The Michael Knowles Show - Ep. 64 - And The Fake News Trophy Goes To…the CFPB!
Episode Date: November 27, 2017CNN is trying to ban the term fake news, President Trump has called for a fake news trophy, and an Obama holdover, left-wing stooge is trying to subvert democracy and take over an executive agency, th...e Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Then, Amanda Prestigiacomo and Asawin Suebsaeng join the Panel of Deplorables to discuss a groundbreaking new study out of Yale that shows indulging ridiculous fantasies makes you more left-wing, Susan Saradon and John McCain’s telling Hillary to STFU, and Denzel Washington drops racist hate facts about personal responsibility and the family Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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CNN is trying to ban the term fake news.
Loll, President Trump has called for a fake news trophy,
and an Obama holdover, left-wing deep state,
Stoge is trying to subvert democracy
and take over an executive agency,
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
In these fake news awards, aren't we all the real winners?
Yes, we are.
Then Amanda Presta Giacomo and Asu and Subsang
joined the panel of deplorables
to discuss a groundbreaking new study out of Yale
that shows indulging ridiculous fantasy
Makes you more left-wing. Who would have thought?
Susan Sarandon and John McCain's telling Hillary Clinton to STFU.
I'll let you spell that out.
And Denzel Washington drops racist hate facts about personal responsibility and the family.
I'm Michael Knowles, and this is the Michael Knowles Show.
Happy holidays.
There are so many holidays that happened in the last four days.
We had Thanksgiving. We had Black Friday.
We had evacuation day.
Everyone forgets that holiday, but it's a great one.
And I promise you, I drank in your stead in Lower Manhattan.
on it and Cyber Monday. It's Cyber Monday is a great day. The main reason it's a great day is because it
lets me hawk my products. And that would be reasons to vote for Democrats, a comprehensive guide.
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President Trump has endorsed it as a great book for your reading enjoyment. None other than Mr.
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I really hope this wins the Pulitzer this year and the National Book Award, but we can't do it without your help.
So spread the knowledge and instruct your friends and relatives on real political philosophy.
Okay, we have a lot of fake news to get to today.
One thing that I'm thankful for, we didn't go over this, what are you thankful for at the Thanksgiving episode?
I'm really thankful for President Trump's Twitter account.
It's one of the highlights of my news consumption all year.
He sent out this beauty this morning.
Quote,
we should have a contest as to which of the networks,
plus CNN, but not including Fox,
is the most dishonest, corrupt,
and or distorted in its political coverage
of your favorite president, me.
They are all bad, winner to receive the fake news trophy.
So here is CNN, fake news outlet par excellence,
CNN's Brian Stelter, discussing the fake news.
It's time to retire the term.
fake news. That's what my next guest says. Claire Wardle is the executive director of
first draft. It's a nonprofit research group at base of the Harvard Schorenstein Center.
Claire, we've talked about this before. I want to share with our viewers. If we never use
the term fake news again, what should we say instead? So we should think about what we're
actually talking about. So are we talking about misinformation? They're just mistakes that
people make. Are we talking about disinformation when people are actually trying to cause harm
and they are disseminating false information? Or we're talking about malinformation, genuine information
that shared again to cause harm. So that could be revenge porn, it could be a leaked email.
So we just need to be much more specific about what we're talking about.
And is that because President Trump and others have co-opted the term fake news and basically redefined it?
So two reasons. Firstly, a lot of this stuff isn't news. And secondly, it's been co-opted by politicians around the world as a label for things that they don't like.
And it's been used as a weapon against organizations like CNN and others. And so when it's been used as a weapon against the news industry and it's just being co-opted, we have to think much more carefully about the power of language.
and it's damaging.
Oh, is it?
It's damaging to you.
Oh, yeah, it was great when you're using it against right-wing outlets.
But now that they're using it against us, we have to stop.
By the way, all three versions of fake news that she said, CNN does all of them.
But now they want to ban them because they either are being disingenuous or they don't get the point.
They want to ban the term.
They're the ones who created the term.
The term fake news reached a mass audience.
People forget this.
It reached a mass audience for the first time in the days following Donald's.
Trump's election victory when a left-wing college professor named Melissa Zimdars published a viral
Google Doc listing a bunch of conservative news outlets, including our own, including the Daily Wire,
as, quote, fake news. The irony, though, the irony which we pointed out is that while outlets like
the Daily Wire and others are honest about our point of view, you know where we're coming from, we're not
pretending to be somebody we're not, places like CNN lie about their political slant all the time.
They pretend it objectivity. They often spread outright false stories. You know, they do.
fake news. What are some other examples? MSNBC ran a fake morning Joe show on Friday. It was pre-taped.
They pretended it was live. The New York Times, main reporting on the alleged Trump-Russia collusion
was shown to be entirely false. It was so false, actually, that former FBI director James Comey,
under oath, said that the story wasn't true. Also on alleged Trump-Russia collusion, CNN,
that Brian Stelter's network, was forced not only to retract a story, but to fire an entire
reporting team over false reporting, over a bad story. According to a media research center
study, 91% of mainstream news coverage of Donald Trump has been negative. According to Pew Research Center,
Trump has received more negative coverage, not only than Democrats like Obama and Clinton,
even more than George W. Bush. According to another study, the majority of Americans believe that
mainstream news coverage of Donald Trump is too negative. And we're not just talking about the facts of the
stories. It's not like the majority of Americans say stop running reality. It's more which,
which stories are being run, which stories are being harped on, which stories are being completely
ignored or they're harped on for Republicans, but ignored for Democrats. Double standards. If the
Democrats didn't have double standards, they'd have no standards at all. The fake news trophy,
though, we can't give it to Brian Stelter, we can't give it to Jim Acosta, we can't give to Jake
Tapper, we can't give it to any of those guys. The fake news trophy winner this month,
it has to go to Leandra English. She is the Obama holder.
bureaucrat who is now, she's pretending to be the new director of the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, a particularly unaccountable government agency that shouldn't exist in the
first place and was established by Senator Elizabeth Warren of the Massachusetts tribe over
Mick Mulvaney, the actual director named by President Donald Trump.
For comment, let's turn to Senator Warren.
I have not.
I have not, Senator Warren.
I don't know why you would ask me.
CFPB director Richard Cordray and Obama holdover just resigned, and he abided.
appointed Leandra English, another Obama bureaucrat, as the director of the agency. So far so good.
Only trouble is, he has no authority to do that. And so President Trump named budget director
Mick Mulvaney to run the agency. Nevertheless, the Democrats, they love just playing pretend,
especially in government. So the woman is just pretending to be the director of this unaccountable
agency. Now, on his first day, by the way, Mulvaney brought Duncan Donuts to the office,
so I think we know who is going to go far and win hearts and minds.
But Leandra English, I'm sure, was waiting for somebody else to bring her donuts.
She's entitled to them, obviously.
And back to the agency.
The agency shouldn't exist.
The agency was proposed by Elizabeth Warren before she became a senator, 2007, 2008.
It was authorized by the Dodd-Frank Permanent Financial Cronism Act of 2010.
The agency's major accomplishments in its seven years of existence appear to have been enriching trial lawyers and abusing black employees.
One unit was nicknamed the Plantation because it comprised.
all black employees and was subject to a special abuse, specific abuse. One employee called it a
quote, humiliating experience, said working for the CFPB is, quote, a living hell. It's apparently
run by intimidation and like a dictatorship, there are consequences for disagreeing or disobeying
the king. All of their words, not mine. According to a government accountability office report,
one quarter, 25% of minority employees at the CFPB reported that they have been victims of
discrimination. Almost one in ten employees reported that they'd been retaliated against by a supervisor
for calling attention to the discrimination. Now, none of this is surprising, by the way,
because this is one of the major problems baked into the agency. The agency is unaccountable.
It's an independent agency. Dennis Scholl, who's a former aide to Barney Frank, that's the law that
created the agency, Dodd Frank. He explained in an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal last week
that the CFPB should just be shut down, which it should. The CFPB is uniquely unaccountable, he writes.
It's an independent agency with a sole director. The director isn't even accountable to the congressional
appropriations process. So there are some independent agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission,
the FCC, the FTC. Those are funded by Congress, but the CFPB is funded by the Federal Reserve.
So that means it has precisely zero congressional oversight. Shawl assails the position of CFPB,
chief as, quote, a politically biased regulatory dictator and a political stepping stone for its sole
director. That is true. As director is now running for governor of God knows where. As an independent
agency, the CFPB is supposed to be bipartisan, but while a lot of its employees donated to Hillary
Clinton 2016, not a single one of them donated to President Trump's campaign.
Now, what about the agency itself? What is it done? The CFPB has been useless and duplicative
of other services, as you might expect. It took credit.
it for other agencies and corporations work, like when the LA Times uncovered fraud at Wells Fargo,
it illegally as regulated industries outside of its mandate, it pays significantly higher salaries
in other agencies, that's how it got so bloated so quickly. It maintains a slush fund of billions of
dollars because its finances lack any oversight, and its proposed rules, which luckily Congress
intervened to overrule, would have devastated industries. Even the CFPB's name is propaganda.
it's a protection bureau, don't it? Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Isn't that nice? Regulatory
Bureau, government bureau, that just doesn't have the same ring to it. Now the agency is even
pretending that a left-wing stooge is its director rather than the presidentially appointed one.
That's because, as President Reagan pointed out, one of the many bits of brilliance he's bestowed
on us, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life on earth. Now, the CFPB is particularly
egregiously unaccountable. It embodies everything that's wrong with big government.
bureaucrats, and so, on this, this is another holiday, this will be the fake news trophy day,
congratulations to the fake consumer financial, fake protection bureau, interim director,
fake director, Leandra English. You win this month's fake news trophy. Now we'll have to bring on our
panel to talk about this, but first, do you know how I knew it was time to bring on the panel?
Marshall, do you know? How did I know that it was time to bring on our panel?
There it is, baby, the movement watch. That's how I know.
Because I am a semi-serious person, at least, so I wear a watch.
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like the day I ordered it, they came out with a new line called the Revolver Line, and I really want
to get one of those watches too. So if these watches were 500 bucks, I couldn't do that. I'd have
to sell many more blank books. Fortunately, they started under $100, so I think I'll probably
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You know, I'm sure you've got yourself a watch, but you can finish your holiday shopping
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It goes really well with blank books.
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thank you for being here and you should I highly recommend you both go out and get
movement watches we have Asouin Sub-Sang and we have Amanda Presta Jocamo
Assohn should we get rid of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
honestly I don't particularly care right now it's
It's a situation.
What I'm more interested in as a reporter,
honestly, is the drama that you alluded to at the beginning of the show that's going on right now.
It's really, really funny how Mick Mulgveney and Miss English,
as you were talking about at the top of this show,
are right now warring for the top spot and control over the staff of the CFPB.
And it looks like this is going to be tied up potentially in court for at least a little while,
but there seems to be a serious actual fight for control of the CFPB.
It sounds like the worst job in the world.
Why are these people fighting for it?
Who would ever want to be the head of the CFPB?
President Trump himself could solve this right now by nominating someone to be a permanent head of the CFPB,
but they don't seem inclined to do that at the moment.
Why do you think that is?
It's just a very funny, almost bizarre situation.
Perhaps doing so would acknowledge that this is something.
to which you would need to appoint a permanent head to.
And as the Trump administration has been very plain about,
their position is probably very similar to yours,
that this is something that should 100% be on the federal shopping block.
Yep, absolutely.
That is what I think it is.
Because he could just nominate someone right now.
I love the idea of Mick Mulvaney,
who is the budget director who famously said that the Bureau shouldn't exist at all.
And I do like the idea of him strolling in there with Dunkin' Donuts
and kicking out this woman who's pretending,
that she has the job, but it will be tied up in courts for a bit. I think even left-wing lawyers
and legal scholars are saying, clearly the president has the right to name his person. It might be a
weird quirk of the law that there is this loophole right now, but that it probably won't stand up
in court. But my question for Amanda is, why does the left love unaccountable bureaucracies so much?
Yeah, I mean, they just love the control and power. It's just part of the leftist ideology. So the more
bureaucracy they have, the more people are dependent on government, the more the government grows,
there's more control. They just, they love it. They love these intricacies and this bureaucracy that
holds everything up. So this is just like a product of what they are. And I agree with you. I think we
should get rid of it chopping block for sure. It's hard because I think most people don't know
anything about the CFPB. So they hear consumer protection. That seems good. I'd like consumer protection.
But what is consumer protection? What is the, the Bureau really done? They almost created a
brand new industry for trial lawyers, and it doesn't seem they protect consumers terribly much.
Do you disagree, Assoen?
Well, before I get to that, I would like to address what you were saying earlier about
unaccountable bureaucracies. I mean, we could spend the entire day going down the list,
both on the left of the right, but I think it's just a function of whoever's in power that
they like unaccountable bureaucracies, sometimes in the form of waging war overseas.
So I really don't think that is a exclusively liberal thing.
You don't think that the left is more inclined toward bureaucracy.
Obviously, look, President Bush set up the Department of Homeland Security after the United States was attacked in a major act of war.
But nevertheless, that's true.
President Reagan wasn't able to cut the government, wasn't able to kill off bureaucracies.
But you don't think that it's more of a twitch of the left to expand government, to expand government power.
and in the case of the CFPB, to expand unaccountable government power that doesn't have congressional oversight.
It honestly really depends which corners of the federal government you're talking about.
I mean, I really do believe that.
But you would say that the left is...
But in terms of financial regulation, which is what we're talking about right now, of course, that is more of a tick of the left.
That's a thing.
They think that's better.
You just think that the right is more prone to military strength, and so they'll grow the government in that sector.
Well, again, I really don't think that's exclusive to either the Republican or Democratic Party, as you were talking about if we want to talk about Bush era abuses and expansion.
The Obama administration certainly was not very, very friendly to the political left, shall we say, in terms of rolling a lot of those back.
So I get worried about painting these into exclusively left or right.
But that's just me.
Perhaps not.
And I think it's fair enough to point out that the Bush administration expanded the federal government in many ways.
Medicare Part D, for instance, and Barack Obama, while perhaps holding an incoherent foreign policy,
nevertheless kept us in Afghanistan for a long time.
The vast majority of deaths in Afghanistan occurred under his watch.
Nevertheless, even though they're imperfect actors here,
Is it not fair to say, Amanda, that government expansion per se is a greater facet of leftism than it is of any conservative philosophy in modern America?
Yeah, definitely.
I mean, I could see the argument for national security reasons where the right might expand bureaucracy in that sense.
But aside from that, I mean, it's clearly that's a tick of the left in almost any other area besides maybe national security.
Plus, I also have a TSA pre-check now, so I've been the main Bush era expansion.
I haven't been groped by in a long time.
As we've seen, the Trump administration has been doing a phenomenal job of shrinking the government
when it comes weaponizing the Department of Justice to go after undocumented families.
They've done a remarkable job.
Undocumented, but you mean illegal aliens resigning in the country?
You mean that he's enforcing the law through his Justice Department,
but the euphemism you used was weaponizing an agency to go after undocumented families.
But consider the language of that phrase.
There are people here who have broken the law, and the law enforcement agency is now finally
holding up the law because we are a nation of laws, not a nation simply of men.
What's so bad about that?
Are you asking me or the other panel?
That's you.
Well, in terms of enforcing the law, I mean, do you really think the Obama,
administration, and this is where the Obama administration was actually hit repeatedly by
immigration activists on the left for ramping up deportation.
Well, you don't, by the way, you don't mean immigration activists.
You mean illegal immigration activists.
Well, people who think as I do, as long as we're talking about political preferences
opinion, you said at the top of the show, you're very upfront about your political
views.
I'll do the same with mine.
People who wish there were something closer to an open borders policy, or people who think
a larger level of immigration is better than a lower level of immigration.
And this, by the way, I don't mean to cut you off, but I want to hear your opinion in light of this
news story because this leads perfectly into the main news story I want to bring on.
And by the way, I appreciate you're being honest about your political views.
But more than that, I appreciate that you have come on this show.
It is so hard to get lefties and Democrats to come on this show.
I truly appreciate it.
I mean, look, I love political debate on his Barrett's.
And Michael, you and I go way back.
I like you.
Well, this is the, here's the news story from Dear Old Yale.
Researchers of Deerold Yale are now claiming to have cured conservatism.
Professor John Barr writes in the Washington Post, quote,
no one had ever turned conservatives into liberals until we did.
Before conservatives answered survey questions,
we had them engage in an intense imagination exercise.
They were asked to close their eyes and richly imagine.
being visited by a genie who granted them a superpower. If they imagined being completely
physically safe, the Republicans became significantly more liberal. So if conservatives, in
other words, if conservatives are instructed to indulge in ridiculous fantasies, they become
more left-wing, which makes perfect sense to me. Now, Asowen, and please continue on your
previous thread as well. These professors appear to be treating conservatism as a
strange psychological glitch rather than as a coherent political philosophy.
or a set of philosophies.
Now, we're all just pulsing nerve endings, according to this idea.
We have little conscious control.
Is the left, in this case, denying the rational faculties of everybody or just of irrational conservatives?
I would honestly, I wish I had a copy of that study you're referring to in front me.
I have not read it.
I'm not familiar with the authors you're talking about, and I'm not familiar with the methodology or where they're coming from.
And I don't feel incredibly comfortable weighing in a study that I haven't read in full.
I only use this study as a launching point.
Sure, sure, sure.
But if your macro question is that there is a lot of people in American liberalism or even farther than that on the American political spectrum who see conservatism as a disease, that's what you're getting at, right?
Yes.
There's certainly, and again, I hate playing this both sides thing, but I mean, there's certainly, you wouldn't disagree with me that there certainly is no shortage of that on the American political right and far right.
Like I think saying liberalism is a cancer or disease, we googled around for that.
I'm sure you'd find plenty of conservative commentators you know and probably enjoy and respect who go around saying it.
In fact, I will make one distinction, though, because we have heard.
We have heard versions of this like feminism is cancer or whatever, you know, you hear these things.
But the distinction is, I think by saying that leftism is a disease or cancer, you might say that and say that it's really bad for the country and we should convince people to stop thinking those things and become conservatives.
But to say that it's a psychological glitch, which I think is what these people are getting at at Yale.
And I think what a lot of people on the left have said for a while, I think is what the field of political psychology is largely based on.
To say that it's just a psychological glitch is to deny our faculties of reason.
It's to preclude reasoned argument.
So whereas we might have a debate over whether leftism is a cancer on the American body politic,
if we accept their premises, what their premises are saying is that we can't have any debate at all
because we've arrived at our conclusions not by reasoned thought or discourse,
but because, you know, our brain made us do it and they twitched in a certain way.
Amanda, if wishes were fishes, we'd all swim in riches, and ifs and butts were candy and nuts, we'd all have a Merry Christmas.
Given the absurdity of the premise of this survey, is there anything worthwhile in the results, could there be?
No, I mean, from what I gathered from the Washington Post piece in the write-up we did at Daily Warrior,
basically, if you're granted this power by a magical genie that nothing, you're impervious to any consequence,
of these policies, then yeah, you'll think like a liberal.
So it kind of proves the opposite that if you have a rational mind and you're aware of
consequences and you're aware of safety risks, for instance, they're talking about immigration,
then yeah, you're going to side on the right because there are real risks.
And by the way, they were talking about immigration.
And if you look broad-based, there are a lot of people, it's a clear majority who want
to put some sort of clamps on immigration.
I think it was like 79%.
And I think it's like 30% of those who are pulled won't even come out and publicly say that they want to halt immigration.
So this is like a big issue across America.
It's not just people on the right.
So just altogether, the study was really, really ridiculous.
But as that a D-Roh, sometimes I think it was this amazing providential moment that when this show launched, Yale was at the center of just every crazy lefty thing in the country.
because they might have convinced a few people in that study, but not me, everybody.
Now, we have much more to talk about.
I know you want to hear more from Asowen.
I know you want to hear more from Amanda, but you can't do it unless you go to the DailyWire.com right now.
If you're already a subscriber, thank you very much.
You keep Cofifei in my mug.
If not, you got to go over there.
We've got to keep the lights on.
I think we even pay, Marshall.
I've been advocating against this since the beginning, but I think we do, don't we?
It's true.
Not much, but it's true.
Such an outrage.
no justice in the world.
If you go to dailywire.com right now, what do you get?
You get no ads on the website.
That's pretty nice.
You get me.
You get the Andrew Claven show.
You get the Ben Shapiro show.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But here it is.
Here it is, folks.
The leftist tears Tumblr.
President Trump today referred to Elizabeth Warren as Pocahontas during a press conference
with Navajo American veterans of World War II.
They are going to be pouring out from the ceiling.
Leftist tears here.
It's already happening all over Twitter.
The CFPB fight is going to result in a deluge of salty and delicious leftist years.
So you have to go to DailyWire.com right now, have them hot or cold, always salty and delicious.
We will be right back.
The left of Lenin actress Susan Sarandon and sort of Republican Hillary pal John McCain are both telling Hillary Clinton to STFU.
Those are McCain's words and they're not mine.
He said, quote, one of the almost irresistible impulses you have when you lose is to somehow justify why you lost and how you were
mistreated. I did the right thing. I did. The hardest thing to do is to just shut up.
What's the effing point? Keep the fight up. You've got to move on. Susan Sarandon seems to agree,
and for her part, she's still defending her vote against Hillary Clinton instead for Jill Stein.
Amanda, I actually don't really care about the Hillary angle of this anymore, but I do love the
personal responsibility aspect because there is no crying in politics. And yet the Democrats are
still crying over the 2000 election. They're still crying over 2016. Why? Why?
are Democrats in particular always making excuses for their political failures?
Yeah, I mean, it's the party with no personal responsibility.
We see this in their politics as well, and it's obviously transcended through Hillary.
I mean, she's been on this tour since she lost, and it's, I personally, I hope she keeps it up,
and I hope she runs in 2020, but, you know, it hurts their party overall, and it's just
a kind of a symptom of how they view the world.
Like, it was someone else's fault.
It wasn't her fault.
It wasn't a bad campaign.
It wasn't that she skipped states that she would have should have campaigned in.
It wasn't that she was a terrible campaigner that she couldn't relate, that she lied, that she was a criminal.
No, it was somebody else's fault.
It was those darn Macedonian content farmers, whatever the heck she was blaming.
They're such an imposing force, I know, was Macedonians.
Yeah, it's never within themselves.
So it's not good for the party, but I'm all for it.
So I hope she just keeps coming out here and keeps going with it.
Aswan, this brings me to a Thanksgiving-related question.
It was just Thanksgiving.
A big difference between the right and the left, to me, it appears,
seems that the right values personal responsibility more,
places a greater emphasis on it when we speak,
when we explain our vision of the world,
while the left insists on grievance and entitlement,
the victim mentality,
the ever-blossoming and flowering intersectional hierarchy of victims.
And I'm not even talking about strategic messaging
with Obama blaming obstructionist congressional Republicans or Trump blaming obstructionist congressional
Republicans while they're in office.
I'm talking about Hillary Clinton, Al Gore, these people are out of office.
Is there a gratitude deficit among our friends on the left?
Well, to directly address Hillary Clinton for a moment, because there's a lot to unpack
in what you just said there, when any Republican or Democratic presidential government,
candidate loses, there is a period of mourning. Sometimes it lasts longer than others. Mitt Romney
certainly had a I'm likable tour after he failed to defeat Barack Obama in 2012. But with Hillary
Clinton, I think for her personally, and from what I've gathered talking to people going in and out of her
circle during and after the 2016 campaign, is that this was a particularly hard blow for her to
absorb, in large part because this had been something she'd been working up to for decades
of her life.
Right.
For decades of her life.
And to lose to someone who she saw as so unqualified and so vulgar and so demagogic
as Donald Trump, who many people, including those in her inner circle, was telling her
would be essentially a cakewalk to defeat in a general election.
It's, for her, it has been something incredibly hard to get over.
But she, I notice, I mean, sure, Mitt Romney went on his likable tour.
He started speaking about politics a little bit more during the 2016 presidential cycle,
but he basically disappeared.
He would give a couple speeches.
He showed up to the White House to shake hands with Barack Obama.
But when you look at George H.W. Bush, when he lost in 92, he basically just disappeared and kept his mouth shut.
Same thing with Bob Dole, same thing with John McCain.
He went back to work.
Mitt Romney disappeared for a good while.
But these Democrats who have lost, Al Gore and Hillary Clinton,
blame everybody and their mother for their defeat
and then keep harping about political issues
over which they have little control as losing candidates.
Well, the thing with the Clint's is that since the night,
the early 1990s, for better or for worse, they have essentially been the center of power,
or at least one way or another, the center of gravity of the redefined Democratic Party
in the wake of its electoral failures post-Raganism.
So I think a big part of the reason why she isn't going away, as a lot of people,
including a lot of people on the left and center-left, would like her to go away,
is because she is trying to continue to define herself as a player in the Democratic Party.
And to do that, you have to sustain her relevance, and right now she happens to be doing that in terms of the book tour,
to not only establish ongoing commentary and relevance, but to try to tell people her side of what went wrong
and why I am not currently leader of the free world.
With Al Gore, I mean, if my memory serves, he did obviously complain about the increasingly.
incredibly narrow 20, 2000.
Sue demanded a recount,
won a Nobel Prize for PowerPoint.
Right, but pretty soon after that,
after Bush became president,
he spent a
pretty solid period of time
redefining himself as a
climate change.
As the savior of the world.
That's the only way he could look in the mirror
in the morning. Stuff I'm sure you
didn't appreciate, but it wasn't
complaining about
the election in 24-7 per se, he did have a form of moving on.
If you can win an Oscar and a Nobel Peace Prize for a largely inaccurate PowerPoint presentation,
I appreciate that. More power to you. Go with God. I wish it were me. And you make an excellent
point, too, which is that the Democrats in the wake of especially Donald Trump are running on rage.
The pink hats and the resistance they've named the opposition to Trump after the opposition to Nazis,
They're running on rage, and she's trying to tap into that, and it's very funny for me to watch, especially as her third cousin once removed.
Now, speaking of personal responsibility, Denzel Washington dropped some truly bigoted hate facts over the weekend.
While he was promoting his new film Roman J. Israel Esquire, Denzel said that researching the LA criminal court system for the movie did not make him place more blame on the system, or the prison industrial complex, or alleged systemic inequality for problems in the black community.
Instead, he blames, oh my gosh, runaway fathers.
He blames individuals who make bad choices.
He said, quote, it starts at home.
I can't blame the system.
It starts with how you raise your children.
If a young man doesn't have a father figure, he'll go and find a father figure.
And Denzel Washington and I actually share the same acting teacher decades apart.
And it seems that we share the same opinions, too, though I don't know how he can possibly keep working after making such bigoted and terrible and factually accurate
comments as he did. Asowen almost.
Oh, we lost Aswan, but we'll get him back. Hopefully he'll come back. Amanda,
this is actually the direct question I have with this. How does Denzel get away with
contradicting Hollywood leftist orthodoxy? Yeah, I don't know, but he has. He's made
comments like this before, and for some reason, he just stays in the game. Maybe it's an identity
thing. I'm not sure, but I love Denzel, and what he said was exactly right. But yeah, for some reason,
He can make these comments and then keep working.
And he's also a fantastic actor.
He's a tremendous actor.
He is one of the few left who's really prominent, who is just an excellent, properly trained.
You know, he brings so much to every role in their different roles.
Aswan, almost three quarters of black children are born out of wedlock in the United States.
So is Denzel right?
Are the problems in the black community cultural primarily?
Or are they primarily the result of some systemic racism?
Well, if you, I'm sorry, my connection cut out so I can only imagine that you're talking about
his comments that he made that were dropping hate fats left and right.
Yeah, right.
Oh, gotcha, gotcha.
The comments he made in the, they were printed in the New York Daily News.
That's right.
About it starting with the family.
Well, Denzo Washington, if you know much about his at least public political leanings, there
isn't too much shocking about him saying that.
I mean, he identifies as a political independent.
Yes, he's supported Barack Obama,
but he's never been a raging leftist in his public persona.
By Hollywood standards, he's to the right of Attila the Hunt.
Right.
Maybe a little bit more centrist than that.
But he did, what he said actually reminded me a lot of something Spike Lee has said multiple times.
And Spike Lee is certainly way more to the left and politically outspoken than,
Mr. Washington. When there were issues of police brutality being talked about by Black Lives Matters
activists, Spike Lee was actually pretty firm in saying that, yes, there is police brutality,
but we as the black community or black communities across the United States have to look more
inward onto ourselves instead of just always blaming the police. And he was actually dragged quite a bit
for that. So when I read what Denzel Washington said, it actually struck me as kind of, of
Of course, that's what Stenza Washington would say.
A lot of famous African-American individuals.
Across the political line, across the political spectrum.
Yeah, yeah, it wasn't too shocking a culture war to me.
I think his quote was very brief, and it didn't have much political context.
He was simply saying that it starts at home, that raise your children right.
I don't think there are many people who disagree with that sentiment.
The disagreement is whether or not—
I think you would never find a white liberal ever say that, ever.
once. I think they would be run out of town on a rail, and I think that for the white liberals in
their paternalism, they need to say that people don't have any agency over their own lives.
They don't have any cognitive faculties or faculties of determination and perseverance.
Rather, you don't have a shot in this country and you're just being kept down by some
invisible force, so don't even try. And apparently we all disagree.
You and I think hang out with, I think you and I hang out with different types of white liberals.
Maybe.
I don't know.
I don't know, man.
New York, L.A., you dearly, Yale.
Try hanging out with Asian liberals sometimes.
Maybe that's your...
Listen, nobody could be more irrational than these lefties out here in Hollywood or are constantly preaching their nonsense.
So yeah, maybe that's a demographic.
We'll just have to bring on more.
Speaking of Asian liberals that I enjoy, Sueb's saying, thank you for being here.
Aswan, Sue, Sue, Sue.
saying, excellent commentary. We appreciate you and we want to have you back. Amanda Presta Giacomo,
The Daily Wire's Very Own, great to have you here. And I'm Michael Nulls. That's the Michael
Nulls Show. That's our whole post-five holiday show. Congratulations on the fake news trophy winners.
We will be back tomorrow. So join us and we'll do it all again. The Michael Nulls show is produced by
Marshall Benson, executive producer Jeremy Boring, senior producer Jonathan Hay,
supervising producer Mathis Glover. Our technical producer is awesome.
Steven's edited by Alex Zingaro. Audio is mixed by Mike Coramina. Hair and makeup is by
Jesua Olvera. The Michael Knowles Show is a Daily Wire Forward Publishing production. Copyright Forward
Publishing 2017.
