The Michael Knowles Show - Ep. 339 - How Odd Of God
Episode Date: April 29, 2019A neo-Nazi attacks a synagogue on Passover, politicians politicize the tragedy, and Avengers is awful. We will examine how this tragedy happened, and why our culture no longer knows how to talk about ...tragedy. Date: 04-29-2019 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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A neo-Nazi attacks a synagogue on Passover.
Politicians politicize the tragedy and Avengers Endgame is awful.
We will examine how the tragedy in San Diego happened and why our culture no longer knows
how to talk about tragedy.
I'm Michael Knowles and this is the Michael Knowles show.
Awful tragedy that happened on the last day of Passover at a synagogue in San Diego.
It could have been a lot worse than it was.
There were a lot of things that happened, providential,
and personal that came into play that prevented this from being a massacre. Nevertheless, obviously,
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This attack in San Diego is a clear example of anti-Semitism.
I don't use that phrase, willy-nilly.
I don't use the word racism willy-nilly.
I don't even, I don't use bigotry willy-nilly.
The left has taken these phrases, water the,
down to not mean very much, but this attack was caused by a guy who vehemently and irrationally
hates Jews. And it gets to a bigger question, the question of theodicy. It even reminded me
there's an old Clarrahew poem that says, how odd of God to choose the Jews. And this is considered
a poetic jive at Jewish people. And the rejoinder to that was,
not odd of God,
Goyim, annoy him.
And then the more profound response
to that was,
but not so odd as those who choose
a Jewish God yet spurn the Jews.
And that's what you see
in what happened with this 19-year-old
guy who went in and
tried to shoot up this synagogue.
What happened exactly?
In San Diego, at this synagogue
shooting, you saw the interaction
of two distinct elements.
You saw providence and you saw preparedness.
It's the only way to describe how this tragedy
didn't become an even bigger massacre.
You have a 19-year-old white supremacist
come in there with an AR-15 rifle
and shoot up this synagogue.
He killed one woman, he wounded three people,
including the rabbi.
The woman who was killed,
who was 60-year-old Lori Kay,
and she wasn't killed accidentally.
She gave up her life
to shield the rabbi from bullets.
The rabbi apparently was trying to get the children
out of the synagogue.
This woman was a wife and a mother
and she gave up her life
to save the rabbi and to save these children.
So this shooter comes in.
He's got sunglasses on.
The rabbi couldn't see his eyes.
He says he couldn't see into his soul.
And the shooter squares up on the rabbi with the rifle,
pulls off around and misses. He goes wide. He ends up shooting off the rabbi's finger when the rabbi went and lifted up his hands. Then squares up, gets a better aim on the rabbi, pulls the trigger, doesn't fire. The gun jams. Guns jam. Modern guns jam less than some older guns. What are the odds that this gun would have jammed after he'd only gotten off a relatively small number of rounds?
Hard to imagine.
Hard to imagine the odds of that.
He gets one round off and it misses.
These guns are very easy to aim, but he misses the rabbi.
And then he pulls it again and the thing jams.
At this point, at this point of unmistakable providence,
a combat veteran and an off-duty border patrol agent
comes out and starts running and yelling at the shooter.
And he's got his own gun on him.
And then this coward, this little gutless sociopath runs out of the synagogue.
But he can't stand up to a real guy with a gun.
No, no, he thought he had a soft target.
Then this combat veteran comes up with his gun and the guy goes running.
Now, the combat veteran was able to hit the shooter's vehicle, wasn't able to hit the shooter himself.
The central story here, this guy could have slaughtered that whole synagogue.
if not for an off-duty border patrol agent, combat veteran, and Providence.
Those two things.
If his gun hadn't jammed, eventually he would have fixed the jammer.
He would have thrown in a new magazine.
And if this good guy with a gun were not here, we wouldn't be talking about one killed, three wounded.
We'd be talking about a slaughter at this synagogue.
Providence and preparedness.
So how are politicians reacting to it?
this. Elon Omar tweets out. Famously, anti-Semitic congresswoman, Elon Omar, tweets out,
love is the answer, love is the way, and yes, less gun. Hashtag, no more thoughts and prayers.
Is there any better way to describe the left in 2019 than the statement, no more thoughts and prayers?
That's it. That sums up the entire left-wing agenda. No more thoughts, no more prayers. That's what they do.
Notice, not a terribly specific statement, is it?
Love is the answer.
Love is the way.
And no more guns, less guns.
What are you talking about?
If that off-duty border patrol agent hadn't been permitted to carry a gun,
the whole synagogue would have been massacred.
The whole thing would have been shot up.
It doesn't make any sense.
And by the way, this was expected.
The rabbi apparently was so afraid of an attack on his synagogue
that he asked that off-duty border patrol agent
to carry a gun. When this guy started to come back into his Jewish faith, he asked him to please carry a gun.
I think the rabbi got a permit to carry a gun, though he didn't have one on him at the time.
And fortunately, he prevented what could have been much wider killing.
No more prayers. No more prayers is what she says. Prayer is the central issue.
The shooter attacked these people while they were praying. The shooter attacked these people on a holy day.
that celebrates God's gift to the Jewish people
of escaping from Egypt,
of leaving Egypt and becoming their own nation,
free nation.
The shooter hated those prayers.
These shooters who go in hate prayers.
When you come out against prayers,
as some people are doing on the left and in politics,
you've lost the narrative.
To oppose thoughts and prayers tells you the whole story.
Now, after this tragedy,
President Trump calls the rabbi of the synagogue, Rabbi Israel Goldstein,
and he explains his gratitude for receiving this phone call.
I received a personal phone call from our President Donald Trump.
I was amazed to answer the phone and say the Secretary of the White House is calling,
and he spent close to 10, 50 minutes with me on the phone.
It's the first time I've ever spoken to the President of the United States of America.
He shared with me condolences on behalf of the United States of America
and we spoke about the moment of silence
and he spoke about his love of peace and Judaism and Israel
and he was just so comforting that I'm really grateful to our president
for taking the time and making that effort to share with us
his comfort and consolation.
I've noticed this among a lot of my Orthodox Jewish friends
just anecdotally is they tend to really like Donald Trump.
for a few reasons, Donald Trump has the most moral clarity on the question of Israel-Palestine
of any president in modern American history. This is why Israel named a train station after him.
This is why they're naming a town after him now. Trump also is clearly, I think, the most pro-Jewish
president ever in American history. He's the most nearly Jewish president himself. He's got a
daughter who's a convert to Judaism, and he's got a son-in-law who is a Jew.
an Orthodox Jew.
This is apparently one of the reasons why the shooter hates Trump.
So,
the question is, why did he do it?
Why did this 19-year-old kid
become radicalized and go in and shoot up a synagogue?
Sometimes people say, who cares their motivations?
Don't read the manifesto, don't read the notes,
don't figure out why he did it.
He's a lunatic.
He's a crazy person.
It should be dismissed and he shouldn't get any publicity.
Okay, I'm sympathetic to something.
of those arguments, but unless you confront the motivations, you're going to have a harder
time preventing these things in the future. You're going to have a harder time refuting these arguments.
Because this guy wasn't just some lunatic. There's no reason to believe that he has a mental
illness or that he's completely insane. He had a perverse ideology, is a perverse understanding
of history and theology and philosophy. So why did he do it? The first thing to know, this is a total
copycat of New Zealand. It's a total copycat of that New Zealand. It's a total copycat of that New
Zealand shooting, not just in the act of it, but in the manifesto. I read the manifesto. It looks
exactly like it. It's a copycat of not actually not just the document, but the reasons too.
So this guy, the shooter, opens up his manifesto, which was available online. I don't know if you can
still find it. He opens it up talking about ancestry and race and blood. It's the first paragraph
or two paragraphs of this thing.
I'm proud of my ancestry.
I'm proud of the blood that goes through my veins.
I'm a descendant of this person
and I have his blood running through me
and that's what matters.
Now, he later tries to justify these crimes
with culture and religion.
But you'll notice he doesn't open up
the manifesto on culture or religion.
He says later in the manifesto
that he's a devout Protestant Christian.
You don't see that in the first paragraph, do you?
No, he gives away the whole game. He is interested in race. Everything else that goes on top of this
racial reason is window dressing. Everything on top of racial bigotry is a distraction from the core
question. So why does he hate the Jews? Because he blames the Jews for everything that has ever gone
wrong. He blames the Jews for pornography. He blames the Jews for political revolutions. He blames the Jews
for everything. Genocide, slavery. He also says, this is, this is.
payback for the Jews killing Christ. He puts that in one of the paragraphs of his manifesto,
which means he probably missed the point of the gospel story. We just celebrated Easter a week ago,
and the crucifixion of Christ is where Christ conquers death and redeems mankind. So this is why
you sing on Easter Sunday, Christians sing, oh, happy fault that won for us so great, so glorious,
a redeemer.
And they're talking about not just the crucifixion all the way back to the original sin of Adam.
It's a way to view the crucifixion as not just this very sad moment, but this triumph over death on the cross to view even that original sin as not this sad, awful tragedy that has no happy ending.
But as a tragedy that actually wins for us a wonderful victory, that actually turns a tragedy into a comedy.
He doesn't seem to understand that, this kid. And like this New Zealand shooter, this guy in San Diego
clearly spent an inordinate amount of time on the internet. In the deepest bowels of the internet,
he dedicates the shooting and the manifesto to all these anonymous people on internet message boards.
He uses internety language. Sometimes he tells jokes that are ironic. So if you're not familiar with this kind of language,
you won't really understand exactly what he's saying.
A lot of in references.
And then he gets to the direct copycat of that New Zealand Shooters manifesto,
which is he does a little interview with himself to explain his political views.
So his first question is, are you a Trump supporter?
His response, you mean that Zionist, Jew-loving, anti-white, traitorous expletive?
Don't make me laugh.
so he hates Trump, calls him a traitor, and he hates Trump because Trump doesn't hate the Jews.
We've heard now for weeks, well, really for two years, but the mainstream media, certainly for the past few weeks, have been calling Trump a neo-Nazi, saying that he called neo-Nazis very fine people.
Clearly, the neo-Nazis don't think that Donald Trump likes them very much. I mean, the stated reason why he hates Donald Trump is that Donald Trump is not a neo-Nazi, that Donald Trump doesn't like neo-Nazis, that Donald Trump doesn't like neo-Nazis, that Donald Trump doesn't like neo-Nazes, that he doesn't.
Donald Trump is too nice to the Jews. He then asks himself, are you affiliated with any political
ideology? He says, yes, it's called not wanting to go extinct. So this is the same exact
ideology that the New Zealand shooter was talking about. It's this idea that white people are
about to disappear and they're all gone and it's this massive conspiracy by any number of people.
It's either the Muslim's fault or the Jews fault or the these people's fault or these, but it's
never your own fault, by the way. Nobody ever takes responsibility for your own problems. No, no.
It's always somebody else's fault. And then finally, he says, are you a conservative?
And this guy says, I'm not a useless, spineless coward. So no, I'm not a conservative.
Conservative is a misnomer. They can serve nothing. So he hates Donald Trump. He hates
conservatives and his only political ideology is essentially racial. Notice here, he's not really talking
very much about his religious views. He's talking about race. Now, you can read the rest of this
manifesto if you want. It's just boilerplate, shallow white supremacist ideology, so I wouldn't waste
your time, but if you want to, you can probably find it online. Immediately in the wake
of these things, anything that you do is considered politicizing the tragedy. Almost any way that
you can respond, other than saying we're praying for the victims and we're praying for
everybody involved, is considered politicizing the tragedy. And both sides accuse each other
of politicizing the tragedy. And generally speaking, politicizing the tragedy is mostly nonsense.
Why is that? Because what is politics? Politics is just the way that you. You know,
you and I interact with each other in civil society.
Politics is the way that we all get along
underneath the same government.
So virtually any way you respond
could be accused of politicizing a tragedy.
It's the same kind of phrase
when you hear people say,
we can't legislate morality.
That's another one of these mostly meaningless phrases.
Listen, I just believe we shouldn't legislate morality.
All legislation touches on some aspect
of morality. The law
exists to codify some aspect of the moral
law. This is obviously true of health care. All the arguments for health care are
it's evil to let people die in the streets. It's evil
to not let certain people go get medical treatment for free. It's evil
not to pay for people's cosmetic surgery. It's all moral arguments. This is true
even of taxes. The arguments for raising taxes are it's wrong. It's unfair. You're
not paying your fair share.
Or, conversely, we need to lower taxes because I have a right to my liberty.
I have a right to my property.
It's my natural right from the natural law.
This is morality, baby.
Every aspect of the law has to do with morality.
And almost any interaction that we have each other in some way touches on politics.
Now, that doesn't mean that there aren't inappropriate ways to respond to a tragedy.
There are appropriate ways and there are inappropriate ways.
and one of them, by the way, is Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's.
So she tweets out, right after this happens, quote,
heartbroken to hear of the San Diego Synagogue shooting,
particularly so on this final day of Passover,
we have a responsibility to love to protect our neighbors.
The longer the Senate delay is holding a vote on HR 8,
the more we put Americans at risk.
What?
Heartbroken to hear about this,
we should protect our neighbors.
If you don't vote for the very specific gun control legislation that I want you to vote for,
you are basically responsible for shooting up a synagogue.
That's an inappropriate way to respond to a tragedy.
Inappropriate way to respond to a shooting.
In part because it's just not true.
HR 8 is some more gun control legislation to expand background checks.
No evidence whatsoever that this would have prevented this shooter from getting a gun.
no evidence whatsoever that this would have prevented any of the other mass shootings that we have seen in recent years.
So we ask ourselves, how could we have prevented this shooting? How could we have stopped this?
More gun control? No. There's no evidence that any major gun control law that's been proposed would have stopped any of these things.
How about if law enforcement had somehow caught this guy earlier? I guess that would have stopped it, but how would they,
have caught the guy. The guy who did it had no prior contact with law enforcement. The guy before
that, before the shooting happened, he was basically a model citizen. Wasn't arrested. He didn't have any
priors. Well, maybe if we were able to catch mental illnesses earlier, again, there's no evidence
this guy has a mental illness. When you read that manifesto, it's perverse, but it's not insane.
It's a perverse ideology that he's following down to its own logical conclusions.
But it's not the ravings of a lunatic.
It's the ravings of a bigot who's filled with hatred who becomes violent.
None of those precautions would have prevented this shooting or any other.
None of them.
Fortunately, the shooting was prevented from becoming much, much worse.
One person dead.
It's a tragedy.
It's less tragic than had the entire congregation been killed.
How was that prevented?
Providence and preparedness.
A gun jamming at exactly the right time
and a guy who was carrying a gun.
The greatest, most obvious evidence
that gun control would not have prevented the shooting.
More gun control may have made the shooting a lot worse.
What does it all boil down to?
is it's hard for us to accept that evil exists.
How odd of God.
How odd of God that in this creation of ours, there's evil and suffering.
And it's not just evil and suffering for people who make bad decisions.
It's evil and suffering for innocent people.
One of the people who was shot at this synagogue was a little girl, was shot in the leg.
I think she was eight years old.
This 60-year-old woman gave her life to save her life.
to save her rabbi.
Totally innocent.
Another man, that little girl's uncle, shot.
Innocent.
Why do bad things happen to good people?
Why does a little kid get leukemia?
How odd of God?
How do we accept tragedy?
The reason that we can't have a coherent political conversation about this.
Actually, we can't have a coherent cultural conversation about this.
We can't have a coherent cultural conversation because we cannot have a coherent
religious conversation. It's not just that there are attacks on synagogues. Obviously, there was the
attack on the mosque in New Zealand. Obviously, there have been countless attacks and desecrations of churches
throughout France and throughout the West. There was another attack that just occurred on a Protestant
church in Africa, five people killed, including the pastor of that church. There is an attack broadly on
religion, and it's really too bad because the only way that we can understand this track,
tragedy is religion. This is the question. We live in a fallen world. And all we want to do is perfect it.
All we want to do is say, oh, just one more law, one little bit of money, just one tweak to the regulatory
state, and then no more tragedies. No, that's not how it works. No government program will end evil.
And so we can't accept the tragic fact of life. Ironically, then, we can't accept the fact
that justice exists. If we can say right now with a good deal of certainty, there's really
nothing we could have done as a society before this shooting to stop it, what about afterward?
Is there some justice that we can have now? Unfortunately, in the state of California,
about a month ago, Governor Gavin Newsom put a moratorium on the death penalty. The dog who shot
up that synagogue should be taken out back and killed by the state, by the civil,
authority. The state should execute him. He should die. He should die because that is just,
and that will give us some modicum of justice. It is important because it can deter other shooters.
It is important because he deserves it, because it is punishment, because he committed a crime,
and that demands retribution. But we don't understand the tragic fact of life, and so we don't
understand justice either. We think there's some way to fix it, some way to just make it all better.
No. We can now, though, at this moment, we can enact justice by putting down this killer like the
dog he is to claim some modicum of justice. We can't do that, though, can we? You know, speaking of
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, she's in trouble again because she came out and she used this
tragedy to try to push her own gun control legislation. And then it was pointed out, she never said
anything about the Sri Lanka church attack, killed 300 people on Easter Sunday. 300 people.
And she never made a statement about it. Alexander Ocasio-Cortez tweeting 25 hours a day.
And so Kelly Ann Conway goes out on television and says it's a little weird that she doesn't
talk about this. And Ocasio-Cortez responds, hello, Ms. Conway, on Easter,
I was away from tech visiting my grandmother in Puerto Rico, which continues to suffer from the White House's incompetent disaster response.
Are you trying to imply that I am less Christian? What's the point of you bringing this up on national TV?
The point is very clear.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is only going to comment on things that affirm her narrative.
And the killing of Christians around the world does not affirm her narrative.
Doesn't affirm her narrative on intersectionality or victimhood or religious bigotry.
Christians can never be the victims, according to Ocasio-Cortez.
And even when she comments on the synagogue shooting, it's just to push her own legislation
that wouldn't have prevented it and might have made the shooting worse.
That's the point that Kelly Ann Conway is making.
Now, did AOC understand this?
Probably not.
But we don't understand how to talk about tragedy either.
And this becomes apparent in all of our fiction, in all of our novels, in all of our movies,
including the biggest movie that came out over the weekend, Avengers Endgame.
The biggest, there were a lot of problems with it.
I hate the Marvel movies to begin with.
But one of the central problems is we can't talk about tragedy.
We have such a shallow view as a culture about tragedy.
We will get to that in a second.
Then we'll get to a little political wrap-up because there's a lot of very bad news for Joe Biden
and it's worth talking about because his campaign is floundering.
But first, you've got to go to Dailywire.com.
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I saw Avengers, and I hated it. I'll tell you all the reasons I hated at first,
but then we'll get to the bigger cultural problem. To begin.
three hours long, three hours of my life I have given away to watch this insipid movie.
The movie is divided basically into four acts. The first act is unbearable. It is so slow and
pointless and horribly written and mostly poorly acted. I was checking my watch every five minutes.
The second act is bearable. It's nearly tolerable. It actually has one moment that's almost
poignant. So, okay, that part is okay. The third act is inevitable. It's the thing that happens
in every superhero movie. And then the fourth act is totally saccharine, sentimental, self-indulgent
payoff for all the people who have watched 20 of these movies, certainly not me. And so that was
pretty awful to watch too. One of the four acts was almost tolerable. The others were awful.
What was so bad about the movie? There's no stakes whatsoever.
there's no stakes at all.
We already know from the Marvel universe that people can die and come back.
We already know from every superhero movie that basically everything turns out the way you expect it to.
We already know that these guys have superpowers.
And so some of them have superpowers that are so immense that basically they're invincible.
Okay.
That was one aspect.
The other is it's tediously politically correct.
the moments of political correctness are so egregious and cringe-inducing.
Luckily, there aren't too many of them.
There are like three or four of them throughout the movie, but you just think, oh, my gosh,
what are you doing to me?
And some of the implications of this political correctness, I'm trying to speak in vague terms
so I don't spoil the movie for those of you who, for some reason, want to go see it.
But some of the implications of this political correctness just don't make any sense.
at all, like, are exactly contrary to characters, characters' motivations, and the worlds that these
characters inhabit. In some cases, the characters are just terrible. So Captain Marvel is just a
horrible character. She's annoying. She has no weaknesses, really. Her biggest weakness is that when she
was eight years old, she got kind of angry sometimes. Now she has basically no weakness. She's just
a perfect and amazing can do no wrong. This is one of the real downsides of injecting
political correctness into superhero movies is superheroes when they don't have a weakness
become really, really boring really quickly. But if you're making superhero movies
for the purpose of injecting gender politics or leftism or intersectionality, then you
basically can't give them any weaknesses. So it's just totally boring. That is, uh,
Captain Marvel. I guess the best thing I could actually say about Avengers End Game is that it's
not Captain Marvel. That's a good thing. And it's not Black Panther either. It's better than
Black Panther, which again, damning with faint praise. Then there's the saccharin sentimentality of it
all. It's just so nostalgic. It's just, I get it. You're talking about 20 movies here. People
have been watching this throughout this whole course. So you kind of want a little bit of a clips show.
You kind of want to go back and revisit old memories.
Okay, fine, but it's so indulgent.
It's just blah.
My final takeaway is that Scarlett Johansson is terrific.
She is such a good actress, and she's hotter than a $2 pistol,
so that part was really good.
And Robert Downey Jr. is good in it.
I mean, there are some performances are pretty good.
The guy who plays Captain America is awful.
I get it that he is a very attractive man and looks like Captain America.
I get it, right.
but his performance is not very good.
Some of the others are fine or whatever.
It's, okay, take it or leave it.
The writing is pretty weak in a lot of places.
Okay, whatever.
Take it or leave it.
The biggest issue with the movie actually does relate to our theme today,
how odd of God, this problem of evil, that evil exists in the world,
is the movie is basically about how to deal with regret and grief
after some evil action has occurred.
That's not a spoiler.
We know some evil action has occurred,
and now all the superheroes
are trying to come to grips with that.
How can you change what happened?
Can you change what happened?
If you changed what happened,
would it change the future?
Why did it happen?
Why does evil exist?
Why don't the good guys win
every single time all the time?
That's a serious question.
There's one moment in a moment
in Act 2
that nearly
approaches poignancy,
it almost gets to
a serious discussion
of this problem,
and then it totally runs away from it.
It totally backs away.
And the answer
that Avengers Endgame gives
for how to deal with evil
is basically,
la la la la, la, la, I don't know, no, no,
it's not, let's make it all better
and it'll just all be better
and it can be better for some reason.
That's basically the answer that it gives.
Now, you might say, Michael, you're making too much out of a superhero movie.
This is a popcorn movie for people who like the funny costumes and see big explosions.
Okay, fine.
That's also true of the Greek myths.
That's also true of the Nordic myths.
That's also true of the stories that we've told ourselves for years and years, which were,
the Greek myths were the superhero movies of their day and of the ensuing millennia.
but those
Greek myths also told us something
about our nature.
Good myths,
good fantasy stories
tell us something about reality
and about human nature.
And so you've got explosions
and superpowers and monsters
and ogres and giants
and you have all the same elements
as every superhero story,
but they tell you something true
about your nature
and about reality
and about evil and about God
and about our purpose and why we're here and how we came to be here.
Now, let me ask you something, if you're a defender of the Avengers movies and the Marvel movies,
what profound truth about human nature is conveyed in these movies?
What does this movie tell you about reality, suffering, grief, evil, personality, God?
What does it tell you about anything?
that stories are supposed to tell you about.
Without giving away any spoilers,
it tells you the opposite of the truth.
That's what it does.
It's a fantasy in the true sense of fantasy.
Nothing really has any stakes.
Probably nothing really has any costs.
I guess, you know, you'll see in the future movies
if anything really has any costs.
If you can correct one evil in history,
Why can't you go back and correct other evils?
Well, because you just can't.
If we're so focused on stopping one evil,
why not all the evils?
Why don't we live in a perfect world?
Why don't we exert our will to just create a perfect world?
Why is that not possible?
How odd of God to create a world in which evil exists?
What does that mean?
Maybe it means that we live in a world with free will.
why do we live in a world with free will? What does our freedom mean? How does our freedom relate
to providence, to the grace of God? In the takeaway from that synagogue shooting is providence and
preparedness, the providence of the gun jamming, the preparedness of the combat veteran being there
to chase the shooter out of the synagogue, save lives. Not every life. One woman died,
but he saved every other life in that room. What does that interaction look like? What does that interaction look
like. That's what stories are supposed to help us deal with. And what do we make of the inevitable
tragedy of life in the here and now? Once you catch the shooter, now we can't kill him. He can't
face capital punishment. At the founding of this country, the punishment for every serious crime
was death. You would hang for any serious crime. That was the definition of a felony.
now, in many states, you can't die for any crime.
State of California.
If this guy is punished by the state of California, he will not be killed.
More than that, you have presidential candidates saying that this guy should vote.
Bernie Sanders last week said that this guy who shot up the synagogue shooting should not vote just when he leaves prison.
He should vote from prison.
That is our talk about justice these days.
days. And why is it? Why is our talk about justice so totally warped? We've actually had to create a
whole other term for it because we know that what we're talking about is not justice. So we call it
social justice. And social justice really just means not justice. Why? It's because if you put
garbage in, you get garbage out. If you put in a garbage premise about human nature that this isn't
really a tragic world, that we really can perfect human nature, you're going to get out the
garbage conclusion that we should never kill anybody, that there's no such thing as real justice,
there's only social justice, which is all about therapy and rehabilitation, and not giving up
on that stupid garbage premise in the first place that human nature is perfectable in this world.
It's not. That's our moral discourse. And so, if you accuse me of haranguing a popcorn movie
like Avengers, I'll say, you don't like superhero movies. It's true. I hate superhero
movies, and I especially hate the Marvel movies. I liked Dark Night and I liked Logan. But
the other ones, I can't stand. Right. Okay, then I just wouldn't go see them. But the issue is,
I have to go see them, because superhero movies aren't just movies for kids anymore.
They're not even just movies for kids and for nerds. They're actually movies for everybody.
They are the central cultural event that happens in the United States. That movie took in
$1.2 billion over the weekend. It's basically the only movie.
that people will go see anymore. That's pretty sad. That tells us our culture has been degraded
and our moral language has been degraded and therefore our politics is going to be degraded.
We say don't politicize a tragedy. Don't politicize this. Don't politicize that. Sure, yeah,
we shouldn't act inappropriately. But politics is down from culture. Culture is down from religion.
our movies and our books and our fantasies reflect a religious understanding and they are reflected
in our politics. You can't divorce them. Profound religious misunderstanding and bigotry is going
to be reflected in certain cultural memes and it's going to be reflected in awful political actions,
terrorist actions. It's going to be represented in the wicked actions of individuals to hurt
innocent people. All political problems fundamentally are religious problems.
and culture is right there in the middle of that.
And that's why you've got to take culture seriously,
even if it's a popcorn movie with a lot of superheroes.
Before we go, we have got to get to a little bit of politics
because Joe Biden's campaign has had trouble from the very beginning.
I know it looks like he's eight points up right now,
not just on the Democrats,
but Morning Consult and Politico say Joe Biden is up eight points on Donald Trump.
Don't believe it.
Joe Biden is going into this with the nice, glossy,
I've been out of the public eye for years. I'm the former vice president under Barack Obama. I'm a really
nice guy and I never did anything controversial in the last four years. Okay, don't believe it. Joe Biden is
already having trouble. They obviously got him on sniffing gate. They got him on all its weird
interactions with those women, you know, smelling their hair or giving them shoulder massages.
Now they're trying to get him on Anita Hill, which doesn't make any sense. They're trying to get him on the
Supreme Court confirmation hearings.
of Clarence Thomas in 1991, and they're saying that Joe Biden didn't treat Clarence Thomas's accuser
fairly, which is ridiculous. He gave Anita Hill the ability to air all of her claims. Her claims
in many cases were debunked, and Clarence Thomas got the confirmation. If anything, Joe Biden should
apologize to Clarence Thomas, not to Anita Hill. But now the big problem he's facing is that
Barack Obama won't endorse him. And here is the pathetic.
pathetic response that Joe Biden is mustering for that.
Best choice for the Democrats in 2020, why didn't President Obama endorse?
I asked President Obama not to endorse, and he doesn't want to this.
He should whoever wins this nomination to win it on their own merits.
So why you, welcome to the door.
You and your message very clearly made this about the debate about President Trump,
but you're going to have to get through the Democratic primary first.
Why are you the best choice for Democrats?
That'll be for the Democrats.
How could he differentiate your...
What do you think about the Moldering report?
Mr. Vice President.
All this stuff in time, okay?
Is the case against Donald Trump's wrong enough for impeachment, Mr. Vice President?
So he's being followed by this gaggle of reporters, and he knew that answer was weak, so he had to get out of there.
Why hasn't Barack Obama endorsed you?
His first try is, I asked him not to endorse me.
Now, his campaign operatives had been saying this for the past week.
Oh yeah, Joe asked Obama not to endorse. Yeah, okay. If you believe that, I got a great bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.
I pay, hey, popular former president of my party that I served under for eight years.
Please don't endorse me. Hey, I know there's a field of 20 Democrat candidates now and it's going to be really hard to differentiate yourself.
I definitely don't want the popular former president to endorse me. That would be terrible, right?
So nobody believes this. Joe Biden knows that nobody believes this. So then you hear people,
are missing this, he changes his answer immediately after he gives it. He says, I asked Barack not to
endorse. And he doesn't want to, he wants the people of the Democrat Party should decide. We should,
the candidates should win it on their own merits. Hold on. Did you ask him not to endorse you?
Or does he not want to endorse? Obviously, he doesn't want to endorse you. And you would take his
endorsement. But why does Barack Obama not want to endorse you?
Joe Biden because he thinks Joe Biden's a lot weaker than the media think he is.
Another report just came out that Barack Obama nudged Joe Biden not to run in 2016.
The reason was he thought Hillary was a stronger candidate.
Why is he not endorsing Joe Biden now?
Because he thinks, like I am, that Joe Biden is a pretty weak candidate, no matter what
the polls say.
The polls can never be wrong, right?
The polls are always right.
Is that what we learned in 2016?
Got to trust those polls.
How could those polls ever be wrong? Especially, especially about an election involving Donald Trump.
So this is a big blow for Joe Biden.
We've been saying this for weeks now.
The only way that Joe Biden really is able to sustain that lead, I think, is if Obama comes out strong for him at the top of the race.
That has apparently been closed off.
We'll see where Joe goes from here.
Again, we've long said that first day of the race was going to be Joe Biden's best day and then he was just going to trail.
You're already seeing his net favorability drop five points since January.
probably only headed further down. Now, why? Why is Joe Biden no good at this? Why does Barack Obama think
that Joe Biden ultimately can't beat Donald Trump, that some other candidate would be better?
One of the rumors is that Michelle Obama is going to get into the race. I'm highly skeptical of that.
I don't think that is happening. But I do agree with Obama that he's probably not the strongest
candidate. It's because Joe Biden's schick is being the every man, the popular guy. He's
going, he's just going to nuzzle your little daughter. He's, hey, I'm just Joe. I'm a big giant
smile. Hey, I'm Joe Biden. That game is a losing game against Donald Trump, because Donald Trump is
the most authentic for better or worse politician that we've maybe ever had in our history, certainly
in the last hundred years. I was the other, I was on Jesse Waters' show on Fox News the other night.
They interrupted our segment because Trump was giving this rally. So I watched the entire rally
beginning to end. Donald Trump is just so good at politics. Here's just a quick little clip of how he
opens up his rally. By the way, Saturday night, is there any place that's more fun than a Trump
rally? Can you imagine Sleepy Joe? Crazy Bernie. You look at the candidates, right? I think Pocahanta,
she's finished, she's out.
She's gone. No, when it was found that I had more Indian blood in me than she did, and then it was
determined that I had none, but I still had more. That was the end of her 32-year scam on colleges.
Donald Trump is going to eat Joe Biden for lunch. This is where he thrives. These rallies are where
he thrives. He doesn't always thrive in press conferences. He doesn't always thrive in Oval Office
meetings. He doesn't always thrive from the position of president. But he totally kills it in these
rallies. And these rallies are what campaigns are. This is the stuff of campaigns. He had another line.
He said, you know, before I became a politician, can you believe I'm a politician? And the crowd
goes crazy. They love him. They just eat it up. That is the game that Joe Biden has been
trying to play for 40 years. He spent 40 years becoming the slickest politician.
in Washington to be slick enough to pretend that he's not a real politician.
Oh, Joe, he's so authentic.
That's what makes Joe Joe.
B.S. Joe Biden is a totally constructed politician.
This guy is the real thing.
You put those two up against one another.
It's not going to be close.
All right.
That's our show.
We've got a lot more to get to, but too bad, too late.
I'll see you tomorrow.
In the meantime.
I'm Michael Knowles.
This is the Michael Knowles show.
The Michael Knowles Show is produced by Rebecca Dobkowitz and directed by Mike Joyner,
Executive producer Jeremy Boring, senior producer Jonathan Hay.
Our supervising producer is Mathis Glover, and our technical producer is Austin Stevens.
Edited by Danny Domeco. Audio is mixed by Dylan Case.
Hair and makeup is by Jesua Olvera.
And our production assistant is Nick Sheehan.
The Michael Knowles Show is a Daily Wire production.
Copyright Daily Wire 2019.
Hey guys, over on the Matt Wall Show today, we're going to talk about this story of an innocent family being ripped apart by child protective services.
because apparently, if you haven't noticed by now, you have no rights and you have no
presumption of innocence whatsoever when the bureaucrats in CPS set their sights on you.
So we'll discuss that.
Also, President Trump got himself into hot water, which he's done many times.
But this time, when he called Robert Lee a great general.
Well, Robert Lee was, in fact, a great general.
And it is absurd that we are not allowed to say that anymore.
So we'll talk about that as well today over on the Matt Wall Show.
