is right. This is right. It's whatever the party says it is. Over the weekend, you had Iona Presley suggesting in fully racist fashion that you are not truly black unless you are a leftist. not truly gay and not truly a Muslim unless you are on the left, which would come as a shock to a lot of Muslims who are in fact not on the left. A lot of black folks were not on left and a lot of gay folks were not on left. In any case, this was all going on. And the piranhas were eating each other. And it was great. It was the Iran-Iraq war of domestic policy. It was just like two parties
Starting point is 00:42:16 and you don't really like either of them. But as long as they're hitting each other, okay, all right, okay. And then Donald Trump. And then Donald Trump. So you guys know the world of Warcraft meme, right? Yeah. The Leroy Jenkins, right? You remember that meme. So for those who don't recall, there's a World of Warcraft meme
Starting point is 00:42:34 where there are a bunch of people and they're all sitting around and they're playing. They're making a plan. They're making a plan. It's very good a particular room. And Leroy Jenkins is a character in World of Warcraft and he has gone out to make himself in the microwave from chicken.
Starting point is 00:42:45 And he comes back and they're making the plan. And he simply sits down in his controller and charges directly into the line of fire while screaming, Leroy Jenkins. President Leroy Jang, just decided over the weekend. You know what would be a great idea.
Starting point is 00:43:01 AOC and Nancy Pelosi are beating the crap out of each other. You know what I should do? I should go in there and just say something dumb. Like something as dumb and offensive as I can think of, like on the spur of the moment,
Starting point is 00:43:11 like right now, I don't know. I'll say that like all the progressive congresswomen come from countries that suck and that they should go back to those countries that suck. Like that's what I'll say.
Starting point is 00:43:21 And he tweeted that out and naturally everybody went, whoa. And then Nancy Lossey was like, I love you, AOC. And AOC was like right back at you, Nance. And suddenly they were on the same team attacking President Trump and passing resolutions in the House to condemn bigotry, which is a shock since just a few months ago.
Starting point is 00:43:37 They condemned all bigotry that has ever existed or whatever. Except, of course, for Elhano Mars. That was the recap. Donald Trump was playing 16-dimensional chess. I'm going on your water upside down, hungry, hungry-hung. I'm going to take issue with both of these sides. It's not 16-dimensional chess, but I don't think that's quite fair. Donald Trump has a genius, an instinctive genius,
Starting point is 00:44:00 for playing the left. The problem is, is a question of whether he is expanding the right. But it's, you know, he did, I think he did something. He made a mistake, and you can tell he made a mistake, because without apologizing, because Trump never apologized, he changed what he said. That's right. That's how you could tell.
Starting point is 00:44:17 And we can all say, go back where you came from, does part- I don't actually think Trump is a racist, but it partakes of that racist meme, go back where you came from, in the same way that. It's all about the Benjamin's partakes of anti-Semitic means. So that was a mistake, and then he changed it to, if you don't like the country, you can leave. Clearly, clearly, his instinctive plan, I don't know how much he thinks these things out, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:44:39 but his instinctive plan was to not let them get into a civil war. Yes. He wants them wrapped around these four horsewomen of the ablokos. That's exactly right. And that is, there is a genius to this because they keep falling for it because he's them. He's a guy created by leftist culture, and he's fighting back the way the leftist fight us and that's why people love them. I think that's backfilling a rationale, but that's the effect.
Starting point is 00:45:01 No, I think he was sitting there going, I need PROTC. I don't think he does it instinctively. No, I think the instinct is, the instinct is, why is the news not about me today? No, I think that's unfair. I think he knows what he's doing with the left. He knows how to play them. He plays them like, he plays them like a puppeteer, but the question is, and this is the place where you have to question whether his strategy is long term, is there a single human
Starting point is 00:45:25 being who reads those tweets who didn't vote for him before who says wow if i had only known what a jerk he was i would have voted for him the first time and it's doubtful i mean he may be able to suppress enough democrat votes to win again but i don't know if he's going to add to you by the way i think this is going there anyway because i think that nancy pelosi one of two things is going to happen either nancy Pelosi was going to get her head on the stick in the form of psychot chakrabarty who is aos chief of staff and then they were all going to make up with each other because aos you would have no choice, but to make up with Nancy Pelosi, or the media we're going to jump in on the side of AOC and the squad, which is what they were already doing, right? Michelle Goldberg and the New York Times
Starting point is 00:46:00 are doing that. The fact is that, again, I don't even think that it's Trump saying, I want them all lumped in. Trump picks the people he wants to argue with, and then he argues with them. And because he argues with those people, people who oppose President Trump all unify to take the other side of the argument. So I don't even think he was like, you know what, I need Nancy Pelosi and Ohan-O-Mar to get back together. I don't think that was it. I think he was like, you know who sucks? Those people are jerks and I hate them. And then Nancy Pelosi was like, well, if you say they're jerks, they're probably great. So I don't agree with either of you. I think that it really is just the news cycle wasn't about him. He doesn't have any real impulse control. He jumps in. I don't
Starting point is 00:46:34 think that it's fair to say that the tweets were racist. I think that the tweet was kind of disgusting. And it was wrong. It was actually in act. It was jerky. I think that it was hugely presumptuous. And race may have played a factor in the presumption. The presumption being that the four women are American. Right. Right. I think the presumption may have been informed by race, but it's, it's more informed by their rhetoric. They present themselves as being an American. And not just an American in terms of values, but AOC talks more about Puerto Rico than she talks about. Rashina Toulin is always talking about Palestine. She said, this country belongs to everyone. It's like, news to me. So I don't, you know, so you, I think you don't have to grant the left,
Starting point is 00:47:15 this catch-all term of racist. Well, so this is, this is the thing. I think that there is a, I think that there is to be intellectually honest, an argument that the tweet was racist. And the intellectual honest argument is that he said something clearly xenophobic, go back to your country, to a bunch of people, including people who were born here in the United States. And the question is, if there had been a white member of the Justice Democrats, which of course there is not, would he have said the exact same thing? Or is he saying that because he's assuming they're all foreigners because they are brown in color? And we don't know the answer to that question.
Starting point is 00:47:45 We don't know the answer, but I think people have suspicions one way or another. I think people on the right suspect he wouldn't have said it. And people on the right, I mean, he would have said it anyway because he says things. And people on the left suspect, he only would have said it because it's about a bunch of brown people, because they do this with everything he says. Whenever he attacks a black person, for the left, it's because they're black. For the right, it's like, no, he attacks everyone. Have you met any Republican against that?
Starting point is 00:48:06 Yeah, really. Right, everyone. But the problem with all of this, obviously, is that he doesn't have to do that in order to achieve the, if you believe that there was any even gut-level stress. strategy to it. He doesn't have to do that to achieve that response, right? I mean, all he had to do was just dump on Ilhan Omar and Nancy Pelosi in the second way he did it. And Nancy Pelosi would rush to the defense. He made a mistake. There's no question he made a mistake. Compare where we are a week ago to where we are today. I mean, this is why I think we all
Starting point is 00:48:34 grant what he said was factually untrue and it was an unfair attack to say, at least it was unfair for three of them, for three of the four that he was almost certainly alluding to. They were born in America. They're not going to go back to their other country. So a week ago, we have AOC, we have the whole squad feuding with Nancy Pelosi, and that's really enjoyable. Also a week ago, you had AOC's approval at, what, 22%, you had Ilhan Omar's approval at 9%, which is why Nancy Pelosi was jumping on them at that moment, because they look very politically weak. Among white non-college educated voters, by the way, that's that poll from Axios.
Starting point is 00:49:05 Sure. The actual poll has them at about seven or eight points underwater each. That's the poll from you go of today. So, and AOC in her own district, right? AOC in her own district, is down. She's very unpopular. So it looks like Nancy Pelosi, who's a brilliant tactician, is going in and taking her moment. President Trump goes in, he makes this comment, which is in part factually untrue and creates
Starting point is 00:49:26 this whole firestorm. What is the effect of it today? The House votes to call Trump a racist. They've been calling Trump a racist for three years. AOC and the whole squad is currently today feuding with Nancy Pelosi again. They went on ABC or CBS last night, and Rashida Taleb called Nancy Pelosi a racist. So we get that exact same thing. She's the...
Starting point is 00:49:45 She has all the impulse control of Donald Trump. But then the best part of this is... She has more than Omar. Omar has none. But why did Pelosi, why did Pelosi go out there and say, yes, he's a racist? They're all talking about what a racist he is, is so that they don't have to do the thing, which is call for impeachment. They're saying that America's like Nazi Germany, that Trump is running concentration camps.
Starting point is 00:50:05 Trump is Hitler. But they're not going to impeach? That's crazy. Until today, Al Green, the congressman, not the singer, makes moves to impeach the president, which is a fabulous position for conservatives to be in. It's a very difficult position for Nancy Pelosi. She's tried to avoid it now for over two years. It just seems to me, sure, more people are going to call Trump a racist
Starting point is 00:50:24 and they can point to a stupid tweet, or a stupid part of a tweet that was untrue. But it seems tactically we're in a better position today than we were. He does correct himself. And when he said, if you don't like the country leave, I was kind of thinking, well, yeah, I say that myself. But it's, okay, so I think first of all, we're tactically in a...
Starting point is 00:50:43 a worse position as far as the presidential race. I think the Democrats are burning themselves down because they can't help but burn themselves down. They were doing it last week. They're doing it again this week. It was never going to change. They were going to call for impeachment. Pelosi was going to refuse them.
Starting point is 00:50:55 That fight was going to keep going. And Trump inserting himself and making himself the issue, as you say, has he won one additional voter anywhere in here? If you just let the Democrats burn themselves down, you're in good shape. Would they have rallied around the squad? If not for this?
Starting point is 00:51:11 Yes, because they would have to rally around the squad. some point because Trump was going to attack them at some point, just not in the dumbest possible way. And because they're based. Can we distinguish between the fact that Donald Trump is very good at picking his opponents and Donald Trump also then tries to club them with a rubber mallet? Like he is very good at picking his enemy. That he's great at. And then half the time his attacks are done well and they kind of hit correctly. And then half the time, he's just like a wild man fighting you. And some, okay, there's the wild guy in your class and you don't want to fight him. he's crazy and you never know he's going to pull a switchplate or is he going to pull
Starting point is 00:51:46 like a rubber doll you just don't know what it's going to be he's the crazy person you don't want to fight and Donald Trump is that but sometimes he does pull a rubber doll okay and the fact is that his attack on this group he could have made an attack on the group that wasn't idiotic and that didn't border on racism or he could have done all those things by the time he was finished he did right okay by the time he's by the time he's finished by the time i pull my hand out of the fire it's no longer on fire it was just in the fire so like what was that i do not agree i think no damage was done here what's that you think no damage was on here?
Starting point is 00:52:14 I'm agreeing with you that there may be 20-20 damage there, and I'm not sure. But I'm not sure because, look, what is happening is Joe Biden, one of the worst politicians in America. I mean, the guy is as dumb as an as somebody once said. He really is that. But he's polling really well because people are thinking, well, he's kind of normal. He kind of looks normal. And we're tired of all the drama.
Starting point is 00:52:36 Trump knows this. He knows that the danger comes from any Democrat who looks sane. And so he made them all look crazy. That press conference, the squad gave, was one of the greatest moments when they wouldn't condemn al-Qaeda. You mean that press conference? That woman is. I mean, my joke about her was, she was so angry. She almost exploded, but the TSA took the belt off.
Starting point is 00:52:58 She is as bad. She is as bad. I'm going to give a media matter of break in. Thank you, true. I can't appreciate it. Here's the photo for the article. Okay, for media matters, she's not actually a suicide bomber, nor is she an Islamic terrorist. She just believes bad things.
Starting point is 00:53:14 That's Drew, who's a satirist, making a joke. Ben is going to have to, like, follow me around. The official explainer. It's like, Obama had the anger explainer, and I'm like the Drew Ironian comedy explainer now. But again, this goes back to, if Trump had an ounce of discipline, he'd be president forever. And there's a way to launch attacks on your political opponents
Starting point is 00:53:34 and pick your opponents. I mean, Obama did it regularly. You can do it, and it is good that Trump has the capacity to do it. But then don't proceed to kick yourself. directly in the nuts. And it's like, why, why do we have to always every time watch him stick his hand directly in the fire? And then when he pulls out, like, ah, but he pulled his hand out of the fire. How about just don't stick your hand in the fire? But one of the things about him, somebody in the Wall Street Journal, I think his name is Holman Jenkins. He's a really good writer,
Starting point is 00:53:59 especially about climate change. But he points out that Trump is one of the most known quantities ever to have been elected president. So everything that he is was elected. Everything that he is is is part of the message the people were sending to the government. And so when he does stuff like this, I understand that he is alienating, especially women who don't like the meanness, they don't like the bullying. I don't blame them. I don't like it either, to be honest with you. But we knew who he was.
Starting point is 00:54:27 We actually hired him to do what he's doing. And I think that he's, you know. Okay, but this comes down to, do you think that 2016 is replicable in the absence of Hillary Clinton and based on the factor that he is the incumbent president? But everybody, these people who watch the Hillary? of whom is the question. No, no, no, but Hillary Clinton, okay, so Hillary Clinton didn't get the votes for two reasons. One, she's terrible. You're right. They're going to be just as terrible.
Starting point is 00:54:50 Two is that everyone thought Hillary Clinton was going to win, so a bunch of Democrats didn't show up to vote. That is not going to be reprimand. I don't know about that. That is 100% true. There was wild under turnout by Democrats in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. Absolutely. It's statistically provable. There was significant underturn out by Democrats compared to both 08 and 2012. Well, there's not going to be underturn out by anybody.
Starting point is 00:55:08 And this is my point. I'm not sure how much more upside turnout there is on the Trump. side, I think that there is upside turnout on the Democratic side. That's what 2018 really looked like. So the question is, again, when the focus is on Democrats, we're good. And here's the good news. The Democrats are going to keep, it's a game of hold my beer. So in my view, Donald, the Democrats are like, hold my beer. We're going to fight with each other over something completely stupid. And then Trump is like, no, you hold my beer. I'm going to jump in here for no reason. And then AOC and Pelosi, they're like, you know what, you hold the beer. You hold the beer. Because we're going to go back to
Starting point is 00:55:41 fighting each other. And then today, Ilhan Omar was like, you hold every beer that I ever would have but cannot drink. You take all of those beers and you take all those beers and you take them forever. Because in the middle of a fight over whether Ilhan Omar has the country's best interest at heart and is a bigot and hates Jews. Today, this afternoon, she launched her first squad initiative of the new world. And her first squad initiative was, I'm going to the Palestinian territories where I'm going to do a propaganda effort on behalf of Hamas and the Palestinian Authority, both terrorist entities. And I'm also going to push forward the boycott-deveston sanctions movement against Israel, which has been declared anti-semitic by, wait for it, Nancy Pelosi five weeks ago at AIPAC. So, I mean, we don't have to, this is what I keep saying.
Starting point is 00:56:28 Everybody is like, well, look how Trump is really able to make them look crazy. Okay, and guess what? I was able to make Francis Farmer look crazy because she was crazy. Like, I don't know what you want for me. Sybil was crazy. I don't have to be like, you know what makes Sybil even crazier? If I poke her with a stick, boom! Now she's got another personality.
Starting point is 00:56:45 See that? Okay. But this is why Republicans, this is why Republicans hate Republicans is because they don't do this. They stand by and they let the Democrats be crazy and they don't stand up and say. No, no, I'm fine with him doing the Donald Sutherland from Invasion of the Body Snatchers. You know, I'm fine with him just pointing at them. and saying, you know. What a great image.
Starting point is 00:57:11 And she's in, and him just saying, okay, look at this crazy thing they said. Look at this crazy thing they said. Look how terrible they are. Like, I thought it was hilarious today when Trump was asked about Ohana Mar. And his...
Starting point is 00:57:21 That was a five-star Trump. I haven't really heard anything about her except like, was she married to her brother? And it was like... And you ask me, I don't know. You guys, isn't it? You're a job to find out. And it's like, and AP immediately.
Starting point is 00:57:33 I like, that, okay, that is like grade A Trump quality Trump. Because then AP comes out and they're like, how dare he say something like this? And everyone's just like, okay, well, here's a Minneapolis Star Tribune column asking a question. Like a full investigation, why all the question won't answer questions about it. Like that, right, that is like, when I say Trump picks the right opponents, but he should actually attack in the way that is most effective. I mean, by not saying American congresswoman, go back to your crap whole country you came from. Like that would be the not effective way of doing it.
Starting point is 00:58:02 And Drew has this thing where it's like, ah, but he course corrects. And it's like, he does course correct. Okay, you know it'd be even better. Maybe it's asking too much, but you know it'd be even better. It's before you course correct from the Indy 500 pile up on the outside wall, if you just didn't steer directly into it, because that was the part that was purposeful. He had to be sitting there.
Starting point is 00:58:23 Like, you know what to end all of Donald Trump's problems, honestly? If he had, like, a tweet checker, okay, all the people around him, they love Trump. I think that's a great idea. All of his staffers like him, and they know him, and they are interested in letting Trump be Trump. if he had what all normal people have, which is a prefrontal cortex that functions and says,
Starting point is 00:58:41 don't do that thing, then he wouldn't need this. But he can let somebody else be the prefrontal cortex. He just writes a tweet, or he makes a video, and then he has somebody view the video and determine whether the video might be problematic. And then, after that happens, he didn't. 90% of them, they'd probably still let go. Almost 100% they would let go,
Starting point is 00:58:59 because it's just him mouthing off or whatever. It's only the rare tweet. And the media fulminates so much that, you know, we think that, like, his kind of normal, weird tweets are really, though those aren't bad tweets. And I think everyone has sort of accepted him being kind of weird and crazy on Twitter. I've never seen a skinny person drink a diet coach. I mean, that's just a true tweet that he sent down.
Starting point is 00:59:20 And we've all, you're right, we've all priced this in. But every so often he does something, you're like, oh, God, was that, am I sure that was priced in quite enough yet? No, of course, but that's what makes him Trump. That's what makes him willing to take this wave after wave. I mean, he has turned the accusation of racism into a silence. Now when they say the word racism, it's like nothing ashes come out because we've heard it so often. And to watch the news guys.
Starting point is 00:59:47 So there's another way of reading that, and this is a much more cynical way reading that, and they're the ones who made racism a non-factor. And Donald Trump doesn't give a crap if they call him a racist, and that's the only difference between him and everybody else. Which makes him great. Well, no, in one sense it makes him great. In one sense, it means that he doesn't care enough about an issue you should care about. What I mean by that is he does cross lines like he did this Sunday that are inappropriate. across the same person who doesn't care about accusations of racism enough to actually police himself should not be the person who is who is the person who is standing up to
Starting point is 01:00:12 accusations of racist this is another point by our pal bill whittle he says the accusation of racism only bothers people who aren't racist you know the only people the only people who get upset are guys like us who sit there and go like but I'm not I don't think you want to apply that logic to the president no what I'm saying about him is that he actually look he has done great things for for people of color in this country I mean this is how you know I mean this is the known entity argument. Yeah, he succeeded at basically most of what he's done in life except being a racist. Right.
Starting point is 01:00:40 He's as bad a racist as they say he is. No, it's not that anybody's saying he's that bad racist, but elections are about perception. Elections are about perception. And the perception of him, I mean, you can look at the polling numbers. So Republicans are not reacting anymore to anything Trump says. It's all priced in for Republicans at this point, right? The polling numbers show that everybody on the Republican side already has an opinion about the guy. And I did a whole analysis today of the polls about this tweet because 57,000,
Starting point is 01:01:02 because 57% of Republicans said they agreed with the tweet, and something like two-thirds of independents said that they hated the tweet, and overall, 59% of Americans said that they didn't like the tweet at all, and three-quarters of women and all of this stuff. And people were immediately saying, well, this is because Republicans are racist. And what I said is, no, what this is, is Republicans answering the question they hear when the media ask the question. Right? Republicans don't hear, is the tweet racist,
Starting point is 01:01:26 when the media ask this question. What they hear is first, do we agree with your generalized definition of racism media? And the answer is, no, we don't. Because if we say, sure, the tweet's racist, your next move is, well, aren't the tax cuts also a little racist? Isn't net neutrality racist? Wasn't Mitt Romney a racist? Right. That's a question we hear.
Starting point is 01:01:43 We also hear the media saying, we are the impartial arbiters of what is racist and what is not. What say you? And we go, well, hold up just a second. Ina Presley said over the weekend that black people aren't black if they disagree with her. So I'm going to go with no on you're the impartial. And then there's the third question that we hear, which is you're not really asking if Trump's tweet was racist. you're asking if Trump himself is a racist. This is the point. And that we're not willing to say, meaning there are people who say things
Starting point is 01:02:07 off the cuff that suck. There are people who say things that are uncomfortable because they're ignorant. Or they say something dumb. Right. And does that mean that Trump in his heart hates black people and thinks they're inferior? No, we're not willing to go there. And then finally, the fourth question, which I think is the biggest one, and this is what you're getting from Republicans, is when you say, is the tweet racist, what most Republicans here is, you're saying that I'm racist. Meaning if I, if, and they are. Right. That's correct. Because the next move make from all three of the prior questions is, if you disagree with us, then you are.
Starting point is 01:02:35 Right, right, right. If you say Trump is not a racist, it's because you are a racist. If you say that you disagree with our definition of racism, it's because you're a racist. And if you say that we are not impartial in our judgment of racism, then you are racist. And so Republicans, most of them,
Starting point is 01:02:50 are simply cutting off the debate, right? They're just saying, okay, we don't wanna have any of those secondary conversations we know are coming. So you know what, you ask us the question, we basically say, go after yourself. And no, I don't think the truth is racist. But I still, I still do
Starting point is 01:03:01 not think you're taking into account how much trump has changed the game and he has done what he was sent to do which has changed the dialogue but we agree on a lot of this we agree that he did his first tweet was a mistake and he quote i think he course corrected and i that doesn't mean that other tweet goes away but it does mean he understood that he made a mistake i think we all even agree that he course correct yeah okay and and and we agree that there's a danger here that he won't expand his base
Starting point is 01:03:24 which i think is a genuine danger and really worries me because the opposition is out of control crazy i mean they are now guano crazy they have gone gone beyond anything i've ever seen democrats do what i don't think you are taking into account is trump has literally changed the way people react to him because he is trump what you're saying is he was in cautious and belligerent he was donald trump he was don't know i'm not just saying he's in cautious now the question that voters are going to be asked is do i want donald trump this guy who got elected and who is a loose cannon basically is the picture next to
Starting point is 01:04:00 loose canon in the dictionary. Do I want these people who hate this country? They hate this country. I wish that I thought it were as simple as that, but I think that freshness in the mind matters, meaning that there are things about all of us that bug each other, right? No, wait a minute. Like, Noel's breathing, right?
Starting point is 01:04:17 The fact that we pay him actual money, right? There are a bunch of, but one of the things that we try to do is avoid doing the things that bug each other. If you're in a marriage, right? You try to avoid the things that bug your spouse. If every day you're like, you knew me when you married me, I'm farting as much as I please, right at the dinner table and you're just going to deal with it. You're making the marriage more difficult. Voting is about making it easier for people to vote for you, not harder for people to vote for you.
Starting point is 01:04:42 It is not merely do they know you. Yes, everybody knows Donald Trump. And then when you don't think about all the dumb things that he's doing, you're like, wow, the economy's great. And he's actually doing some pretty good things. And then every so often he jetpacks in, right? He parachutes in from the sky, like the blue angel flyover. And all of a sudden it's like, and now I'm going to do. to say something stupid. And you're like, oh, God, like, but now you've made it harder for me today
Starting point is 01:05:05 because people are emotional creatures. And it's not all priced in on the day. It's priced in general, right, which is why the polls are remarkably stable for him. He's been at 41, 42% public approval since literally that he was elected. He has not moved from a 4% ban his entire, the entirety, right? That's all priced in. And it's why there are certain things that won't have any impact on him at all, meaning like NBC News breaks this dumb tape of him dancing in 1992 and standing next to Jeffrey Epstein and talking about raiding women. I did a whole 10-minute segment on my show today
Starting point is 01:05:33 about like, wait, you're telling me that the guy... A billionaire label of his wife. Nailed his second wife when he was married to his first, and then nailed his third wife when he was married to his second, and bragged publicly on tape about grabbing women by the genitals, and they would let you do it,
Starting point is 01:05:48 and had an affair with Stormy Daniels and Karek McDoodle and every other person you can imagine, and was on the cover of Playboy magazine, and ran a competition with swimsuits, so he could rate women was making jokes about raiding women and also was dancing with women that he hired to come to him
Starting point is 01:06:06 who were good looking and then he was grabbing them exactly the way that he said and they were smiling because they were happy like that's not just figured in it's part of the reason he was elected right and you bring up the point of the
Starting point is 01:06:18 that's fine I don't really care I mean like I think maybe maybe not like if he hadn't done all those things would if you were similarly famous but he had not made a habit of marrying So I think they elected him to be this guy. Now you're making a not great argument about conservative voters, which is we elected, we elected him because he's about that. No, no, I think what I think is conservative, what conservative intellectuals did is they let the culture become so poisonous that only a guy like this could break the chains.
Starting point is 01:06:47 They let the basic rules of politeness become the rules of leftism. So we need an impolite, boorish guy to break those changes. I don't disagree. You bring up the steadiness of his approval ratings, which I think is obviously true. It's not even a Trump problem because over the years, the country has become more polarized. We become more set in our politics, and Trump is a polarizing figure. How many votes did he lose? Not how many people did he upset, not how many of his voters did he make a little uneasy about voting for him.
Starting point is 01:07:17 How many votes next November did he lose because of this tweet, which he then changed a couple days later? I think very few, because the question for a known entity like Donald Trump is, Look, racial bigotry bothers all of us, and I think it bothers the vast, vast majority of this country. The question is, is Donald Trump really a racial bigot? Is Donald Trump going to use his position to discriminate against racial minorities? Does he harbor ill will toward racial minorities? He married his daughter off to a Jew. He has two towns in Israel, a town and a train station in Israel, named after him.
Starting point is 01:07:47 He has the biggest pop star in the world, a black man, say, I love this guy in the Oval Office. The same guy who said, George W. Bush doesn't care about black people. the last very nice, very genteel Republican president. I just don't think, as ugly as we think that that line is, as ugly as the line is, what effect is that actually going to have a whole year for now? Let me ask you this, though, because I feel like I'm always caught between you two guys. Is there a problem with his not expanding the base? Is there a problem with these tweets that nobody who didn't vote for him is going to vote for him?
Starting point is 01:08:19 I don't think that Donald Trump is one of those Republicans like Tom Keene, you know, in New Jersey. uses. Politics is the art of inclusion. I don't think he's one of these nice republic. They're these big tent guys. He's not. President Trump doesn't win by making himself more likable. He wins by making the other guy unlikable. He's a pugilist. He punches. He's a tough dude. So in terms of numbers, you think that he is going to suppress enough Democrats to make it unlikely that he needs more. I think he's going to push them and encourage them to rally around the worst elements of their party and the worst elements of their base. They already have but absolutely abysmal field in 2020,
Starting point is 01:08:54 and he's making it worse for them by making them rally around the squad. It is the other theory. You've got to admit that since we don't know what's going to happen, it is the other idea. Listen, and again, he picks the right opponents. I mean, I've said the whole conversation.
Starting point is 01:09:08 It's getting easy. I have one piece of counter data, and that is the election of 2018. In 2018, during the Kavanaugh hearings, the Democrats set themselves on fire. They took a vat of gasoline, they jumped in it, and then they lit a match,
Starting point is 01:09:21 like that scene from Zoolander. And the poll numbers went like this, right? Democrats were up in the generic poll 10 points, and suddenly, within two weeks, the entire gap was gone. Republicans and Democrats were right together. And then Donald Trump said, you know what, I need to rev up my base, and I need to suppress the other guy's base.
Starting point is 01:09:38 And so what I'm going to do is I'm going to talk about immigration, because that's what my base loves. They love immigration. So we're going to talk about immigration crisis. And for three weeks, he took Kavanaugh off the front pages, and he talked about immigration crisis, and he got shellacked. he got shellacked.
Starting point is 01:09:51 So there's one problem with... He has an instinct, but he ain't always right. No, I agree with you there. And one of the dangers in revving up your base is that you also rev up the other guy's base. And the whole point of revving up your base is that you don't want to rev up the other guy's base. The worst thing that can happen to Trump,
Starting point is 01:10:07 listen, every Republican is going to show up. In 2016, every Republican in the world showed up to vote against Hillary Clinton because Hillary Clinton was, as we all know, demon spawned over the course of 20 years. Right. Everybody knew this for two decades. She'd been the most hated woman in American politics. Coming up in 2020, you're not going to have to make the case to Republicans that whoever the Democrats nominated,
Starting point is 01:10:26 who by the way will not be Joe Biden because Joe Biden still has a shred of sanity left in him. And as some of us have been saying from day one, his first day was going to be his best day. He's not going to be the nominee. He's the one who could most easily contest Donald Trump, maybe not win, but he could certainly do the most damage. His own party won't vote for him. Right, exactly. And so they'll replace him with Kamala Harris or Elizabeth Moore. You're not going to have a problem getting Republicans out.
Starting point is 01:10:49 to the polls to vote against the media and vote against the left and vote against AOC and vote against Talib and vote against all these people. What you are going to have a problem with is if he doesn't be quiet, every Democrat in the world is going to, on a daily basis, feel the moral compulsion to kick him out of office. And they're not going to stay home. You need them to stay home because he isn't doing the Tom Kemp day. He hasn't won over anything. Between 2000 and 2004, George Stubby Bush picked up 11 million additional votes. aside from me can you name like five people and any of them in the middle of the country in the districts that matter that he is that he is picked up i can you name it to the institute of 11 million votes
Starting point is 01:11:26 this is the thing i fear this is the thing right the funny thing for me is that the president's kind of grown on me i didn't vote i didn't vote for the guy i didn't like him there's a lot of him i still don't like i am i get a big kick out of him there's many places where he's done a really good job. I'm very likely that I will vote for him this go-around. I think all as well. Yeah. But to Ben's point, he doesn't always make it easy. He does not make it easy. Even when you want to support the guy, he doesn't make it easy. One thing that makes this show different than all the other shows, except for everyone of your shows on Thursdays, is that it's mailbag all the time on backstage. And we're going
Starting point is 01:12:03 to go to our first question. And this one is from our newest Daily Wire subscriber. Hey guys, sorry for not fixing my hair. We've been a little busy around here. Anyway, our newest daily wire subscriber is number one, very excited for her legislature's bottle. I think it's being custom made, so it'll probably take more than six to eight weeks to get here. Oh well. And also, she wanted to know, who do y'all think will be the leaders of the DNC and the RNC? You know, the parties, will there be new parties? Will there still be a two-party system? By the time she can vote in 2038. Will there be a new party
Starting point is 01:12:41 by the time she can vote? Are you really focused on the question? I'm focused on that beautiful great. What a cluster of cells that is. Congratulations, Elisha. I'm so glad that that baby was born and not terminated early
Starting point is 01:12:53 like Leanna went over. President of Planned Parenthood. She didn't make it a full term, only eight months in. They forced the head out and then they terminated it. I think Elisha actually submitted that question, so we would would still have to pay her talent fee for this.
Starting point is 01:13:10 The question, though, the question, will there still be a two-party system for 2038? I think there is a possibility that we are going to lose one of the major parties. I actually do. It's something that almost never happens, but then it does, right? It does happen. And I think, you know, it is possible that we are watching the end of the Democrat Party. And I think that this is, I mean, I'm watching how much, you know, somebody, asked this. I asked it on my show was why would you have somebody? Oh, and Tucker Carson also said
Starting point is 01:13:41 that why would you have people who hate this country govern the country? I mean, it doesn't make any sense. If there were one reporter still left in the country, that's the question I would ask. If you think we're running concentration camps, if you think we're Nazis, if you think the Betsy Ross flag is, you know, a sign of white supremacy, if you think our history is just, why would we let you run the place? You know, I mean, why would do that? It would be, it's insane. It's like, It's like marrying somebody who hates you. People do do that, but it's a very small number of people. Ultimately, you want somebody who loves the country to run the country.
Starting point is 01:14:13 And I think the Democrats may be finished. Let me offer a counter. Yeah. I'm not saying this is what I believe, but it's just a counter thought. We could also be watching the end of the Republican Party. The Republican Party has completely remade itself ideologically over the last 24 months. I mean, as rapid a change as has happened in my lifetime in terms of, of a shift in the ideological center of a party.
Starting point is 01:14:39 Possible that it's only a reflection of Trump that we're kind of conforming ourselves to the guy who is our leader. That's definitely a possibility. Possibility that it's a new streak that's sort of moving through the right and it's just gonna get sort of embraced into the, the part, it can't stay what it is right now,
Starting point is 01:14:54 like this party is too narrow. So possible that this just becomes a part of the, sort of the ingredients of the Republican Party over time. Also possible that right now we don't see that the division is fatal in our party because we're ascendant in terms of the power of the president and the regulations in the court, but that the second that the presidency changes will actually be left sort of where they are right now. Do you see that as a possibility? I do see it as a possibility, but one thing I think, you know, it's becoming the party of Trump,
Starting point is 01:15:25 and I don't think there's any way around that. I don't think there was ever any way around that. Certain things, I have to put this exactly right, because I don't want like five guys to have to pull Shapiro off me. But certain things that Trump is doing are incredibly smart, and I don't know how he got there, but he has gotten there. And one of them is his awareness that the post-war global order is over and has been over for about 10 years. And I think that I'm not sure. What does that mean? I think that the idea that we are moving unstoppably into a global economy, into a global worldview,
Starting point is 01:16:03 I think that that idea has hit a snag in the sense that a lot of people were being hurt by that and started to get upset about it. And a lot of people like their countries. I mean, this is one of the things. We like our neighborhoods. When you move a million immigrants into a country that has 16 million people, you have done serious damage to that country, to the nature of that country. And suddenly people are saying, well, wait a minute, we kind of liked our neighbor being the guy, the son of the guy who lived there before. That's not racist.
Starting point is 01:16:33 anything but nationalist is saying i like my country and and i think that he has put the brakes on that whether he has a philosophy to replace it there you and i probably agree i'm not so sure he does again i don't actually disagree with your take on transnational governance i disagree that the the replacement for the global economy is going to be nations i think that the return to mercantilism is not a winning strategy for anybody involved because mercantilism kind of suck but his but his theory His theory is that the country's like a company that competes with other countries. Can I want to... Yes, but our country is a country that competes with other countries for power, but that doesn't mean that...
Starting point is 01:17:10 But also for money. Well, that's just an ignorant view of economics. I mean, if the idea is... We don't compete with people for money. That's not how trade works. That's not how economics works. You and I do not compete for the same dollar. We produce more dollars. This is how capital is the functions.
Starting point is 01:17:25 Of course, that's true. But we do compete for what people do... I mean, we cannot abandon... If you want to compete for T-shirt jobs, and bring them back from Vietnam, go for it, man. I mean, like, that's all you. But you can't, you know, look, there is a moment. There is a moment when the Luddites are burning down the machines.
Starting point is 01:17:42 When the Luddites have a point, okay? And we all know that 100 years later, all those machines worked out pretty well. What is their point? The point is that those machines destroyed their families, destroyed their home industries, destroyed their lifestyles. I mean, of course they had a point.
Starting point is 01:17:56 And nobody denies that that is true. It is also true that they were wrong. And what I mean by that is that in the, in the broad span, if they think beyond their own job, they recognize that an economy run by wheel rights is not an economy that is going to either be competitive on the world market or an economy where they have jobs or their kids have jobs.
Starting point is 01:18:14 But see, this is where I do not. This is just not how economics works. I don't understand. I know it's not how economics work, but it's how life works. You take away people's families. You take away their communities. You destroy their jobs.
Starting point is 01:18:25 You have 3.7% unemployment. More people working in it now. Because Trump has brought a lot of that stuff back. Okay, there was 5% unemployment when Obama was president. Let's not pretend. No, no, no, no. Yes, yes, yes.
Starting point is 01:18:35 At the end of his presidency, it was 5% unemployment. What are you talking about? It was a fake. The Obama economy was a fake. I'm using the same unemployment statistic that you are currently quoting. You can't say that it was fake when it was Obama, but it's not fake when it's true.
Starting point is 01:18:47 That's not how it works. Look, you travel around the country, you see a help wanted sign in every store. You did not see. During Obama, I used to walk down streets that were boarded up, and you do not see that anymore, and that's the Trump economy.
Starting point is 01:18:57 I'm not saying that the Trump economy is not better than the Obama economy. The point that I'm making Exponential. The Trump economic policy has not been based in reality on the notion that we are going to steal jobs back from the countries that took those jobs. It is to some degree in the fact that he's deregulated
Starting point is 01:19:12 the energy industry. I mean, that's a deal. Okay, deregulation is not competition with other countries. Of course it is. No, it is not competition with other countries because you deregulate whether or not they regulate. That's silly. You're deregulating for your own good.
Starting point is 01:19:23 You're not deregulating because you're taking jobs away from other countries. But if you are regular... I mean, that's one of the reasons conservatives want people to come into the country illegally. so they don't have to beg the regulation. I'll challenge what Ben just said only slightly, because I think you actually agree about this. Deregulation makes us more competitive for industry.
Starting point is 01:19:43 Being more competitive for industry is something all four of us support. Briding industry to work here, or penalizing industry to work somewhere else, is not the same as making this... Deregulation. Deregulation, no, hold on. What I'm saying is that deregulation is not looking at the economy as a zero-something.
Starting point is 01:20:01 game. And the philosophy of the Luddites is that the economy is zero-sum game. But a job that is lost in one industry is lost to somebody else. You're confusing two points. What you just said, you said it makes us more competitive, which means we're in competition with somebody else, which is what I started out by saying. My point about the Luddites is the human point that the machines did bad things to the people who were alive at that time. And you can't make an argument and say, well, don't care about your own interest, don't care about your own family, don't care about your community. No, but I can say that you're a, I can say that you are a damn liar over the course of any span of time
Starting point is 01:20:35 if you believe that wrecking the machines is going to save your job or save your economy. But also, nobody's right. But that is the promise that that's why this is going to all fall down. That's why that if you think that the post-war consensus about free trade and property rights, which has brought nearly all of the global out of poverty. That's not what I'm arguing. This is why I was distinguishing before from because you said two things in one sentence, and I'm agreeing with one and disagreeing with the other.
Starting point is 01:20:56 You said global economics versus global government. And I'm saying, I agree with you on global governance. On a cultural level, you cannot have the idea that all borders are permeable and that all people are widgets and all of that. It's the difference between, it's a different visions of global economics. It's a difference of saying we are going to become more competitive even on jobs of a lower level. I mean, we are going to become more competitive in every way. It's a difference between saying we are an entity that is competing with other entities and saying we are all one big economy. Those are two different ways of looking at global, at the same idea of global.
Starting point is 01:21:30 By the way, this is actually an accurate description of the economy. This is why the parties are not going away. This is why I don't think the Republican Party is collapsing. I don't think the Democratic Party is collapsing. I think they are both adjusting to deal with changing political circumstances because it's not 1945. It's not 1885. It's not even 2005.
Starting point is 01:21:48 We're in a new political circumstance at the moment. I don't think that they're fundamentally changing everything they've always believed. I think the Democrat Party has always been terrible, and it remains terrible. I think the Republican Party has embraced a global, global trade, free trade economics for the past 40 years or so. It's also the case that the GOP was founded on tariffs. Abraham Lincoln said, give me a tariff, I'll give you the greatest nation on earth. That's not an argument for tariffs. We're not even instituting a lot of tariffs. Where do you get his iPhone?
Starting point is 01:22:15 And where do you get his iPhone? My point is those two parties are actually adapting to market demands among voters, and what would the third party be? We're always talking. We're always by people, especially on the internet, especially guys who spend a lot of time thinking about politics, they say, you know, and I hear this, I've talked to billionaires who've told me, you know, Michael, if the GOP would just drop those social issues, if we had a third party that was economically really competitive and socially, totally liberal, you'd win every vote. You know how many votes you would win? They've done polls on this.
Starting point is 01:22:47 Yes. Four percent of votes, nobody wants that. I think actually, right now, for all of our chaos, the two parties are very stable. The real problem with the Luddites, and then we're going to take another question. The real problem with the Luddites isn't that they're right that they're hurting. It's not, it's that they're wrong about what should be done about their suffering. Of course, of course they are. And the ultimate problem from a governmental point of view is who gets to decide whose interest to advance again above the interest of someone else. Who gets to say that the guy who has the job as a truck driver is more important than the guy who is building the self-driving car?
Starting point is 01:23:20 And what the free market posits is no one gets to make that decision. The collective economic decision-making of everyone gets to make that decision. Yes, but the thing is that in that moment, I don't think there's going to be self-driving cars. I think they're going to be automatic cars, because we don't have self-driving planes. I mean, a plane basically at this point could take off and land itself,
Starting point is 01:23:44 but you're not going to get in a plane without Boeing. But all the other planes can do that. You're not going to get in a, what is there, a 40-ton truck. A 40-ton truck is just as dangerous as a plane. They're not going to be 40-ton truck. Okay, the German is just taking an example. alighting the exact.
Starting point is 01:23:57 No, no, no, no, but my point is that the mistake that the Luddites make, the mistake that the Luddites make, is that their, the jobs are going to go away when in fact technology actually increases employment. It actually does over time. Correct. The mistake I feel that conservatives make when they side with the guys who own the factories is you can't have a generation wiped out and
Starting point is 01:24:21 maintain cultural stability. You can't have people, their lives. being destroyed. You know, Karl Marx was exactly wrong. He said religion is the opiate of the people. It turns out that opium is the religion of the people. People are going to kill themselves if you take their lives away. I can't remember who it was and said if you take away a person's way of life, you've got to replace it with something of value. There's nothing wrong in starting to think about, and it doesn't have to be more government, it doesn't have to be more government action. There's nothing wrong with starting to think about what do we replace people's lives with?
Starting point is 01:24:53 What do we go into those towns where the jobs disappear and say, okay, well, what is it going to look like? I think that there is a, I think this has to do with education myself. I think our educational system stinks. I think it should be destroyed. I'm a Leninist when it comes to that. Ripe it out by the room. Rip it out. Yeah, let it go as bad as it can get so it will fall apart.
Starting point is 01:25:13 But I think we need a more rapid response to the way jobs change because we're conservatives. We believe in the mediating institutions. We believe in communities. We believe in churches. You can't just say, oh, your community fell apart. You should move. Move to the city. Then we'll be conservative.
Starting point is 01:25:28 That's right. You know, conservatives believe in those things that are falling apart, that fell apart in the Midwest under Obama. Which is why we want the government not making these decisions, even our government, even our president, even President Trump. We want the government not to have so much power that it is crowded out all the people who can address these issues, which are communities and churches. But you're talking about the federal government. The federal government should have that power, but local government should be able to make rapid responses. to the rapid changes that come into their communities and destroy them. There's a difference between they should be able to, on a constitutional legal level,
Starting point is 01:25:59 and it's good policy to do so. I think that the truth is that the history of the United States, frankly, the history of humanity is, in fact, mobility. And I'm sorry, but Donald Trump telling you that the Mexicans and Chinese jacked your job from your town, that is not going to bring the job back to your town if you're in non-competitive industry, and if it does, it's for a very short period of time, as Foxconn is finding out. So this whole routine where we lie to voters by telling them that their jobs will be there forever in the towns that they are guaranteed and that you're going to be buried in the same town that your grandfather was buried in. I mean, I had this exact conversation with Tucker, right?
Starting point is 01:26:32 That is that is not what American history was literally about people leaving the lands of their birth and coming to the United States and then people crossing a wide-fruited plane in the face of people who wanted to kill them in many cases and then building something up. This notion that you're born in America, therefore you get to stay there and live with the job that your grandfather had. First of all, nobody has the job their grandfather had. Pittsburgh was the dirtiest city in America, and the sky was basically green because of all of the pollution. I remember, yeah. And now, the unemployment rate in Pittsburgh is under 4% because the entire industry transformed into health care industry and education.
Starting point is 01:27:01 So this attempt to, your job is the best it'll ever be, and what we need to do is bring your grandpappy's job. You know what your grandpa you probably didn't like doing? Probably he didn't like sitting on an assembly line and dying at age 60 because he was sitting there chain smoking cigarettes with his dead-end job for 40 years. The fallacy in what you're saying, putting rivets in cars. The fallacy of what you're saying is that in the big picture, mobility is very important,
Starting point is 01:27:24 which is why I think we need to go into space. But this is not about the big picture. But this is not, wait, not always, it's not always about the big picture because you have elections and people will not vote for you if their... All politics is local. Is it right. So you're saying the policy should... This is not... Wait, wait, wait, wait, don't do that.
Starting point is 01:27:41 And the political and the political thing should be aligned. Let me... This is not the world right now. right now where there is a wilderness that people can fill. They people are, we do not believe, none of us believes that people should be constantly on the move, constantly destroying their communities. Nobody believes that. The moment when the new world was created is the moment when that happened.
Starting point is 01:28:03 But now we are an older country with- Even if I'm sympathetic to what you're saying, I don't trust you to make those decisions. I don't trust me to make those decisions either, but I think there are decisions that can be made. There is such a thing as good policy, right? I mean, there's good policy and bad policy. There even are good statesmen. We don't have a lot of them, but there are some.
Starting point is 01:28:18 You just said on a general policy level you agree with me, so I'm not sure what your good policy looks like. No, no, no, I said over time, mobility is important. That's why I think we should go into space, but we're not in space right now. Our country has its borders. The substitute for the wilderness was commerce. That was the substitute for the end of the wilderness. The wilderness in the United States ended in the late 19th century. That's right.
Starting point is 01:28:39 And the substitute for that was entrepreneurship and commerce. There was also islands overseas and different territories. realistically it was commerce it was the great it was it was it was making the united states into the greatest commercial power in the history of the world bar none and driving the vast majority of the globe out of abject poverty so that was so when when don't trump stood up and said to the people in the middle of the country who were killing themselves at such a rate that our life expectancy was going down when he says i remember you i have not forgotten you and came into office and by
Starting point is 01:29:07 deregulating actually created the jobs that obama said could not be created was he mistaken i didn't i didn't object to one word he had i didn't have i didn't No bad words to say about his words on Zir regulation. What I'm saying is that when he says that he's going to rejigger the global economy through quote-unquote better trade deals, and what he actually has done is basically substitute fake NAFTA for original NAFTA with minor changes. He's also driven the Chinese economy back to the 1990s. I mean...
Starting point is 01:29:32 Listen, I was in favor of that for security concerns, but not for economic concerns. Also, is the suicide rate going down? What's that? Is the suicide rate going down? I don't know yet. It's the opioid crisis. We don't know about it. We won't know for at least two years.
Starting point is 01:29:43 Let's take at least three questions from our... Back to state, if you want to get a question, go over to dailywire.com slash subscribe, give us your heart in cash, and we will give you very, very, very few answers. Because we talk about to that. This question comes from Christopher. Why do you think Bernie is losing so much of his base when other Democrats like Warren are just parroting his ideas? It tastes so good. I don't know. It is a fair question.
Starting point is 01:30:05 The guy's the only person actually proposing policy in the entire. And he's created the modern Democrat Party. Because he was the only rival to Hillary Clinton. And it's the only reason he was popular in the first place, right? He was the only one allowed to be a rival for it. He was Martin O'Malley. Yeah. It was Martin O'Malley and Jim Webb, who made the great sin of saying that he killed a Vietnamese soldier in the Vietnam War, which makes him a very bad man.
Starting point is 01:30:28 And then it was Bernie Sanders, who was not a war hero, and, in fact, as a communist. And he was the chief rival to Hillary Clinton. And now it turns out that they've got people who can speak in more than two complete sentences, who actually have crafted a patina of intellectuals. planning around his kind of dumb sloganeering. So you'll see people like Elizabeth Warren, he'll say, well, we should make college free for everybody and remove all student debt.
Starting point is 01:30:54 And then she'll be like, well, let me give you the exact specifics on how they're like, wow, she's so sophisticated. She has that. That's right. And she's not, she hasn't got the Soviet Union tied to her leg like a chain. And he's not old and she's not grumpy. And I mean, you saw it in the last debate when he looked like he had nothing. I mean, there was one follow-up question to him about taxation. And they're like, so how are you going to do all this? He's like, the people will rise.
Starting point is 01:31:13 The people will come out, and we'll all go with the streets, and we'll wave are putting an chout, and then the end of the world will come. There is a verified guy on Twitter named Jeremy. I don't know. Who sent out a tweet about Bernie Sanders that I thought was the most accurate thing anyone has ever said about him,
Starting point is 01:31:33 which was that he's running to make up for the fact that everything he ever thought was wrong. This is the big problem. And that's just, by the way, I think all the Democrats are doing that. This is why he can't actually win the election, though, is because as just a matter of accomplishment in government, he's been there since 1776,
Starting point is 01:31:48 and he's never accomplished one single thing. He actually is the intellectual leader of the current Democratic Party, which tells you more about the intellectual state of the Democratic Party than about his intellect. But he did craft the party from an intellectual level. He's just never done anything. He doesn't have the spirit for it, whereas Elizabeth Warren, as detestable as she is,
Starting point is 01:32:07 actually has accomplished certain things in her life. And has the great spirit. And she has the great spirit. This next question. Michael, why does entertainment from conservative artists and companies appear to lack the creative quality that the progressive... First of all, did they not see DIM Girl Squad? Maybe the question came in before DEM Girl Squad. What do you think, Michael?
Starting point is 01:32:28 Why do conservative movies, why are they bad? Yeah. Well, a lot of movies, a lot of the greatest movies of all time have been conservative. They've had conservative messages. We just don't call them conservative movies, and they don't air on conservative channels. They're made by liberals. Like Chernobyl's fantastic. The guy who made it doesn't get it.
Starting point is 01:32:42 Exactly, he doesn't get it. This often happens. But part of the reason why conservative movies or Christian movies are often very terrible is because we've just sort of ghettoized ourselves and because when we know that we're selling a product that is going to a specific audience, we put the ideology and we put the philosophy at the forefront and we allow that as a sort of shortcut to making a good story and casting good actors and all those sorts of things.
Starting point is 01:33:10 So the left doesn't have to do that. they get their messages in a little bit more subtly, and they own the industry. There's one other piece of this, which is every now and then a guy is born in some small town, in some backwater state who can throw a hundred mile an hour fastball. And God touches the person who can throw a hundred mile an hour fastball. Yeah. Right? It's not one in three people. It's not one in ten people.
Starting point is 01:33:36 You are special. You have a gift from God. You might as well be an ex-man. Mostly, though, if you take the 100 mile an hour fastball guys out, all the best baseball players are going to come from bigger towns. If my hometown, Slayton, Texas football team, plays against any of the football teams from nearby Lubbock, Slayton will lose. It will lose not because there aren't talented people in Slayton, but because the total pool of people from whom we have to choose our football team in Slayton is so small. Lubbock has, you know, orders of magnitude more people from which they get to choose their football players.
Starting point is 01:34:11 So with the exception of, by the way, even if you're born able to throw the 100 mile an hour fastball and you're from a very, very small town, when you do get to the professional league or you do get to a college ball, you will be at a disadvantage. It may be temporary because of your gifts, but you'll be at a disadvantage because you didn't play against the quality of opposition that the guys in the bigger town played because they played other big towns. The truth is there are artists on the right, and they work hard and they're trying. We have a lot fewer people from whom to choose. And so the quality that rises to the top over, you know, we may get the 100 mile an hour fastball guy one of these days.
Starting point is 01:34:47 They don't have to count on the 100 mile an hour fastball guy. They've got everybody. It's also a funding problem, right? I mean, the people who fund conservative film, their general perception is, the first question they ask is, is it conservative enough? That's right. But where's the come to Jesus call, right? Like, where's the, at the end of the movie, where is the thing where they say, and that's why abortion's wrong? And then the title of the movie is, abortion is wrong.
Starting point is 01:35:11 This is the other thing. I mean, great movies, and I don't even think movies are the question anymore because I think movies are an outdated form, but great art is made by great artists. It's not made by great conservatives. It's not made by great Christians. It's made by great artists. And I think, just given the numbers, I think there could be as many great conservative artists and even good conservative artists as liberal artists.
Starting point is 01:35:33 But let's face it, they're blacklisted. They do not have the venues to go to. But you do agree that the movies may be over, but everyone who says, spent their life making movies, has a right to keep making movies and getting paid because it's not their fault that the global economy... And they should be paid as much as men. Yeah, very good. This question comes from Mark.
Starting point is 01:35:53 Why do you think people are seeking the extremes, such as the views held by AOC and the rest of the fresh faces of the Democrat Party? Because purity is easier to sell than moderation. Just as a general rule. And so it's always a lot easier to say, well, you are insufficiently pure in your intent. And also, we live in an era where castigation of motives is the easiest game in town. And so it is easier to castigate the motives of somebody who is impure than it is to castigate the motives of somebody who is pure. So you can't say to AOC, well, you're not sufficiently socialist enough because you're obviously willing to compromise.
Starting point is 01:36:26 She's not willing to compromise. This is Bernie Sanders' whole pitch. He kept using it with Hillary Clinton. It was like, well, you kept compromising. Look at me. I've never voted for anything. I've never done a useful thing in my entire life. And that is my selling point because I have never done anything useful.
Starting point is 01:36:38 People are like, he hasn't done anything useful. It's great. Because he's so pure. That's why he didn't do anything useful. It also goes back to what you're saying about losing the Soviet Union as an enemy, though. This country won, our system won, our philosophy one. And now we need a new vision of what that's going to look like in the 21st century. And I think it's easier to find those things in the extremes.
Starting point is 01:36:58 There's not a lot of vision to the sort of incremental small changes based on winnowing history. It's not a sexy self. Except that we did have, we did have in that moment, we had a, an overall vision which could be defined in opposition to the slave states of the Nazis. But Burke is never as solid as sell as the French Revolution. And so is always a better self. There's a good, there is actually a plus to this, I think, which is people used to complain 70 years ago that the parties were too similar and nobody had a clear ideological
Starting point is 01:37:24 vision. And over time, the parties have become ideologically much more extreme. To quote Barry Goldwater, extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. Not sure I totally agree with it, but I just mean there is, if you follow ideas to- The part of it that he has a problem with is liberty. Yeah. I'm all for the vice. The vice is fine.
Starting point is 01:37:42 He didn't think vice was a bad thing. Yeah, yeah. But I just mean, I like that people are following their ideas to their logical conclusions. I like that the left isn't lying to us anymore about their view on abortion. They're actually telling us their honest view about abortion. The other reason I think that we're getting extreme is C.S. Lewis predicted it. He said a sick culture needs to talk about politics, just like a sick man needs to take medicine. But if all you're doing is talking about politics,
Starting point is 01:38:07 as we currently are. I mean, our whole culture, Donald Trump is the TV star, he's the movie star, he's everything. If that's all you're talking about, the culture is so sick that you're actually not doing any of the things that politics is supposed to permit, like the arts and like religion. I have to inject a religious argument here,
Starting point is 01:38:24 because I think that David Brooks, of all people, wrote a good column this week about how the thing about AOC, I know, hard to believe, but stop clock twice a day, right? But that thing about AOC and Nancy Pelosi was really an argument over whether we were going to still have liberalism, because Nancy Pelosi, as far left as she is, is still a liberal in the sense that she believes
Starting point is 01:38:41 in compromise and the system working and all that stuff. And I think that we're in this moment when liberalism is under attack. And I think it's under attack because it became a secular system. And as a secular system, I think it lost its reason for being. I think the reason we were liberals is because we were Christians. And you know, Judeo-Christians because, and I think when you take that away, I think somebody wrote a book about this.
Starting point is 01:39:04 It is for freedom that Christ has made us free. That's right. And I think when you take that away, you take the bottom jingle block. We removed religion from politics because we wanted to protect religion from politics. And then religion died. And then we made politics our religion because we still needed religion. And once politics becomes religion, well, that was the same as when religion was politics. So now you're back to actual religious internecing warfare.
Starting point is 01:39:25 I mean, I made this point on my program a few days ago, that we have returned to a time where you can't actually – because there's no actual discussion to be had beyond a certain point about religion. Because either I'm right or you're right. Either you're going to heaven, I'm going to hell, or vice versa, in most religions. Well, in politics, it's the same thing now. Now, if you don't vote Democrat, you are an evil person who is going to hell. And they're even, you know, they've got their votive candles to Robert Mueller. And they've got their sacraments that you have to perform with recycling and abortion.
Starting point is 01:39:52 And there are all these things, these little things that you have to do, and you have to pay lip service. We have Latin Mass in the Democratic Party, where if you don't say precisely the right words about men and women and transgenderism, then we consider you a bad person who is destined to hell forever. If you tweet a bad thing, there's no forgiveness. It's the worst kind of religion because there's not even any level of forgiveness. And so without any grace, what you end up with is politics returning to religion and return to religious warfare because if we have the absolute truth, why should we have this whole liberal construct in the first place? It is an amazing thing that, like, for all of human history, men were men and women were women,
Starting point is 01:40:26 and we understood that that had a wide range of definition, but still, there was essential fact. In one day, that becomes hateful. I mean, it's not just that, like, gee, I have an idea that maybe gender is a construct. Let's discuss, you know. It's not that. It's like, I believe that, and you are a terrible, terrible person for not thinking that. I just came back from this conference of evangelical teenagers, right? And I'm always a little odd there because I basically think that a loving homosexual relationship can be tolerated and included within the Christian vision of humanity.
Starting point is 01:40:59 And so I'm always the guy who's kind of arguing for a little. You don't think it's marriage, though. I don't think it's mad. I don't think it's actual marriage. It's only a sacramental marriage, which is obviously the center of human life. But I don't think it needs, I don't think people should be chased out any more than I think divorced people or fat people or lustful people or envious people should be chased away from the church. And I would even go further and say that I do believe that there is a state of homosexual relationship
Starting point is 01:41:23 that isn't actually any more sinful. You know, it's off-center, but it's not necessarily sinful. But anyway, my point is this. These kids talk to me. They argue with me. They discuss things with me. At no point does anybody stand up and say you're going to hell. You know, never. They're always open to these ideas and they disagree and they disagree ferociously. And we have these wonderful, friendly, actually loving conversations, which to me are one of the great joys of life. We talked about this when Dave Rubin was here, arguing like this and walking away and saying, you know, that guy actually made a good point.
Starting point is 01:41:58 I may adjust something that I, that's part of the joy of life. And they've completely eradicated it. Well, I've enjoyed the argument. think he made any good point. No. There were a lot of things we didn't get to tonight, the horrors of Jeffrey Epstein, which I do think Mary. We all agree. He's terrible.
Starting point is 01:42:12 He should burn in hell. Right? We're all in the same people. Everybody who also involved with him should burn down. And I don't care how the economy changes. That man should lose his job. And I hope everyone involved gets caught. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:24 We didn't get to talk about the fact that a left-wing would be domestic terrorist actually stormed a government facility while quoting. Trump tweeted something. Yeah, while quoting one of the squad. So there is more to talk about. We will talk about it the next time that we are together, which I believe will be at Backstage Live at the Terrace Theater in Long Beach, California on August 26.
Starting point is 01:42:47 You can still get your tickets. We'd love to see you there. DailyWire.com slash backstage, dailywire.com slash backstage, dailywire.com slash backstage, dailywire.com. It's not even the prompt. I just stayed in three times. You remember that guy? Beetle juice of Pierce?
Starting point is 01:42:58 No, it was like, apply directly to the forehead. What was that? I do remember that. So we'd love to see it backstage live. Come hang out with us to everybody who wrote in their questions. We appreciate it. Go over to dailywire.com slash subscribe. Get in your questions for next time.
Starting point is 01:43:15 And we will see you there. Fake live. Three, two. What? What?

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