The Michael Knowles Show - Friendly Fire: Gavin for President, Greenland for Sale
Episode Date: January 16, 2026Will Gavin Newsom be the next president? Ben Shapiro gives the juicy details. Matt Walsh calls for civil rights for white people. Where is all the desire to own Greenland coming from? Find ou...t inside an all-new Friendly Fire tonight at 5 PM ET on The Daily Wire. Ep. 06 - - - Today's Sponsors: Policygenius - Head to https://policygenius.com/FIRE to compare life insurance quotes from top companies and see how much you could save. Kalshi - Visit https://kalshi.com/friendlyfire to see live prediction markets and sign up today to trade on the outcomes that matter most to you. - - - Become a Daily Wire Member and watch all of our content ad-free: https://www.dailywire.com/subscribe 🍿 Season One of Real History with Matt Walsh premieres Monday, January 19th. 🍿 The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of the Merlin Episodes 1 & 2 start streaming Jan. 22nd exclusively on DailyWire+ 🧙🏻♂️ Pre-Order The Pendragon: Rise of the Merlin Board Game! https://dwplus.watch/PendragonBoardGame - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Gavin Newsom just tweeted something out about me that's hilarious.
Really?
You think JD would mock Gavin Newsom?
Yes, I do think it would mock them.
I'm really enjoying Neocon, Matt Woll.
I have also been lusting after Greenland my whole life.
I don't buy that.
Oh, come on.
I know it's uncouth to say it, but like, am I wrong?
For media matters.
He's joking.
It's not true.
He's not joking.
Matt, first time that Matt wants to talk foreign policy, so I'm like, I'm all ears, man.
Let's do it.
I mean, no, don't put it all of me.
I just, there's more for you guys talking about.
Normally we mention any place that is outside the United States, and I can see Matt's eyes glaze over.
Greenland is the only country outside the U.S. that I care about.
And it's about to be inside the U.S.
I just love that we have as a listed topic, the slave trade.
Yeah, no, I'm hoping we all.
Matt is going to take the Aristotelian pro position.
That's funny because you said that.
I was thinking about Aristotle too.
Will Gavin Newsom be the next president?
Daily Wire's very own Ben Shapiro just became Paul Allen sitting down with the Patrick
Bateman of California.
We will hear all of the juicy details.
Then Matt, I believe, is calling for a civil rights movement for white people as he releases his new mini documentary on the slave trade.
What is a slave?
No, I don't think it's called that.
Anyway, he's going to be giving the history on that.
And then we will be going all the way into Greenland.
I don't think it's coincidental.
Denmark has said that they will not sell Greenland to the United States.
Then France came out and they said, the French military will defend you.
And then immediately Denmark said, okay, listen, we'll make a deal.
So we will get into all of those things on friendly fire.
Gentlemen, wonderful to be with all of you.
Happy New Year and Merry Christmas.
Christmas is still on until February 2nd as far as I'm concerned.
Wow.
I didn't realize it lasts that long, Michael.
Why?
Yeah, I go right through to Lent myself.
Yeah, I actually, I count Christmas as lasting through until the next Advent,
so I've still got all the decorations up in my set.
It's amazing.
I haven't seen you guys in a little while.
And Ben, you were just over with Mr. Slimy himself.
I was with Gavin Newsom at the governor's mansion in California, which, by the way, is very tiny.
It is the tiniest governor's mansion.
It is a very, very small building in Sacramento.
You have to brush thousands of homeless people out of your way just to get to it.
But, you know, it was definitely an interesting experience, right?
I had a little bit of time off camera with Gavin Newsom.
I'd been it briefly before.
And like most politicians, he's very good in person.
I will say that just is a class of people.
Politicians in person way better than politicians on camera.
just generally speaking.
And we all know a bunch of politicians.
And I think that this is the general rule about literally all of them.
So off camera, he's very friendly.
He's very garrulous.
He will kind of get a little more honest with you than he might, in terms of his positions
on camera.
And then I was out there because he had invited me to come on his podcast.
That's a podcast where he has, I guess, once every couple weeks, I believe.
Usually it's somebody of the left.
Occasionally he'll have somebody of the right.
Famously, he had Charlie Kirk on the show.
This is back during last summer.
And it was about a two-hour shows, a little bit under two hours.
We covered a lot of ground.
Before I get to your epic, sit down with him, because I want to know if he's going to be the next president.
I really hope he's not.
I want to get to an even more epic topic, which is, of course, the Pendragon cycle, Rise of the Merlin, which is coming out.
It's coming to Daily Wire Plus.
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If only we had waited a little longer to make it.
We could have shot it in Greenland.
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remember January 22nd, it all happens.
And then possibly in January of 2029, our whole country falls apart if Gavin Newsom becomes
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It turns out that that series is the only thing more ambitious than Gavin Newsom.
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I mean, it is as good or better than anything that you will see on HBO,
and you won't get the gratuitous sex and the insane nihilism.
Oh, then I'm out.
Guys, go ahead.
I know. It's a massive disincentive for, oh, wow.
Well, no, so they, because they said we're going to play the Pen Dragon trailer,
and they came in and gave me this fake sword.
They said, what is this for?
It's a, so this is a bit where I'm supposed to pull the,
I don't know what I'm supposed to do with this,
but they gave me the sword and said, well, you could do a bit where you have a sword.
What's the bit?
Like, I have a sword.
What am I supposed to do?
I don't know.
For the lady in the lake, that'll be, uh, that's any one of my ear want to tell me what the bit is with the sword?
Is there a thing I'm supposed to do it?
what's what are you doing with it?
No.
No.
I think I'm supposed to just have the sword and you guys are supposed to laugh hysterically
because Matt Walsh is holding a sword.
You could use it to smash in the windows of illegals in Minneapolis or something.
You use it for like a very practical political purpose.
It's plastic.
It's not even a real, it's plastic.
If you should buy Matt a real sword, then you can get a subscription to Daily Water
and you can watch Pen Dragon and then we can pay for actual metal swords that Matt can use to go and, I don't know,
chop down trees and whatever part of rural America he is in right at the
this very moment. Anyway, back to Gavin. So Newsom, I will say that he is good on his feet.
He's scurly enough that he knows his talking points well enough that if you hit him on California
policy, he's able to sort of shift responsibility. He's big moves. He likes to shift responsibility
onto local officials for failures and then take credit for any state successes. Or he likes to
make sort of grandiose claims about the robustness of California. And if you point out it is not as
robust as he has said that it would be, then he'll start talking about Louisiana. So you see that sort of
stuff happened a lot. So for example, I was dinging him on California's income tax policy because it's driving
business out of the state. And his immediate response was, well, yeah, but we're fairer than say
Louisiana. And here's how that kind of went. I think we have the clip.
Luckily lowering the income tax rates in the state. Well, California has tax. I mean, there's 16
states right now. Let's talk about those 16 states. Well, I'm going to that taxed their low wage
earners more than California taxes. It's high wage earners.
Let's talk about lowering those tax rates in those 16 states.
Okay, so again, notice what he tends to do is he will misdirect away from the actual topic.
And even when it comes to the topic of taxes, he'll must direct.
Because the point I'm making is not a fairness point.
It is an efficacy point, meaning you're driving every taxpayer out of your state,
which is what's happened in California.
He'll shift it over to Louisiana.
And then he will have his online minions talk about how he owned everybody by showing that you pay a lot of tax in Louisiana as a poor person based on excise taxes and such.
So that's kind of one of his squirly strategies.
There are certain places where he is less squirrelly, and that's kind of what's interesting.
I will say the thing that I found interesting is his overt attempt to moderate his sort of online persona.
So there are a couple of points where he did this.
One of them most obviously was on ICE.
So his crazy social media account, his press office account, which has been dedicated to trolling,
President Trump for a while, had tweeted out that they'd engaged in ICE, had engaged in state-sponsored terrorism.
And I asked him straight up about it and really pushed him on it.
One was a narrative that was immediately pushed by the Trump administration and Secretary of Homeland Security, Christine Nolm, that she was a domestic terrorist who was attempting to run over officers with her car and was legitimately trying, not just this officer, but multiple officers.
That was the original statement.
I said at the time, I thought that was undrue.
And then your press office tweeted out that it was state-sponsored terrorism, which, I mean, Governor rights to ask you about that.
That sort of thing makes our politics worse.
Yeah.
And it does.
And our ICE officers obviously are not terrorists.
Yeah.
A tragic situation is not state-sponsored terrorism.
Yeah, I think that's fair.
Okay, so again, you can see him trying to take his own press office and just chuck it under the bus.
He's doing a couple of things.
One is he will kind of rhetorically appeal to the radicals in his base.
And then when he's called on it, then he will back really quickly away from it because
he still wants to win moderates for 2028.
By the way, our sponsor, Kalshi, in the prediction markets, shows that he is right now,
the leader in the clubhouse among Democrats for the 2028 nomination.
Hold on. Hold on. Before, I want to hear, because you saw him actually personally,
I want to hear what you think about him for 2028, but before you sully the opinions of the,
you know, you sway our fellow DW guys here. Do you think Drew and Matt, do you think that
Newsom's the guy for 28? No, I think he's the, I think he's the Jeb Bush of the Democrats. I think,
you know, one of the continual arguments we have had on this show and when it was backstage is, you know, Ben and Jeremy would always say that Michelle Obama runs should win against anybody.
And I think, I don't think it's underestimating the American public. I think it's misunderstand the American public. They actually are, the American public actually is keyed into issues more than the media wants them to be.
The media wants them to look at people what they look like and how they behave and whether they do this or that and what words they use.
but the people actually do care about about topics and issues, especially when they affect them.
I think Newsom is a haircut, a sleazy haircut, and I think that that doesn't play.
I think the fact that they, anybody who runs against them is going to bring up the fact that they have spent $40 billion almost on fixing the homeless issue and their homelessness has gone up 30%.
Where's the money for the bullet train?
Where the hell did that, those billions of dollars go?
money disappears in California because like any one state, one party state, it's full of graft.
It's just a completely corrupt state.
But, Drew, wouldn't you also say that Bill Clinton and Joe Biden were greasy haircuts?
I mean, a sleazy haircut?
Bill Clinton was one of the great, and Barack Obama.
This is the other thing about Democrats, by the way.
We've had three Democrat presidents over the last, you know, several decades.
Obama and Clinton were two of the greatest politicians of my lifetime.
They were fantastic wholesale politicians.
and Joe Biden won under very suspicious circumstances.
Let's face it.
I mean, very weird circumstances.
So I don't know.
The drift in this country is to the right.
The drift in the west is to the right.
And in Europe, they're basically stamping it down,
but we don't have the capability of stamping it down.
And I think Gavin Newsom is toast the minute his record comes up.
And the social stuff, the way he handled COVID,
the way he had everybody, he shut down John McArthur's church and tried to
and harassed them while he was dining out at a French,
restaurant with his friends without a mask. I mean, the guy is just, he's too easy a target to really
make it whence the national attention is on him. And I just don't think he's, look, I understand
he's ahead in the polls. Anything can happen. It's way too far away to actually predict it. I'm not
making a prediction. But he's just not the guy I'm looking at. It's AOC who keeps me up at night.
Is the question whether he's going to win the presidency in 2028 or whether he's the Democrats guy in
in 2020? Even just, even start with just the nomination.
Yeah, because, well, among Democrats, I guess I could put this sword on.
Gavin Newsom among Democrats has something that no other Democrat has, that I'm aware of on the entire national stage,
which is that he can actually talk to people.
Like, he could sit down and talk to Ben.
He can go on any podcast and have a conversation.
And yeah, he's lying the entire time, but he's willing to do that.
I mean, can you name any other Democrat at any level who could even potentially run for the presidency in 2028 who would, who could go on, say, Joe Rogan and have a conversation for two and a half hours?
Gavin Newsom could easily do that.
And again, although what he's saying is off is almost always false, everything he believes is wrong and he's lying almost always.
he's at least able to go do that in that environment.
And he's the only Democrat,
not only the only Democrat in the field right now who could do that,
he's the only Democrat in the last like 20 years
who has that kind of ability.
I think what, so that's an argument for why all things being equal,
he has a good chance of being the nominee for the Democrats of 2020.
I don't think he's going to win the presidency
for a lot of the reasons that Drew just articulated.
You think that JD vans, assuming that J.D. is the presumptive nominee,
you think J.D. would mog Gavin Newsom. Yes, I do think it would mock him. I agree. I do. But then,
not that I know what mug means, but I think he would. No one knows. But the problem for Gavin
Newsom is that, like, the obvious thing for a Democrat is that he's a white male. And in a primary,
like, would the Democrat voters be willing to say, hey, we tried a woman and she failed? We tried a black woman.
She failed even worse. So now we're just going to.
to go back to a white guy because they're the only ones who can win. I don't know that the
Democrat private members were willing to say that. So I'll say this. He is he is smoother on his feet
than virtually any of the Democrats that I've talked to. And I've talked to a fair number of them.
He is also, I think that there's a more than decent likelihood he's the nominee in in 2028
because his chief rival is AOC, meaning that AOC is not a black woman. She's a Hispanic woman,
actually. And if you look at the Democratic voting base, particularly in the South, that is a
heavily black voting base. There's no evidence that that crosses over to, quote, unquote,
the people of color category, a category that has never existed nor will ever exist in real life.
And you've already seen cases in which the black vote has mobilized behind a white person to
stop another white person or a Hispanic. So I would not be surprised if he's able to pull out
the nomination. I will say that, again, the game that he's playing, which is a smart game,
is he's usually rhetorically radical with regard to President Trump personally.
And with regard to Trump, you know, that makes you real popular inside the Democratic Party.
But he's trying to moderate on a lot of the issues where he actually is most radical.
Like in that interview, he suggested that he's cooperating with ICE, which I find, you know, very difficult to believe, shall we say.
In that interview, he tried to pretend sort of moderation on the trans issue.
His state is not moderate on that issue at all.
And that brings up sort of the second question that you're raising, Michael, which is, how does he do in a general election if it's J.D. Van.
So, you know, obviously the number one.
question there is going to be, how's the U.S. doing? If the economy sucks, JD's got a real problem.
And I think everybody acknowledges that circumstantially, that's just the reality. As far as sort of
head-to-head as candidates, I will say that my biggest question mark for J.D.
Is can he grow any part of Trump's coalition? I look at Trump's coalition and I think to myself,
Trump has maxed out in many ways many parts of that coalition. What is the part that J.D. grows that
Trump was unable to grow because this was a fairly narrow election. If you look, it was a couple hundred
thousand votes in a couple of different places and very, very high turnout because, again, people
really, really love Trump in a way that, you know, again, that's not a rip on JD. That's just a reality.
But you've been saying for a while, Ben, and this is something I totally agree with, that almost all
of this is going to depend on the economy, which I think is getting better. I mean, even the
Wall Street Journal, which has been hysterically depressed ever since the tariff thing comes
up, is admitting that the economy is actually turning around and doing pretty well. And the other thing
is also, you know, again, I don't think we talk too much, and the media likes this. They want to
talk about everything as people's faces and their style and the way they talk. And I admit all that
is important, but people actually do pay attention to certain things. Like, for instance, the parade
of U-Hauls leaving California looks like a Howard Hawks cattle drive. I mean, people are just
like deserting the state. And the state, as we all know, is paradise. If you left it alone,
if you took the people out, it would be paradise. And it's just, he's just, he's,
He's ruined everything that he touches.
I mean, listen, I left the state.
You left the state.
We all left his state.
We all left his state because, again, I don't think that his state was well run.
But there is one thing that I do know, and that's that you need life insurance.
You do.
That's just the reality.
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Actually, I don't like to bring this up because it violates my contract, but I actually do.
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So here's my question.
Drew, I agree with you, obviously, about all of Gavin Newsom's policy failures.
The real questions, and I even agree with you, obviously, about the economy,
it's hard to disagree with a 5.3% GDP growth in Q4, following a 4.5% GDP growth in Q3.
I mean, those are really, really good numbers.
Here is the problem.
And I go back to it, just coalitionally speaking.
You look at Trump's coalition.
It's a very weird coalition, right?
It's a different coalition than the sort of historic Republican coalition.
It's blue-collar voters, his heavy share of Hispanics,
slightly outsized portion of black males, particularly, and skewing younger than traditionally.
It's hard for me to see exactly where JD grows any part of that coalition.
He's going to win fewer Hispanics than President Trump did.
Trump has a sort of weird capacity to move beyond his own person.
He's kind of everybody's idea of a rich person in their various ethnic group.
It's really, really funny.
Like, if you talk to, you know, if you talk to my people, you talk to the Jews, he's like,
oh yeah, he's like every rich Jew that I know.
And then he talks to like a white Italian guy.
Like, yeah, he's like just like the rich Italian guys.
I know.
He talked to a Syrian person.
He's bizarrely every person and no person at the same time, Donald Trump in a weird way.
That's not true of J.D. Vance, who is a very talented politician, but clearly a politician.
And so you take sort of Trump's comments about ICE and he's not going to, it doesn't come across
the same way as JD Vance online.
My chief critique of JD in this way is that I think JD is too online and he needs to get
off X.
This is also my chief critique of everyone because I think X rots your brain.
And if you're a politician and you're using that as your echo chamber telling you which
direction to row, I think you're going to end up rowing in the wrong direction.
But doesn't that undercut your point on Trump, who is the tweeter in she?
No, no, Trump is not on X.
That's not true.
Trump tweets, but he does not read X.
Trump is not online.
Trump literally they print out things for him and put them in front of him.
You know this.
This is a factual truth, right?
They were literally, he doesn't, like, Trump does not spend any time at all on CNN.com or
New York Times.com.
They literally print out.
If there's a tweet that he has seen, it's because his staff literally prints out the
tweet on physical paper and puts it in front of him.
Okay.
How does Gavin Newsom grow the coalition?
Because isn't this conversation Gavin Newsom hypothetically versus J.D. Vance?
Yeah.
How does Gavin Newsome grow it?
So the way that, so again, when it's two choices, then shrinking your coalition,
is growing the other guy's coalition.
So if you have a Hispanic voter, he's only going to go in one of two directions,
if that guy does not vote for J.D. Vance, and now he votes in the election, and doesn't just go home,
he's going to vote for Gavin Newsom.
So I think that Gavin Newsom does win a larger share of Hispanic voters than Kamala Harris won in the last election cycle, for example.
I think there's a counter argument here.
One is a lot of people were predicting that Trump had maxed out his coalition the first time,
and, you know, people were upset, they weren't getting exactly what they wanted, you know,
all these disappointments.
And then what happened? He goes on to win the popular vote the second time. So if JD were able to
maintain Trump's coalition, that alone, he'd be great. And let's say that things change because obviously
in 2024, almost half the voters were millennials and zoomers skewed a little younger. I, in my meandering
through the young right, I think the young right does like the vice president a lot. For sure.
But the other thing, so, you know, to me, that's a bonus. I do think he, this guy is very, very talented
in that he came up as this, you know, Ohio guy, this guy who wrote a very famous.
memoir about his lower class upbringing and he goes on, succeeds at very high levels. He plays
well in Silicon Valley. He plays well with rural people who want industrial policy. He plays well.
I think he's got a lot of talent. But this actually gets to my point vis-à-vis Newsom,
which is Newsom is overestimated. We're all talking about how slick he is. The thing he's most
famous for in politics is just being really deceitful. And he's, and Nikki Minaj had that whole line.
He goes, oh, he's so sexy.
He's so slick.
He's so this.
So I think he's being overestimated in the ways that people overestimated guys like Beto O'Rourke,
these also rands who fell away.
I don't think it's always great to be the top guy in the race a year or a year and a half out.
But second of all, there was a great interview once between Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.
And Clinton said, he goes, you know, George and I have benefited from the same thing,
which is we've both been underestimated, me because I'm a nice guy.
and they thought I was all nice, and they thought he was kind of dumb.
And you think about the winning presidential candidates, they tend to be very underestimated.
Trump doesn't know anything.
He's totally ignorant.
Go ahead and run, Donald.
Right, yeah.
Barack Obama, he's black in a racist country.
Bill Clinton, he's Bubba.
Bush is stupid.
You know, Ronald Reagan's a cowboy.
On that subject, though, I have to say, last time we were here, which is not that long ago,
I would have bet money, and I'm not a betting man, but I would have bet money on J.D. Vance being the nominee.
Right this minute, I'm a little uncertain.
if that, if we're actually talking about the next nominee, because he's not, you know, every time, I mean, Trump has been going very hard on foreign policy and he has people around him in the press conferences, mostly Rubio.
And Vance is nowhere to be seen because Vance is one of these guys who's trying to take Maga and turn it into isolationism, which it never was.
I don't, I don't buy that.
Oh, come on.
I don't, I don't think so. Why isn't he in these meetings?
Well, I'll give you an example. So this was very interesting.
I don't know if you guys caught this interview with So Rabamari right after the Van Gogh.
Venezuela strike, so Rob posted it again. And he said, wow, these comments the vice president made a
couple weeks ago really hit differently now. And he was being asked, you know, his involvement
in the admin. And he said, I'm getting it a little, little off, it's not verbatim, but this is the
thrust of it. He said, look, if, let's say hypothetically, there were an action to be taken by
the administration that would look really good for Marco that I would not be all that publicly
involved in, in part because you don't have the president and vice president at the same place,
often outside of the White House, where Marco would be center stage, and I would seem to be more
in the background. If I were optimizing for 2028, I would try to kill that action. But if I were
optimizing for the good of the country and just to be a good person, I would encourage that action.
And, you know, it's kind of unclear what he was talking about there. After the Venezuela strike,
it seems clear his day to me. That's what he's talking about. I think the idea that JD is some
isolationist. I don't buy it. He's positioning himself that way. He's been very close with Tucker
Carlson, who I don't know if Tucker Carlson believes anything at this point. I have no idea,
but I mean, he's actually kind of on the phone, remember, on that signal call that was bugged,
he was the guy who was calling for restraint. You know, he's not always like, it doesn't seem to
be online with the president's foreign policy, which, which frankly, I think it's working out great
right now. You know, I think it's going very well. So I don't know. I'm not saying, look, I'm not
counting him out by any stretch of the imagination. I'm just saying the guy who looks great is Marco
for Rubio and I keep thinking.
Here's the thing. I think Marco, Marco has basically
already said that he is not going to run if
Shady runs. And I think that that's probably
true. And I think that right now, if you're
looking at the vice president, obviously
his benefit is that he is the vice president.
No one's underestimating that he's
incredibly talented. He for sure is.
I think that there are a couple of systemic
factors that are running against him.
Because I sort of did a bit of a deep dive into this.
I mean, the reality, he's the vice president who
currently has a 40% approval rating.
Vice presidents who have a 40%
approval rating running after presidents who have a 40% approval rating don't typically do amazing in
general elections. And so, you know, maybe that changes, maybe that changes radically. But I think that the
sort of core assumption that a lot of Republicans are making, that there's sort of a cakewalk into the
presidency for the vice president, that I don't see. And I will say that I do think that the memeary,
if you do care about the very online, every meme of Marco Rubio, the big meme of Marco Rubio,
obviously is Marco having a different job every day, right? Is the Secretary of State, now he's like a gladiator.
Now, it's just him in that pose, being like annoyed that he's been given a new job as king of Venezuela,
or now the new governor of Greenland or whatever it's going to be today.
And then all the memes are JD or the JD is fat with weird hair.
And like, that's not kind of where you want to be, just in sort of meme land.
I disagree.
You should talk to your guest clavicular, okay?
Like, your guest clavicular will agree with me, which is hilarious.
I don't think the looks maxing, you know, meth-addicted 19-year-old is representative of the American voter.
I certainly hope not.
This is why I disagree, though, and it gets to my point on Newsom, is I think it was so smart
of the VP to lean into the goofy meme.
And the reason I think it was so smart is you want to be underestimated so that the reality
can surpass expectations.
So even down to the physicality, the fact that the meme is he's like this big fat guy,
but then you see him, he's not a big fat guy, he's actually a pretty thick, relatively
thin guy.
The meme is that he's kind of like short, he's actually very tall.
The meme is that he's kind of dumb.
He's extremely intelligent.
So I think all of those things play really well.
Even to the point ideologically, some people tried to pin him down on he's an isolationist,
he's this or he's that, but he's defended the administration's actions in Iran, in Venezuela,
quite vociferously.
And so I don't know, to me, like if I were in this position, I would not want the memes
to be making me out to be the really cool guy.
Frankly, you even saw this with Trump in 2015, 2016.
All the memeery was that he was like a big, dumb idiot.
And I think to be underestimated actually puts you in a better position.
And he doesn't, and he's not taking himself to.
seriously, so that's, which is a rare quality for politicians. People appreciate. But the question
is, for Republicans, what other Republican, I mean, to go to Ben's point about Trump's coalition,
what other Republican has a better chance of at least maintaining most of Trump's coalition,
if not expanding in it? I don't see anybody outside. I mean, there are others who might have a shot.
There are others who I could like in that spot, but I think J.D. Vance certainly would have the best
shot of that. And as far as, as far as approval ratings go, it's like every president and vice
president my whole life has had terrible approval ratings it feels like i just i don't think it like
means anything um it's just it's just it's part of the reality the political reality we live in that
you just hate whoever's in there and they get bad approval ratings and it still just goes to
i don't see anyone else in the and this could change obviously we're still a couple years out but
i don't see anyone else in the republican field who i'd look at them and say well you know we know what
trump's coalition is and that guy over there really is going to resonate with that coalition more
than J.D. Van'sworth. And I have to say, by the way, I wasn't suggesting he won't be the nominee
or the next president because that has been my certainty. I'm just saying that my certainty is a
little less certain nowadays. But I think, I'm sorry, go ahead. I think, well, just what Matt was saying.
I agree with this. I think, you know, the accomplice is a big deal. And think about having Donald
Trump's policies without Donald Trump, you know, the Trumpian of Trump that people don't like.
A lot of people don't like his brashness and his big mouth and all that stuff. And if you, if we
thought we could get MAGA without Trump, I think a lot of people would turn up. Oh, see, I totally.
I disagree with this, actually. I've completely flipped on this. I think that I think that MAGA is
Trump. I think that MAGA without Trump is boring and stupid in many ways, because I just don't think
as a concept it holds together. There's no, everyone keeps trying to say, what is MAGA? And so you have
the isolation as saying MAGA is America first, meaning America alone. Then you have people who are saying,
no, no, no, what MAGA really means is X-W. MAGA means whatever Donald Trump says MAGA means. That's the
reality. And trying to take away the sizzle from the steak and then say, yes, but now it's very
nutritious. Like, that's, that's not the thing. And if I were going to look at, here's what I've said
about JD, I'll say about Rubio 2, every politician must form their own coalition. Anybody who
thinks they're just going to pick up the last guy's coalition, they're wrong. It never, ever,
ever works. That's what Biden did in weird circumstances? But Biden did that, didn't it? But in what way
did Biden do that? He was just running on Obama's third term, basically, in strange circumstances.
Okay, the 2020 election, as I think we will all acknowledge, those of us who think that he won and
those who bizarrely think that he lost are the are the are the are the we will acknowledge that was
the weirdest election of our lifetime and that that those circumstances are are not replicable
absent some sort of massive pandemic that shuts down the entire world unless the democrats act right
unless unless we do it again I mean which could but is it but the biggest problem is that if you
look at here's the thing I look at jd and I look at jd's coalition and it looks like Trump's coalition
but smaller I look at rubio's coalition and if I were going to build a coalition as a marco rubio it would
not actually be Trump's coalition. It would be Rubio's coalition, meaning more college-educated white
people, more Hispanics, fewer blue-collar white voters, right? I mean, that's actually what his
coalition would look like, probably more women, right? Like, his coalition just looks different.
And when we dismiss that kind of thing, it ignores the fact that that's actually what Trump did.
He didn't just replicate George W. Bush's coalition. He built an entirely new coalition where he went
to low-propensity voters who weren't voting and got them in his camp. My guess is somebody like
Marco Rubio dropped some low-propensity voters and maybe convinces some more higher-propensity
voters who voted for Mitt Romney but not for Donald Trump to come back.
Now, again, I'm not saying that means that Rubio wins or the J.D. loses.
I'm just saying that when I look at J.D. Vance, I cannot see how if Donald Trump got 77 million
votes in the last election cycle, how J.D. Vance gets to 79 million votes in the next
election cycle. Very difficult for me to see that. And that's a problem for Republicans.
That's not a question just for J.D. That's a problem for Republicans. They should keep that in
mind. So when I'm saying Gavin could be the next president, I'm not talking about Gavin because he's so
intellectually superior and such an amazing can. I'm saying we have now had.
a series of binary elections in which everyone was kind of squirrelly about all the candidates.
And we came down to the final two and there were a couple of, you know, core bases were like,
yeah, I love it. And then a huge swath of the middle was like, man, this is, man, this kind of
sucks. And if you look at the Gallup poll right now, more than 45% of Americans are now
identifying as politically independent, not because they actually are, but because they don't want
to be identified as either member of either party.
That's right. That's right. But see, this is the thing. I mean, as you've pointed out, Ben,
I mean, Trump's policies, you know, eliminate Trump.
His policies are fairly middle of the road.
I mean, I think some things he's more right and some things he's more left.
But he's not, you know, he's not a radical in any shape or form.
It's just that our politics has been so radicalized that he sometimes looks like it.
And I can't help feeling that you could pick up the Trump MAGA and present it in a somewhat more statesman-like way.
And, you know, I always feel that what the people are asking for is normalcy.
They're asking to kind of get back to the way we're supposed to.
supposed to be. And I could see Vance selling that really easily. I don't see why you can't do that.
The other issue, I see your point, Ben, that I agree with it, that MAGA is what Trump says it
is. But I think where I disagree is, I think that Trump actually has a pretty coherent policy
vision, though it's often called incoherent or capricious. And you see this especially with foreign
policy. Like, what does America First mean? I was just debating some guys on this the other day
on Pierce Morgan Show. And there's some people who insist, America First means conservative or
libertarian isolationism. I don't think that's what Trump ever meant. Some people that say the
alternative is a liberal internationalism, whether we're talking about, I don't know, like George
W. Bush or something, spread liberalism and democracy overseas. I think Trump's is this third option,
which is a conservative imperialism. I think he's been consistent about it. He ran in the first term
on destroying ISIS. That obviously doesn't mean you're just going to only focus within your borders.
But when he does intervene, it seems to be in this way that's a little bit more restrained. We're going to
have these real tactical, you know, in and out kind of hits in the Middle East, and then we're
going to focus a little more in the Western Hemisphere. But in the Western Hemisphere, that's going
to have cascading effects that do affect Iran, Russia, China. And so to me, that it's a third
option that is kind of coherent and that therefore could be replicated by whoever succeeds in.
He's also always thinking about China. He's always setting us up to fight the Cold War with China.
I mean, everything he does, you know, when you look at Venezuela, the Chinese ran for their lives,
They're like a lot of running Chinese after they got, took Maduro out of there.
They were setting up shop in Venezuela.
And now they're not so much.
You know, now they're sort of thinking, well, maybe we can use this as an excuse to go into Taiwan, which eventually they'll do.
But they're not in Venezuela anymore.
And I think Trump is thinking about that all the time.
I think if you explain everything he does in terms of China.
I mean, I totally agree that.
I think that the danger in trying to intellectualize MAGA is that I think that when you abstract into sort of absolute terms, what his foreign policy is, then when you do.
zoom back in into what the specific decisions that are made are by somebody who's not Trump,
they don't necessarily match up.
I think that, for example, you could make easily the case right now, and I'll make two
varying cases.
One is that President Trump is what I think he is, which is sort of a hawkish realist,
which is that he only wants to get involved in the most minimal possible way to achieve
the maximum possible effect on behalf of American interests abroad, and that's not
restricted to the Western Hemisphere, right?
That he will bomb the Fordo nuclear facility in Iran if he feels that that's necessary.
maybe he'll go ahead and he'll take a military action in Iran if he believes it'll be necessary
right now, but only if it achieves his desired effect.
He's not going to just do something like fire a missile at a camel and hit him in the ass,
sort of for show.
Right.
So that's sort of one version.
And then there's an equally coherent version that I find really off-putting in to think
would be wrong in policy, which is this sort of multipolar hemispherism, right?
This idea that what Trump's actually trying to do is create a Western hemisphere free of foreign
intervention, but he's totally fine with Russia dominating both the Near East and Eastern
Europe and maybe a little bit Western Europe, and he's fine with China dominating Taiwan and the
far east. Right. That vision has actually been put forward by people who consider themselves in sort of the
MAGA camp. And because Trump is not, I would say rhetorically coherent in the way that he approaches
these issues, even though I think you can read the policy line in the ways that I've presented. And I think
the first one is much more accurate than the second. I think that's why you're seeing concerns
about, you know, when people say, well, what is MAGA? Those are real open questions because, again,
ideology does sort of matter. And President Trump doesn't really have one. And so he's the best
pragmins as you'll ever find without a root idea.
But what that means is very difficult to have an ideological air.
How do you have an ideological error without an idea?
It's a good point, man.
Who listens to the maga people talk and think, thank God, somebody's finally talking
about America's benefits again.
Yeah, of course.
Who hears that?
Like these guys come out and they say, you know, we want this to be good for America
because that's who we work for.
I think it was Rubio who said that.
And I thought, thank you.
You know, like you suddenly remembered that all this stuff that we hear like, you know,
you're a racist if you don't open your borders.
It's like, screw you.
It's in my country.
I want to defend my country.
It's a multi-ethnic country.
It's got everybody here.
I don't want to let in foreigners.
That doesn't make me a racist.
And I think this is the first time I don't hear us being accused of anything.
They remember that we actually pay their salaries.
Yeah, there's something kind of funny about when Trump goes in and he says, we're going to Venezuela for the oil, which is not even exactly true.
I mean, like, we would be justified in part.
But it actually does have a lot more to it and a lot more principle and everything.
And Ben, I think you make a great point, which is you can't quite tell.
exactly what this is, or you could read in two things, because there is a retrenchment that's going
on. There's no question about that. That's what the assertion of the Donne Row doctrine is about.
That's what Greenland is about. And the question is, is the retrenchment a way that we can make sure
that we're strong, we're not spread too thin, so that we can preserve American strength around
the world, or is the retrenchment this kind of surrender that says we just don't want to be
involved anywhere else? And I agree it's kind of ambiguous right now, but I just don't see any real
American politician on the right running to say, I want to make America weaker.
You know, that's the, that's the opposite of what, of what MAGA literally.
Then you'd have to become a Democrat.
That's right.
That's their actual platform.
I mean, it's, hey, it's not.
Gavin Newsom just tweeted something out about me.
That's hilarious.
Okay.
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
He tweeted out like, here's what Ben Shapiro is hiding.
And it's like, Gavin Newsom gets Ben to criticize Trump's tariffs.
What?
Medoo.
What?
Gets Ben Shapiro to oppose the invasion.
of Greenland.
The presses.
What?
Against Ben Shapiro to say
that Republicans
are going to have a hard time
in the midterms.
Man, well, that kind of,
wow.
Wow.
They nailed you.
You got Mogged.
Brutal.
I got mug.
You got mug.
You got news.
Okay.
Brutal.
All right.
Speaking of a very hard
right turn, Matt,
you, I think,
are what, you're defending
slavery now.
You want, you want to bring
slavery back.
Do I even seeing that really?
Yeah.
Very pro.
Well, it's a,
look, it's a controversial
issue with slavery.
Are we for it?
Are we against it?
There are arguments,
There are arguments on both sides, guys.
Of course.
Okay. Both sides make interesting arguments.
Of course.
Because you get me off the shelf, please.
For media matters, he's joking.
It's not true.
It's, uh, well.
He's not joking.
Sorry, go on, go on.
So we, you know, I've got this little, this, not little,
but a series coming out starting on Monday, real history.
And they're shorter, you know, shorter documentaries on,
on various topics, very historical topics that have,
so often been lied about misrepresented. And these are generally going to be topics that are
talked about a lot. I mean, people talk about slavery all the time. But I think the average
American doesn't understand the topic very little because schools lie about it, media
misrepresents it, Hollywood. And there are all kinds of realities around these topics that
are never talked about at all. And we're going to start with slavery. And it's, look,
interesting because although slavery comes up a lot in our political debates, like I said, I think,
you know, the average person knows almost nothing about it because we're not taught about it
in schools. And that's because the history that we've been taught, and this isn't just something
that started five years ago in the age of wokeness or whatever, this is something that goes back
generations. I mean, I can remember being in public school, you know, 30 plus years ago, and it was the same
thing and that's because the education about American history that we get in the mainstream is designed
to make us hate ourselves, hate this country, and feel guilty about it. And that starts with
slavery. So in the series, we're going to begin with a look at the, you know, a global look at
slavery. Slavery existed as an institution across the entire world for thousands of years.
if it's possible to carry the guilt of slavery in your blood somehow, as we're told white Americans do.
If that's possible, then every single person who exists on the planet carries that guilt
because slavery existed everywhere on the planet, and then we kind of narrow it in to slavery in America
because even if everybody will acknowledge that, of course, slavery existed everywhere,
then they moved to, yeah, but slavery here was more brutal and it was worse.
and that is also not true.
And we get into some of the facts about, you know,
where did these slaves come from?
Well, they came from Africa.
How did the slave traders,
the European and American slave traders,
get their hands on those slaves to begin with?
Well, it turns out that there were entire African empires
who, this is what they did.
I mean, this is how they became empires,
is that they enslaved other African tribes and sold them.
And not only that, but if you were,
captured by one of these African tribes to be sold as a slave, the best case scenario for you
is that you'd be put on a ship and shipped specifically to North America. That would be the
best case scenario. These are basic facts that I think most people don't know. As you mentioned,
or as you maybe intended to mention, this is coming out once a month on Daily Wire Plus. It's awesome.
Obviously, we all agree with all of that. Can I just sound like a little bit of a lib though for a second?
This is one of my most lib opinions, but it's correct.
You know, when they talk about the legacy of slavery
and the enduring, you know, challenges that come
because they're great, great, great, great, great, great, great,
grandpa was brought on a slave ship,
I don't think they're totally wrong.
I don't think that comes from, I don't, you know,
in the sense that, like, look, I'm smoking a Mayflower cigar,
a brand new blend that's extremely exquisite
that I'm not yet gonna debut for you all.
But I love the fact that some,
a very small number of my ancestors,
came here on the Mayflower. That makes me feel good about the country. It makes me view the country
in a certain way, makes me feel a kind of pride and ownership in the country. If my ancestors had come
on a slave ship, even if I were rich, I were a rapper, I had, you know, gold teeth and everything,
and I was materially really well off, I would view the country differently. I would have a
different relationship to it. And I think as conservatives, we say that heritage matters and
tradition matters and all that. All I'm saying is, I kind of get it. And if I were a black guy in America,
that would color my view.
Well, you get what, though?
I think that's true.
I also think it's important.
Matt, I completely agree with the history you're saying.
I know that history and you're absolutely right about it.
But I also think it's important while we're saying this, that we should put out the idea that
slavery is bad.
You know, we think it was bad there, it's bad here.
We're against it.
I think, you know, this is the Daily Wire.
You know, official Daily Wire, you know, our co-founder is a Jew.
Let's take the Moses idea here, like, let the people go, you know?
You know, you read Aris.
He says, well, some people will have born slaves.
You just want to slap him.
And I just like, Aristotle, stop that, you know?
It's bad.
Aristotle means like different things.
But people should not own other people.
And I just, I just think that, you know, of course it's true that, you know, it actually
is true.
I mean, I live in the South and people come up to me and they say, well, you know, slavery
wasn't so bad.
And I think, okay, but can we begin with no?
You know, like don't hold people's slaves.
And I think we could put that on our mast head maybe.
But I, but other than that, it is.
true that it was you know I won't say it was better here it's just a it's just an
evil but it is it is true that we didn't start started we bought people from
we bought people who had already been enslaved and if you read I think at one
point Matt I sent you the the memoir of Mungo the guy who made it into
leave it was in Nigeria the explorer and he just described a world of slavery
when he got to Africa I mean he had some I can't even I can't remember the
number but he said like 40% other people were slaves
And of course, if you got caught by the Arabs, they also castrated you, which was like
an unpleasant thing in and of itself because you couldn't just claim you were a woman and play
soccer for the team you could beat.
You know, it was really bad.
So, I mean, I think, you know, I agree with Knowles as well.
I think I do understand.
The guy who sold me, my gun was a black guy.
And he said, believe me, I believe in gun rights.
Because if I had gun rights, I wouldn't be here.
So I actually disagree with Knowles on this.
and I'm with Walsh, I think, on the question of, you know, this kind of generational,
I would feel differently about things.
I think that the history of black Americans is one of the most glorious things,
meaning like moving from slavery to freedom, moving from, you know, abject slavery to
participating in the building of the greatest country in the history of the world and
becoming leaders in a wide variety of fields in that space is an amazing history.
and the idea that you should carry with you some sort of generational stigma or shame or that you should feel internally as though that is like obviously you know the history has consequences and you feel those consequences over the course of time but you know I'm I'm not willing to sort of grant the premise that a history of slavery is so deep that it ought to make you think that today's America is the problem this is also the America that fought a civil war to abolish slavery this is also the America that did the civil rights movement
That's different issue, then.
That's not what Norse was saying, though.
Yeah.
Can I just, can I say one thing here?
So, well, actually, two things.
First of all, to Drew's point that slavery is bad, that's debatable.
No, it's, no, it's, it's, it's actually slavery.
Walsh's job is just to give me a heart attack today.
This is like, this is great.
No, obviously slavery is bad, but I do think that assessing that there is a, that there's an important point in bringing up that it was a, it was a global institution, which is that it was bad.
But when you're assessing the individual moral guilt of people who were involved in slavery,
say 500 years ago or 600 years ago, their individual moral guilt is severely mitigated
because it was a global institution.
And at this time in history, they just didn't have concepts like universal human equality
just simply did not exist for the majority of human history.
And that means that slavery was bad, but it also means that to kind of look at it through a modern lens
and assess the kind of moral guilt on those people that we would on a slave owner today is incoherent.
But secondly, to the black Americans today, I agree that the fact that they, that, you know,
if this is actually your heritage, of course, there's plenty of black Americans who came here
afterwards, and so that's not their heritage.
Like all of Minnesota, you mean?
Right.
You mean like the entire state.
So if that is your heritage, then that's relevant.
It's like your heritage is very relevant, of course.
But what is incoherent is to be mad about it, to be mad today that slave.
that your ancestors were enslaved is completely incoherent.
Not only because it happened a long time ago,
I mean, there is that, it happened a long time ago.
It didn't happen to you.
So to be mad about a thing that didn't happen to you
doesn't make a lot of sense.
But also, there's the other part of this,
which nobody really wants to say,
and every time I say I'd get in a lot of trouble,
but I'll say it again, which is that,
okay, let's just be real about it.
If you're a black person in America today
and your ancestors were enslaved,
you are better off today,
because of that, then you likely would be if your ancestors had not been enslaved.
That's the reality. If your ancestors had not been enslaved, then guess what?
Either you would not exist, most likely, or if you do exist, you'd exist in Africa.
And it is better to be in America than to be in Africa.
That is not an argument that slavery is okay.
I'm not making an end justify. That means argument.
I'm only saying that to be mad about a thing that ultimately has actually benefited you today
makes no sense.
What would you prefer that you're in Africa right now that?
Oh, yeah, I actually just heard that.
Yeah, Nose is right.
Nose is actually, I mean, look,
Noses actually said something that makes sense and is almost profound,
which I think we should all stop for a minute and just understand that a miracle is taking place in front of us.
I retire. I finally did it.
I know. I mean, it doesn't matter whether it's rational or not.
And Ben, I completely agree that even though you have these feelings,
you should be able to overcome them and understand that you've been given the gift of being born in America,
and that's a beautiful thing.
And I agree with that.
But, you know, heritage does matter and it doesn't fuse you with a certain feeling.
And you hear the name of the famous black comedian who went up against the trans people,
Chappelle.
You know, I'll hear him say, like, it was really the black people who freed themselves.
And you think, like, no, it wasn't.
It was white soldiers fighting.
It was people from, you know, Maine and Vermont coming down and fighting for liberation.
It was not black people who freed themselves.
You know, there's a sense of shame that goes with this.
There's a sense of shame, you know, when I was growing up.
I think Jews have a sense of shame that stemmed out of the Holocaust.
You know, why didn't you fight back?
Why didn't you stop them?
Which is a complete, obviously a complete false understanding of what happened in that country
and what it was like to live through it.
But people feel these things and they affect the way you see the place that you're living.
And I think that's basically what Knowles is saying.
And feelings, you know, I hate to break this to the event, but feelings matter, you
know the way people feel affects their lives.
And so when you see things like when you hear the word pride, you immediately know
you're dealing with shame.
When you hear black pride, gay pride, you immediately know somebody is,
It feels ashamed. And I think that you can't make it go away the way the left wants to make it go away by proclaiming that you're proud.
Okay. Am I wrong? Am I wrong? Am I wrong? No, you're not wrong that that the, you know, I have had black people say to me. I've had black people say to me. Slavery was bad. Slavery was bad, but I'm glad I'm here. I've had black people say that to me and I understand it. But, you know, still, the history counts. And I think we can have some kind of compassion for that and understanding for it.
I mean, on a practical level, obviously, Matt, your history is all.
all contingent, right? It's a bunch of if-then statements. So if X had not happened,
then why would not happen? But that doesn't mean that you have to be super happy that X happened,
you know, in and of itself. So that, of course... I'm not saying you should be happy. No,
I'm not saying you should be happy. I know you're not. Yeah, I'm not justifying or saying
you should be happy about it. What I'm saying is that to be to now in your life today,
to be angry about it just doesn't, it doesn't make any sense because if the thing hadn't
happened, then you would not exist and or you would exist probably in a worse situation than you do today.
I think that what we need is more specificity, actually. What is it that they're angry about,
that a bad thing happened in history or at the concept that may still be walking around of,
say, black inferiority, right? That there's still some people who think that and that's what
leads to slavery. And so that's what you're actually angry at. That's justifiable. You know,
you're right in the sense that like anything that happened historically, you can be angry at the,
If you had been then, there, would you have been happy?
No, you'd been very angry.
Of course.
And I think we all agree with that.
But I think we should be more specific about what it is we mean when we say angry at that.
What is the that we're angry at?
I guess one way to think about it is just because we're conservatives, we're not Libs, ideologues,
who think that, you know, one action of politics can just erase the totality of human experience.
You would say, look, the 13th Amendment was great, but it doesn't, it's not a magic wand.
You know, the 14th Amendment or all the way up to, I don't know, Civil Rights Act of 1964 or whatever,
all sorts of bungled policies that have actually made things worse in many cases.
But in any case, those are just magic ones that erase a human identity or heritage or a feeling
of tradition or place in a society.
And so I guess my point is basically boiling down to, I kind of get it.
You know, identity really does matter.
And the libs are totally wrong about their conclusions from that.
But it's not to say that that isn't a real problem or a real phenomenon.
They're also wrong about what identity is, but I take your point.
I think one of the things that's actually quite important also is that if slavery was a human universal,
then the people who abolished it ought to get outside his credit.
Yeah, absolutely. Amen. Amen.
Mainly the British, right?
Yeah, no, I mean, really the British.
But the truth is that, I mean, slavery existed in legal form in Saudi Arabia into the 60s.
And there is still slavery that is happening on a pretty wide scale, particularly in the Middle East today.
And very often, it's people who are being brought there as wage laborers.
And then their passports are taken away.
They're being held there.
They can't get out.
That sort of stuff is happening right now on the ground in a lot of places on Earth.
So, you know, the stuff that we take for granted is not easily taken for granted.
Well, it's controversial stuff, and you can only make controversial stuff if you have subscribers like ours,
which is why you should have over to Dailywire.com and go check out Matt's brand-new series
where he will be offending, I assume, a wide variety of people over the course of the next year with actual historical takes.
So that's exciting stuff.
Speaking of taking stuff, are we going to take Greenland? Should we take Greenland?
This is, by my count, the first foreign policy intervention in American history, at least since the Louisiana purchase, that Matt supports.
Matt, you are pro just F-35, like, you know, Don Rumsfeld flying over nuke and taking the ice?
I mean, I am. I want Greenland. I've been, I have been, I have also been lusting after Greenland my whole life.
We just need to go take it.
No, look, I am often labeled an isolationist,
and depending on how you define that,
maybe I fit the bill.
But my actual, very simple foreign policy view has always been,
I've said forever, is I'm in favor of anything that America does
that actually advance the interests of Americans.
And I think that very often we do things,
especially in faraway places that supposedly are to advance
the interests of Americans,
but actually aren't doing that
and aren't really intended to do that.
But if that's the goal is to help Americans
make America's life, make the lives of Americans better,
then at least it's potentially in the realm of something
that I would support.
And with Greenland, I mean, I can easily see the advantages.
I mean, there's, of course, what Trump always talks about,
the national security advantages.
There's also, you know, there's the resources that are there.
It's a resource-rich country.
you know, only like 12 people live there anyway.
They're not making use of it.
I will say that, you know, I think there are actually,
actually militarily invading Greenland.
Well, probably wouldn't be necessary, first of all.
I mean, you just send in one team of Navy SEALs.
You'd topple the whole country about 12 minutes.
Send in one name.
Send in a seal.
You can send a seal.
One like actual SEAL.
Yeah, one actual seal.
So that, you know, but doing that, I think it wouldn't come to that.
That's a different conversation.
Maybe they could work something else out.
I will just say, though, that it's interesting to me when people today get so offended by the very notion that we would try to acquire land, that we would try to grow sort of the empire, and in particular, we would try to do it by force.
It's interesting when people are so offended by that, because how do you think America right now that's currently constituted came to be?
You know, America became what it is today, the continental United States plus Hawaii and Alaska.
That happened through purchasing land, in some cases, going to war, taking it by force, displacing people, kicking them out and taking the land for ourselves.
That is how this country came to be.
We conquered this land and we did it because we believed that manifest destiny.
It's what God wanted us to do.
We knew that, you know, the American Empire should reign.
and we had leaders who were looking out
for the interests of our people.
And that's how the entire world has taken the shape
that it's taken.
This is the way that goes.
So that doesn't mean that I'm gonna support
any effort to just go and conquer land,
but it does mean that I'm not gonna automatically rule it out
because that's the only way that America exists in the first place.
So it's worth talking about.
I mean, I don't know what I'm gonna do.
I'm really enjoying neocon, Matt Walsh.
This is like my favorite version of Matt Walsh.
This is really exciting.
It's not neocon.
I know.
I'm joking that.
I would never call you a neocon.
I know.
Of all the things to call me.
I'm looking forward to war with Denmark.
I think that's going to be exciting.
Matt Walsh, they got him.
They finally got him.
They got Walsh.
Call me George Bush.
Matt makes a really,
Matt makes an interesting point though,
which is like we're supposed to be growing and strong on us.
And it occurs to me,
the last time we seriously added territory was 1959,
which coincidentally is the last time.
time we were like really strong and growing. You know, it seems like since the 60s,
everything's been kind of going downhill. And, you know, if we did acquire Greenland in a serious
way, that would expand the size of the United States by 22 percent, that would be, not by
in terms of people, obviously, but in terms of land, that would be a huge acquisition.
And just think of the shrimp, the amount of shrimp we'd have. The delicious shrimp would be,
there is a real question, though. Does this violate, you know, the NATO treaties, the spirit,
or international law? But I believe, I don't like to say this out loud because,
I know it's going to blow back on me, but I believe that empire is a phase in the life of great nations, and I don't think you can help it.
And I think it's coming our way. I'm sort of hoping I'll be gone, so you guys have to deal with it.
But still, I think ultimately that there's just an amoral truth about the fact that you grow or you die.
And I think, you know, war with Denmark is going to be so much fun.
And, you know, I love the foreign minister of Denmark.
He looks like a lawn troll, you know, and he's very similar.
Smoking sings at the White House.
It's such a civilized little guy, and he says, I agree with Trump in many ways.
But we can talk it out.
And I think, yeah, let's just invade.
Come on.
Let's go.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
So as the, apparently Abraham Lincoln, all of your imperialist ambitions to grab Texas and open it to slavery, apparently.
Yeah.
Yeah, I am not in favor of the invasion of Greenland.
I think that I think it's great that you have to say it, though.
Media matters, Ben Shapiro, I am not in favor of the invasion of Greenland.
Listen, I'm fine with cutting whatever contract we want to cut with Greenland.
If we can pressure them to selling the thing, that's fine.
If we want to grab their mineral rights, that's cool too.
But I'm wondering, I do love the fact that really all this has come down to
is that Donald Trump really wants to rename that place, Trump land,
and just increase the map and be like, this is the thing that I got.
Because that's clearly what this is, right?
We have a military treaty with Denmark.
We can bill whatever the hell we want there.
Like right now, if we just decided to put 20,000 troops in Greenland without invading,
we could just build a base and put our troops there.
We literally can do that under current treaty.
So this idea that like the Chinese are about to grab Greenland,
the Russians are about to wade ashore in nuke,
and they're going to start shooting all the dogs from their dog sleds.
I was hoping now that Trump took the Venezuela ladies' Nobel Prize.
I was hoping that maybe he'd calm down.
I can't even with that.
That one also, I can't even.
Like, oh my gosh, the taking of the
The taking of the Nobel Prize is so, like,
are you kidding me?
Like, what are we doing now?
You know what it feels like to take you in the Nobel Prize?
You know how on eBay there will be some guy who won an Oscar
and then he goes bankrupt and then he sells his Oscar?
And so you're sitting there and you've got like Marlon Brando's second Oscar
on your mantle.
What do you do if you're trying to walk around like,
like here's Maria Kachat, Mauchado's.
I like the idea that she insisted.
She insisted the White House.
So she insists that you take, she's like this little piece of girl.
It's like, I insist you take my Nobel Prize.
All right, all right.
I'm sure.
Yeah, and oh my gosh, it's so good.
And obviously when we build the greenhouse in Greenland,
then President Trump will obviously put the Nobel Prize in the Greenhouse.
Well, I think, look, I think it's a good,
even if you disagree with going in and conquering Greenland
and making them our slaves,
because that's another part of this.
Yeah. You absolutely have to disagree. But even if you disagree with that, the fact that Trump has the desire at all to kind of like expand in this way is, is that's what presidents. I like that. I like that's what our leaders should want to do. I'm like you said, 1959, right, was the last time when it felt like Iran states. Well, I would say it's actually 1969. To me, 1969 was the last time when it would it win, when, you know, it felt like America was was was was was, was like, was was like, was, was like.
reaching for something. And that's when we, that's where we landed on the moon, of course. And we
actually did land on the moon, first of all. But I think there's also this kind of, and I know
it's not the most compelling foreign policy argument, but there's this kind of a spiritual
truth, which is that if you're a great country, then you should be trying to expand, trying to
reach for something, explore, go to unknown places. I mean, this is when America has been great,
we talk about Make America Great again. Well, when America has been truly great, it's
It's when it was driven by that desire, by manifest destiny.
And then it's kind of like, well, we expanded.
We took over, you know, the continental United States, and we had Hawaii and Alaska.
And then we said, well, where is there left to go?
Then we started going up.
And we're not really doing that as much anymore.
At least that's now kind of in the private sector with Elon Musk.
And so Trump is the first leader in a while who says, no, let's continue to try to expand and grow this empire.
And I think that that's, like you said, Drew, if you're not growing, you're dying.
I think there's like a real truth to that when it comes to nations.
There's a fact too, which is we had been, you know, since the middle of the 19th century,
the State Department has been eyeing Greenland.
We've tried to buy it multiple times over the years, including the 20th century.
And it is kind of weird that Denmark controls Greenland in that, you know,
Denmark has been downhill ever since Claudius killed Hamlet's dad, you know?
Like it has not been a good few centuries.
And so you think it's bizarre that they're there.
When Trump was in the Oval Office, he said,
Denmark said they're going to double up their defenses. They added another dog sled. That's real.
I thought that was a joke. That's not a joke. That's real. They have the serious dog sled
Arctic defense, which I'm sure they're great people and great dogs, but that's not really going to cut it.
And so, you know, then there's this argument that, well, this violates the spirit of NATO or something.
And I think NATO is a Cold War organization. It was developed in the Cold War to protect the American Empire, you know, against the Soviet Empire and the Warsaw Pact.
And it doesn't mean exactly the same thing after the fall of the Burroughs.
Lin Wall. And yeah, to your, really, to all of your points, well, no, not as much to Ben's,
you know, because he doesn't want us to just gobble up the whole world. But to Matt and
Drew's point, you know, we're great. We grow. That's we become empires. That's what we do.
And you just look at the map and you say, this is kind of weird, especially with a more aggressive
China and Russia, whether or not they're actually going to land and put up a P.F. Chang's and
nuke. Like, the fact that they're a little more on the move now means that, yeah, I think we
need to get a little more serious guys. And, you know, Denmark, I think you're going to get on board.
I do think they're going to get on board.
By the way, Kalshi says, according to our sponsors, Kalsh,
42% shot or 42% of the people who are betting on it say that we're going to take Greenland.
So, you know, we're going to find out.
And if that's, you know, you might be able to tell.
We'll see if there's like an insider spike right before Trump declares that we've taken Greenland.
So, honestly, my main objective, my main objection to taking Greenland is just,
it's not even truly ideological.
It's more like, is it, why is this a prior?
Like, Trump is like, we must deter Russia.
We must deter Russia from going after Greenland.
You know what's a really great way to deter Russia to fight it?
To have the Ukrainians fight them.
There's like engaging in a gigantic-ass land war in the middle of Eastern Europe.
And it's like, no, no, no, they're not taking Greenland.
This is where we draw the line.
I care much more about Greenland than Ukraine.
Am I in the minority here?
No, you're probably not in the minority, but you're wrong.
Those are not the same thing.
I think the shrimp is the one that turns me toward Greenland.
And as a, I keep kosher, so I don't care about the shrimp.
That's what's happening right here.
See, that explains.
It always comes down to that.
It always comes down to this.
You know, and because we added Hawaii as a state in 1959, the vastness of the American Empire
C to C, we can actually have coconut shrimp once we take Greenland.
That's going to be so delicious.
My God, this is great.
Guys, we have to go.
We have to go and we need to go to Duke.
Wonderful to see all of you.
Wonderful to see all of you out there.
Go become a Daily Wire member right now.
you can hear Matt Walsh vigorously defend slavery.
This is friendly fire, and we'll see you next.
You're killing me here.
