The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Raging Moderates: Are Protestors Playing Into Trump’s Hands?
Episode Date: June 11, 2025Scott and Jessica talk about the protests in California sparked by ICE raids, and the White House’s decision to deploy Marines and National Guard members in the city. They also get into what the Dem...ocrats’ message for the future should be, the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from El Salvador, the very public Musk/Trump breakup, and whether or not America will go out with a bang… or with a whimper. Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov. Follow Prof G, @profgalloway. Follow Raging Moderates, @RagingModeratesPod. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Raging Moderates. I'm Scott Galloway.
And I'm Jessica Darleff.
Jess, it's banter time.
I've been waiting for banter time because I need you to tell me about the rumble in Detroit.
Oh yeah, so I've had a great week. I went to the French Open, which I found lovely, which was
lovely. And then I got on a plane from Miami, did a speaking gig down there. Unfortunately, it was
raining. Miami loses 110% of its charm when it's raining. 110% is generous. I think it's more like
200%. Yeah. There you go.
And then I got on a plane from New York,
a couple of days in New York.
Daddy hit the members clubs, went deep in the paint,
a little alcohol, a little mushroom chocolates.
That's my next thing, mushroom chocolates.
It's like the tequila of psychedelics.
It takes you up.
Had never done those before and enjoyed them
more than I thought.
And then I went to Detroit for Summit, which is this big gathering.
They call it Learning Man.
It's talks during the day and then everyone does much more serious hallucinogenics and
listens to DJs and talks about vertical farming.
And as far as I can tell, it's a bunch of rich kids whose parents are putting them through
focusing on their sleep or, you know, I mean.
Didn't they fly you and some friends somewhere before
because they didn't have money to pay you.
So you were like, let's just all go on vacation.
Yeah.
To South America or something.
First of all, I'm being cynical.
I love the community.
I think they do a great job.
I think it's interesting people.
And my speaking fee is fairly crazy.
I've noticed.
Not that I'm trying to pay you, but...
But instead of charging them a speaking fee,
I say, let me bring my team and friends.
Because I think it costs like five or 10 grand
to go listen to DJs and hear me talk
about incremental quality.
And so I went to that, and my friend Pablo Deritas,
who runs Culture and Programming at the Fiena and my friend Pablo Doritas, who runs culture and programming at the Fine,
my favorite hotel in Miami,
he does this thing called the Rumble,
where they have two people.
The metaphor is a boxing match,
you come out in a ring.
The best part is the entrance.
My opponent was Sher Michael Singleton,
super impressive young man.
All downside for me, 34 year old black Republican,
like I lost before I got in the ring.
No, I saw your abs and I'm not trying
to get an HR violation, but you are looking fabulous.
I appreciate that and you're welcome to harass me
at any time, any point.
I see it as a feature, not a bug of a lower place,
if as long as it's coming this way.
Anyways, can I hear from people on that?
So, Sher Michael did a drum line,
which was fantastic, but I won up them.
I came out with five drag queens,
and I mean these ladies were outstanding.
They were fabulous.
And then audience has a question,
you answer, your opponent answers,
and at the end of like eight rounds,
they decide who wins and you get a big belt if you win.
It was really cool, I really enjoyed it.
So yeah, that's my midlife crisis tour.
And I knew I was gonna have to take my shirt off.
I decided to take my shirt off.
So additional dust is a testosterone
and I've been doing free weights
and loading up on the creatine
just to put it in the window a little bit.
So yeah, that was my, that was
my week. What did you do? What have you done the last week?
Nothing like that. I definitely haven't been testosterone dosing and creatine. You sound
though like when women are getting ready for their weddings, right? Like that you have
this push at the end to make sure that you look great in the dress, or in your case,
in the boxing shorts.
That's right.
It was pretty normal family stuff,
but I'm in the middle of a staycation at home.
Our girls are at Brian's mother's.
So we're at home without them.
And it's so great because you realize
that you actually love your home,
which you don't usually feel
because you're just like stepping on toys
and everyone is screaming and has a dirty diaper.
Not talking about my husband, talking about little people.
So that's been fun and going out to dinner,
which I miss doing without thinking about like,
oh, I have to get back for the babysitter.
So these are all very kind of average, I'm sure,
experiences for young parents, but I am enjoying my kid-free
week.
So you have great in-laws.
Yeah.
You have in-laws you can dump the kids at.
Well, also the nanny goes as well.
So the in-laws get to feel like they're taking care of kids, but they're not actually taking
care of kids.
That guy.
I take it back.
They're average to better than average in-laws.
No, they're fantastic, but you know.
Can I give you sort of some insider, a little insider info,
some like hacks on getting along with your in-laws?
Yeah.
It's very easy.
It's like buy them a Mercedes.
A hundred percent.
Don't communicate with them.
Don't communicate.
It's not a thing, Scott.
You can't do that.
And women can't do that.
That's like totally a dude thing.
That's when your relationship with your in-laws
comes off the tracks.
When you start communicating
and your father-in-law decides
he needs to let you know why he likes Trump.
And two, buy data Mercedes every three years.
And when your mother-in-law gives your father-in-law
just an unreasonable amount of shit and grief,
just look at her in the eye and nod.
Just to show that empathy for a little bit of crazy.
That's what I do. I just buy him a car every three years,
and when she's out of control,
I look at her and I'm like, I get it.
I 100 percent get it.
I'll work on it.
You're welcome, Jess.
Thank you.
Today, we're talking about
the LA protests sparked by ice raids.
That's bias. I don't want us bias saying it's sparked by ice raids. That's bias, that's not his bias saying it's sparked
by ICE raids, that's a little bit of our progressive bias
here, Kilmar Obrego Garcia's return and the fallout
from Musk and Trump's breakup and what it means
for the future of the GOP.
Okay, let's bust right into it, it's been a volatile
few days in Los Angeles.
Over the weekend, President Trump deployed 2000
National Guard troops to the city without a request
from the state, prompting swift backlash from Governor Newsom, who called
the move purposefully inflammatory.
Now California is suing.
The state filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, asking a federal judge to
declare the troop deployment unconstitutional and block future call-ups tied to street
protests.
Meanwhile, tensions on the ground remain high.
Over the last five days, law enforcement fired rubber bullets
and threw flashbangs at protesters in downtown LA
after projectiles were reportedly thrown at officers.
Over the weekend, police used similar tactics
to disperse crowds.
Protesters set self-driving cars on fire.
And parts of downtown were declared
an unlawful assembly zone.
One county official called Sunday probably one of the most volatile nights in LA's recent
memory.
The federal response is only escalating.
On Monday, U.S. Northern Command activated 700 Marines to help protect federal property
in the area.
The Pentagon also confirmed Trump had ordered another 2,000 National Guard troops from Los
Angeles on top of the original deployment.
The president's border czar, Tom Homan, said the Marines were necessary to quell protests, though he declined to explain what criteria the administration
is using to justify the moves. This all comes as outrage over Trump's immigration crackdown spreads
from the streets to the courts, especially in the case of Kimar Obrego Garcia, a man who was
mistakenly deported despite a judge's order, eventually returned to the U.S. and later faced
federal charges, he says are politically motivated.
And while public opinion on immigration remains split, Trump's tactics aren't winning him
support.
A new CBS News YouGov poll finds most Americans do support deporting undocumented immigrants
in theory, but a majority disapprove of how Trump is doing it.
Over 60% say no one should be deported without a court hearing. And many question whether these crackdowns make the country safer
or just do more harm than good.
Jess, what is your take on all of this?
It's distressing to see what's going on, but I overwhelmingly feel like Trump
is just having the best time ever.
Like he's in absolute heaven.
Trump is just having the best time ever. Like he's in absolute heaven.
So it's less than six months into his term,
and he has Russ Vogt as the head of OMB and now of Doge.
So if you thought Elon was bad in terms of what he was trying
to Doge, put the King of Project 2025 in charge.
He has yes men and yes women at DOD and DHS. Mike Johnson has been more useful to him
than I think he could have ever expected.
Remember at the beginning, he wasn't even that enchanted
with Mike Johnson, didn't know if he was gonna have
the backbone for this.
Mike Johnson by far and away earning his keep
at the Mar-a-Lago buffet.
And Scott Besson has forgotten that he hates tariffs.
There are scenes of troops, Marines, National Guard across Los Angeles.
And even though it was only a couple of people, there is an image of a shirtless protester on top of a flaming Waymo car waving a Mexican flag.
He is in absolute heaven with what's going on here.
And I know people point to the courts,
and I am one of those people and say,
the courts are holding the line, and they absolutely are.
But he's getting everything that he wanted,
everything that he dreamed of,
all of the people from the first administration
that were saying things like,
eh, we can't really invoke the Insurrection Act.
You know, maybe we should double-think this.
You know, the John Kellys of the world are gone, the Mark Espers of the world are gone,
and he and Stephen Miller are sitting side by side gleefully smiling at one another that
they just can't believe their luck.
That's writ large how I feel about what's going on now. In terms of the specifics of
Los Angeles, I think that we are in a new frontier of the immigration wars. This has
been bubbling because the administration has been frustrated that they weren't getting
enough deportations, that they were getting less on a daily basis by far and away than
the Biden administration. So they set a fake quota, 3000 people need to be out per day.
And the Washington Examiner, which is a conservative paper,
had some great reporting about a private meeting
with Stephen Miller and ICE agents
where he's berating them,
saying enough with going after the criminals.
You go to Home Depot and you go to 7-Eleven.
And that's where we are now.
People are being picked up off their job sites. They are
invading nail salons, elementary schools. There was a story about a pickup from a birthday party.
And most importantly, I think, is that they're showing up at immigration courts to take people
away. So the signal is clear that there actually is no right way to do this. If you are here
illegally, you can be sent home and you're most likely not going to get the due process
that you deserve as a protection from the Constitution. But we are going to have millions
of people going inside and hiding and living in abject terror of what's to come.
And I feel like we're pretty powerless to fight it.
Public opinion is swaying against this.
There's new YouGov polling out about disapproving of sending in the National Guard and sending
in the Marines.
And people don't like how he's executing this.
But I don't know if any of that matters.
See my first comment about how well
he thinks everything is going. Like, you're not going to get them out of office. And even
if there's a blue wave for the 2026 minterms, he's not doing anything through a normal legislative
route anyway. So what's the difference? Yeah, it's, I think your comments are spot on.
I always draw parallels when people say I'm being hysterical
or a catastrophist. I always draw parallels with 1930s Germany. And you don't have to be Hitler
to take a page out of his playbook. And we didn't just wake up with Auschwitz. It was a slow burn.
You know, a few of those incremental steps were recasting authoritarianism as patriotism
and claiming that the enemy was within.
You know, on the whole, Americans for the most part, on the whole day to day, pretty
much get along.
On the whole, our economy with all our problems around income inequality, 159 sovereign nations
in the world, the majority would kill to have our problems.
What you do or kind of the best practice around a move from a democracy,
which is based on trust to an autocracy, which is based on fear, is you claim
that the enemy is within.
And in the thirties, it was socialists and Jews.
And they talk about law and order as being that I will restore order.
And then they weaponize and order as being that I will restore order.
And then they weaponize and deputize the military. When you have tanks on the street, when you have the military being brought in
above and beyond state and local law enforcement, it essentially says, in my
opinion, our society is failing.
The last time it happened for me was in 1992.
I came home from graduate school and after the Rodney King riots, there was, I
lived in a very sleepy came home from graduate school. And after the Rodney King riots, there was, I lived on a very sleepy
suburb of Westwood, there were what looked like two high school kids and
fatigues and M15s just posted on every corner.
I remember thinking, wow, this is America now?
We're that country.
But this is how an authoritarian gets, they try and motivate or incite a
response so they can justify having an overreaction
against their political enemies.
Now the really sad part about it is that I won't say we, I'll say the protesters are
playing into their hands.
When you see people throwing rocks and stones at law enforcement officials and you see them
wearing masks and you see them waving Palestinian flags and even Mexican flags.
I think they should be waving American flags.
I think they're just absolutely playing into his autocracy playbook.
And this is incredibly disappointing.
I feel like these individuals who are angry and there's warranted anger and concern,
but they're absolutely making things worse
and giving them an excuse to call up the military.
I think Miller and Trump are praying
for a law enforcement official to be shot
such that they can warrant an overreaction here
and move to sort of a police state
and attempt to defend a straight
who is one of kind of the democratic strongholds, California and what is perceived
as a potential democratic presidential candidate.
And that's governor Newsom.
This is just so disappointing, both in terms of people
on the ground, protesters not recognizing they're doing
themselves a disservice with the way they acquit themselves.
But this is just, this is using a flame thrower
to fix a smoke alarm.
This is just unnecessary inflammation. Typically when the National Guard is called in, it's
at the request of the governor, it's at the request of the local police authorities. The
LAPD issued a statement a couple of days ago commending the protesters for what had been
to that point, very civil protests. And yet they invent,
this happened over and over in 30s Germany, invent the enemy within, preach about law and order,
have an overreaction of things to try and seize control, to avoid or obviate the total erosion of habeas corpus and say that the enemy is academics and immigrants
and Democrats that the enemy is within.
Yeah, I agree with what you're saying
and I'm thinking back to some of the rhetoric
from the campaign that they're poisoning
the blood of America and referring to them as vermin.
So that was straight 1930s playbook stuff.
I tend to not be an alarmist in that sense.
I don't like any comparisons to Hitler.
Hitler was one of a kind in the absolute worst way,
but you are definitely seeing the important components
of democracy being stripped away
or an attempt to strip them away.
And that's deeply concerning to me. I think that Governor Newsom and Mayor Bass have done
an incredible job in managing what's going on. And central to that has been that they have led
every statement that they have made with there is no tolerance for violence on behalf of the
protesters. That's a clear signal that we've learned our lesson from the Black Lives Matter summer,
where things got wildly out of control and there wasn't enough democratic leadership
out there.
Some exceptions like Keisha Lance Bottoms, who was the mayor of Atlanta, who got up there
and basically said, what the fuck are you doing?
There is a way to do this properly? There is a way to do this properly
and there is a way to do this wrong
and you are doing it the wrong way.
So I like that there has been a call
for peaceful protest at every single opportunity.
The lawsuit that Governor Newsom has filed
against the administration,
I don't really know where that goes,
but I do think it's important that we seem like
there's fighting back on every level.
I should note as well that all of this is going on while there's a threat from the administration
to defund California.
So this is an incredibly precarious time that Newsom has to be operating in.
And I think that he has seemed downright presidential at these moments and also saying, you know,
go ahead, come
and arrest me.
And that's what Trump is threatening now.
And even Tom Homan is trying to walk it back.
And then of course, Trump, who has no limits or care for what is possible actually, or
even legal just, you know, keeps harping on it.
And that just makes Newsom seem stronger.
But January 6th always exists in the back of my mind, right? Our
country is being run by people who don't have a respect for the rule of law or for our vote,
right? That they tried to overturn a free and fair election and then we send them back
to the most important seat in the world. And my mind is going to this scary place where you think this might just
be step one or step two heading towards a place where we don't have elections. Because
if you want to militarize the country, which is what he wants to do, and the decree that
he sent down actually means it's not just about sending troops into California. They can be sent anywhere.
And it's very few limitations on what justifies sending the troops out.
It's what you decide as a rebellion.
It doesn't even have to be violent protests, et cetera.
David Frum wrote in the Atlantic, you know, for Trump, this is a dress rehearsal.
And you can see a world in which an administration that already says everything is an emergency.
So they've exercised emergency powers more than any of their predecessors, you know,
everything from immigration to the economy, tariffs, energy emergency, etc.
So if we live in a constant state of emergency, if you can deploy troops at the drop of a hat, we're recording this on Tuesday
morning, another 2000 National Guard is being sent, and we
should note, refuse to send them for January 6, which is really
what an insurrection looks like. You could see a world where it
comes time to vote and we're living in a military state. And
somehow that isn't possible.
You know, seizing control of local operations of government.
Maybe that is a step, I don't know what number step in this process, but it's something that's
hanging over my head and it's really distressing me.
What do you think about that?
Have you catastrophized to that level?
Yeah, I'm a glass half empty kind of guy, so it's easy for me to go there.
That's what I love about you. There you go. Bring me down even further. I'm
already like on ground level. Take me subterranean. I'm just so sick of everyone saying
they're an optimist. You know, yeah, you need an optimist to vent a plane. You need
pessimists to have seat belts. But anyways, there are three firewalls here. And so let's go
through each of them. The first is the courts.
And I think the courts are doing their jobs.
Essentially, anytime this gets in front of a judge,
even if it's a Trump appointed judge, they go,
no, you can't raise tariffs and claim you're doing this
because it's wartime.
No, you can't cut all research from medical funding
to a university because you've decided it's anti-Semitic.
We're talking about research for diabetes. And so the courts seem to be doing their job. The second is the media.
I'm mixed on the media. I think there's a lot of good on the ground reporting,
but the media isn't interested in giving you a real, they're not going to cover the peaceful
protests. That doesn't, they might say this is bullshit and talk about this is
peaceful protest as a means of diminishing or puncturing the validity of
this over-response, but they don't really give the rest of the world a sense for
the real vibe in LA.
And when I talk to people in LA, they say, yeah, there's flashpoints.
I've seen them on the news, but
Everything's fine.
We're at brunch.
Yeah.
We're, we're all going to Gelson's and headed to the movies or whatever it is people.
Getting like a $90 smoothie.
Yeah, we're not, we're fine.
We're still going to Nobu tomorrow night.
It's just, it's not like the riots.
That was different or it's not nothing like COVID
or anything like that.
But on the whole, I would say the media
is doing its level best.
And there's a lot of kind of citizen journalism.
I've seen that.
I think it's been pretty good.
And then civil protest is sort of the third leg of the stool.
And I would argue that started strong.
I just think that the absolute worst thing for us is when you see someone
waving a Palestinian flag with a mask on, you know, on top of a burning car.
That's literally like, okay, the Democrats are fucking out of control.
They may not endorse this, but they tolerate it.
Things are out of control and people's emotions start to, they just get angry
and they want an over correction.
And so I would say that there's some elements of the protest that are
just absolutely feeding into this.
that there's some elements of the protest that are just absolutely feeding into this.
The scenario here where things get really bad is that it's much more dramatic to think about a nation as great as America goes out with a boom. That it's a huge civil war where we have
the Air Force pitted against the Navy and the Coast Guard has to pick a side and people with
all their guns take to the streets
and there's this civil war and then, you know, whatever side wins, they take over the state
capitals of blue states or if the blue states win, they end up assaulting the White House.
I don't think America ends like that. I think it's much less cinematic. And this is one of
those steps to what would be, I would argue, a fairly non-dramatic,
non-cinematic end of America as we know it.
And it plays out something like this.
Trump tries to foment an overreaction and a militarization or an occupation
of our biggest blue states.
And then Governor Newsom says, hey boss, I send 70, 80 billion dollars more than I get from you.
I'm out. I'm not sending you 80 billion dollars. I'm sick of funding your attempt to militarize my
state and funding the red states who seem to have endorsed your militarization of our state. I'm no
longer sending you this 80 billion dollars. Or Texas, if say governor Newsom or
representative Torres is elected president, they say, we're not certifying the
election. We don't recognize this president.
And then slowly, but surely you have California tech based economy that does
business with Asia.
You have Texas lead in oil and energy based economy that does business with the
Gulf. You have the Midwest, an industrial economy, manufacturing economy that does a lot of business
with Canada, the East coast, financial services and media economy that does a lot of business
with Europe.
They each develop their own currencies.
They come to a detente.
They don't want to go to war against each other.
They don't want to escalate that far, but slowly but surely you end up with a series
of nation states that look very similar to the EU, where you have big
ones like Germany and that'd be California, smaller ones like Florida,
which would look more like France or what have you.
And America kind of ends with a whimper, not a bang.
I think there's a non-zero probability we're sort of at letter C or D in that
devolution or digression to a breaking up of America.
And I don't think it's, I think people think, well, it's not going to happen because I
can't imagine, you know, grabbing my gun and going somewhere and potentially killing my
cousins who live in Atlanta.
I don't think that's going to happen.
You think it could be peacefully done?
Where we just, we go into a federalist system and we say this is what the Northeast looks like.
No longer sending money to the federal government.
I'm capturing my own property and income taxes.
I come up with my own shit coin, the Texas coin
that is used as currency here.
And we essentially have our own economy,
our own elected officials.
We ignore federal mandates, federal laws.
We come up with our own constitution, maybe blue and red. It might be blue states that lead
this to say, we've had enough. We're done. We're California. We're the fourth largest
economy in the world. We'll go our own way. We'll be able to house the homeless if we
don't have to send $80 billion to DC to fund a military occupation of our state. I mean,
that to me seems like a fairly cogent argument if, and by the way, I don't believe
we should do that.
I think it's a terrible idea.
But I can see blue and red states creating a narrative where they justify kind of a slow
sequestering from the federal government.
Well, I think people will tire of, if they haven't already, the ricochet effect of what
a new administration means every four or eight years, right?
That you have to totally recast how you see America or how America operates depending
on who holds the Oval Office.
And America is not supposed to be that way. There are supposed to be fundamental
principles and ideas and sets of laws that govern. And that is supposed to bring some
consistency. And then the difference in the political parties that are in charge are supposed
to make changes more or less around the edges. Right? And then we have a slightly different
tax policy or immigration policy changes this way. Oh, you know, we're going to do more nuclear power.
Oh, we're cutting down on EV credits, et cetera.
Like that's I think how people had understood what's going on.
But we are in a moment where people want to burn it all down.
And I don't know if you read David Brooks's column from the end of last week in The Times,
but he was talking about how one of the ways at least that he sees
that the Democrats don't get it or are not prepared for this moment is that we're thinking
way too small in terms of what can be achieved and that the problems that we face as a country
and as a political party are not going to be solved by having a good midterms, right?
Or even having Governor Shapiro turn into President Shapiro in 2028, but that the Republicans
have much better understood the moment and how much people hate the system, you know,
system TM, right?
But see that this deck is stacked so enormously against the average person
that unless you are willing to actually burn it down, that you can't capture real
support from the American body politic.
And I think that there's a lot of merit to that.
You know, how do we make it clear to people that we understand how important this moment is,
how scared everyone is, and that also business as usual
is not something that they are interested in returning to?
So we have to at once be the adults in the room that
can quell everything and bring us back to a status quo,
but we also have to destroy the status quo at the same time. And the Republicans never had to do that. They just went all burn it down
and they were able to get reelected. But Democrats have to be both parent and child. And that's a
very complex role to have to fill. Okay, let's take a quick break. Stay with us.
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Welcome back. So I'm, I'm, I'm renovating house and building a house. And what I've found much
to my surprise is that it actually takes less time to build a house than to renovate one.
Because there's, you know, historic society, you run into a pipe.
Once you have your architectural plans on a piece of land and you have zoning, you can just go wham, you just go.
And I do think the advantage that the Democrats should lean into right now is basically, I think our party is almost at zero right now.
We had leader Jeffries, we interviewed him.
I think he's a wonderful congressman,
a wonderful representative.
I don't think he is up to the job
of leading the Democratic party through this.
And I think Senator Schumer is case study number one
for why we need age limits and how weak we've become.
I think there's very strong bench,
but I don't know if it's party orthodoxy or format or
systemic rules that keep these voices more quiet, whatever it is, but we are literally
starting from zero.
And I think that's an opportunity.
It's like what Yoda said to Luke Skywalker, you must forget what you know.
So forget everything about identity politics. Forget everything about Democrats trying to show their affection for special
interest groups by just cutting them a check.
Like if you had a blank slate, which I think the Democratic party kind of does right now.
If you were to propose a tax bill, what would be your core themes?
Would it be around encouraging housing?
Would it be around capital formation?
Would it be around lowering tax rates and moving to a flat tax?
But it's non-negotiable.
These tax rates are non-negotiable for everybody.
Everybody, if everybody paid about 24% in tax, corporations and individuals,
you're kind of done.
No deficits.
That's it.
24%.
I think most people would sign up for that.
They'd go, okay, I'm down with that.
If that's going to give my kids a better life and it's simple and I don't have to deal with
accountants and taxation and you know, just a postcard as Ross Perot said,.24 times my
top line income.
Boom, we're done.
And maybe it's zero.
Anyone makes less than $80,000 at zero, two taxes.
You make less than $80,000 at zero, above 80, it make less than $80,000 at zero above 80, it's 24, above 10 million.
It's 64.
I'm already making it more complex than it needs to be, but we'd have to have
someone from the democratic side or a group of democratic representatives say,
this is our contract with America.
These are the three things we're focused on.
And try and get away from the identity politics and the hand
ringing over the trans community or, you know, pronouns or just, okay, we
are totally focused on the material and psychological well-being of Americans.
They're very focused on their economics.
I mean, flat tax, more housing and socialization of medicine.
Within 10 years, everyone's going to have coverage and no one's ever going to have
to come out of pocket more than $1,000 a year.
You're never going to find out that your wife has cancer and that means you're going
bankrupt.
Whatever it is, I'm not saying those are even the right things.
Foreign policy, our foreign policy is we're going to bring in really fucking smart people
to figure out these complex problems, but we're not going to dictate foreign policy right now around what it means to meet American abroad. Or maybe it's
the restoration of alliances. Our job is to take advantage of the unbelievable prosperity that we've
recognized through global trade. We're going on a gigantic apology tour. We're going to take down,
not only we're going to go anti-tariff, we're going to have bigger, bolder free trading zones
around the world.
Biggest tax cut in history will be if we kiss and make up with China.
There has to be some IP protection, but just as the cost of clothes have been
cut in half because 97% are imported into the U S right.
Let's get rid of this old stupid 1890s thinking we're going to have more
global trade.
Shit's going to get much cheaper for Americans.
And we're going to try and restore the Alliance, the greatest Alliance in
history, and that is between men and women.
Men have to stop this bullshit of thinking that their struggles have
come because of the assent of women.
This is not a zero sum game.
And women, we need you to stop saying that men don't have problems.
They are the problem.
We need men and women to get on each other's side again.
I don't know what it is, alliances, housing,
an embrace of global trade.
I don't know, three things, but the Democrats need to say,
okay, this is an etch-a-sketch, and it's been shaken,
and it's blank right now.
What new lines do you wanna draw?
And for God's sakes, get it out there,
propose something and get it out there,
such that we're just not all running around, you
know, accusing Trump of being a fascist over and over.
Like, we have to move to the positive part of this.
What are our proposals?
What are our counter-proposals?
And the exciting thing is, I don't think we're renovating a house here.
I think the house is burnt down.
I think the Democratic Party, given this move towards authoritarianism, despite that, Trump would be reelected today. I think that if he
was running against Vice President Harris and the Democratic establishment, I think he'd
probably win today. So the Democratic Party is done as we know it. And the ideals and principles
and bench are really strong. We have some outstanding assets.
So what would we do new?
Don't even mention Trump's name.
Don't even mention his name.
Hopefully he has an afterthought
in whatever goes on for 2028 anyway.
But it seems to me that mentioning Donald Trump
is perhaps the quickest way to get people to turn off,
but is at least in the top five
in terms of who they're looking to support
as a politician or as a political party.
His people have already made up their minds about him
years and years and years ago, frankly,
and to self-flagellate a bit.
We forced people back into his arms,
or we made it a lot easier to go and do that in 2024.
And I think that if voters could see Democrats at least spitballing the way that you were,
so some of the things that you said I like, some of the things, you know, I want to double
tap on and push back, you know, I'm not a big flat tax person, but at least you're having
a discussion about this.
And no one would penalize a politician for showing up with a postcard that said,
an economy that works for everyone, decent health care that isn't going to bankrupt you,
an education system that works.
And then you build out the rest of it.
I think focusing on domestic policy is the way to win a domestic election.
I think that our alliances and partnerships abroad are certainly important, but people are most
concerned with what's going on in their house right now.
That's why they call them the kitchen table issues.
Like, they're going to get up, they're going to go to work, they're going to think about
how much they're being paid to do that work, their kids are going to get up and go to school,
they're going to come home and they're going to sit around the dinner table and they're
going to think about what it is that they're having for dinner and if it was too expensive or cost the right amount.
That's basically what life looks like for the average person.
And you are also describing a governor.
You are describing someone who has worked in management.
And you can see the kind of clarity that's delivered in a speech by a J.P. Pritzker,
a Wes Moore, Josh Shapiro, Governor
Whitmer, Jared Polis, etc. It doesn't even actually matter the topic that they're discussing. Jared
Polis talking about anti-Semitism, which is not going to be the lead issue or the lead platform
plank for someone running for president. But there is a clarity that comes with having to manage a state that you just
don't get from people that give, you know, soaring speeches on the floor of Congress.
These people have to get shit done. They have to rebuild I-95. They have to repair a bridge.
They have to bring a community back together after some lunatic anti-Semite is throwing
flames on Jews peacefully protesting.
So I'm very much in on the governor train right now
and somebody declaring, I have a higher opinion,
I think to some degree of what Hakeem Jeffries is doing
than you do because keeping the caucus together
is difficult work.
I bet, yeah, that's fair.
Especially when you have, you know,
super conservative members of the caucus
over to the AOCs of the world,
and Democrats have at least been able
to have a unified front.
And I think that that matters,
and especially in opposing legislation, et cetera.
But point taken on all of those fronts.
What are your thoughts on Kilmer Obregah Garcia, Jess?
So I was pleased to see that he was returned
to face his day and quarter to get his due process,
but was pretty disturbed by the indictment that they had.
I don't know if you saw Pam Bondi's press conference about it.
So this all came together,
and I think the grand jury met a couple of weeks ago.
But this indictment, which was filed in Tennessee,
is absolutely scathing,
and alleges that he was engaged in smuggling men,
women, and children.
She also went off script and talked about all these things
that he allegedly did that aren't even in the indictment,
like talking about murder and child pornography.
And you would think if that was true
that it would probably be in the indictment itself. But now we have kind of like a mini fight within the larger
fight because Kilmer Arbrego-Garcia's lawyers have filed a contempt lawsuit against the
administration. They're sticking with it because it's quite clear that they could have brought
him home months ago. So it was three months ago that he was mistakenly deported. And I'm
using the terms that they even used.
It was a mistake that he was sent. Then two months since the Supreme Court said
you need to facilitate his return and then they finally got around to it.
I think because public opinion was so clear about this. He may be an MS-13 member.
He may be the gangbanger that they said and not the Maryland dad,
but that people deserve their due process rights and it's a lot different to deport someone versus to put them in sea
caught, right? To put them in a foreign gulag where they may never see the light of day
again. And I just wanted to bring up, you know, also about the indictment itself. And
that's where the next phase of this battle will be fought, that a high ranking prosecutor in Tennessee,
this guy Ben Schrader resigned over this indictment,
fearing that Albrego Garcia was being targeted
for political reasons.
So this isn't just someone claiming that he's turned
into a political pawn or a target.
It's somebody who has worked with the federal government
for a long time saying that that is the case.
And not to get too nitty gritty,
but this is going back to a 2022 incident
where he was pulled over.
He had many passengers in the car.
He was driving them to a construction site in Maryland.
He told authorities at the time
that they had originated in Texas.
The current government, Pam Bondi's DOJ,
is denying that that was ever stated
at the time.
So there's a lot of fuzziness around this, but the big flashing red light to me is this
prosecutor resigning over it.
And I don't know if that means that Obregó-Garcia ends up going free and it's all totally fine.
But it seems like the Trump administration needed to find a solution or save face after they've
been humiliated on so many fronts when it comes to immigration and that they may have
and let this play out, but they may have created a scenario that isn't particularly accurate.
Yeah, I'm trying to think of someone who's been more politicized than this young man. I just, he's now got essentially the Department of Justice,
which has been weaponized against him and an entire administration is,
who's not, does not shy away from lying or I would imagine
recasting evidence.
They feel as if their whole reputation around this issue is showing that he's
evil and finding a way to put him in prison for longer. So yeah, politicization is an understatement here.
Do you think it was a mistake to make this case as big of a deal as the Democrats did?
Because that is a discussion that's still going on internally. Like if it does end up
that this quote unquote Maryland dad, you know, is a human smuggler or whatever,
and God forbid the child porn stuff is true, any of it,
do you think it was a waste of capital?
Because I don't, and I think that going for due process
is what matters the most, no matter who he turns out to be,
and that we have a higher chance of getting people
like Andre Hernandez, the gay makeup artist who's also in El Salvador, the Venezuelan back, if there's a precedent
that they can get people out of CICOT.
But I do understand the flip side argument as well, that if we're talking about him,
we're not talking about tariffs.
Yeah, I think it's an interesting point because the way you grab people's emotions is you
humanize it with individual stories.
But that's a risk.
I would have stuck to just probably habeas corpus, and I'm not sure I would have gone
down there.
I think they should have just stuck with, look, there's just the definition of a concentration
camp is lifting people out of their one region, sending them to another one such that they
don't have the protections and rights that they had domestically.
We should not have concentration camps and
everyone needs to be brought back and for due process.
I just would have stuck with that argument and list
people and maybe reference them and individuals and
the most obvious ones are the most blatant ones.
But to pin your hopes on one person, I mean, if
this guy has done half of what they say he's done,
it could backfire. And I wouldn't even engage in the argument.
Yeah, maybe he is guilty of all these things.
We'll find out.
The constitution is clear.
It says persons, not citizens.
And an underpinning of our judicial system is the following.
We purposely decide to err on the side of occasionally letting someone guilty go free
as opposed to incarcerating innocent people. So that means we go through incredible expense
and provide some people who are awful with rights at the time that feel like unfair to the victims or
to safety, but that is the approach we've taken to national security.
And if we want to have a different approach where,
okay, innocent people end up in prison, innocent
people end up incarcerated without due process,
with no access to their family, perhaps even shipped
to different black sites or concentration camps.
All right, a vote for those people, but the
current constitution does not allow for that. I'm not sure.
I worry that we've, we've doubled down too much on an individual's background
that we don't know that much about, or that the government using their
synchronicity with Fox news and different conservative media outlets
and doctoring of photos over tattoos is going to be able to just say,
hey, we should have left them down there.
Look at you guys are wrong. This is a bad ombre.
That's not the argument.
The argument is we take the worst people and we give them due process
and habeas corpus because we want everyone to have access to that.
So, you know, we'll see how it plays out.
But this is, you've always said correctly,
I was watching him on the five,
that this is still his most popular issue
or the issue he has the most support on.
All right, let's take a quick break.
Stay with us.
A few weeks ago, Google dropped VO3, Generative AI video,
but now with Generative AI sound to go with it. This is video dropped VO3, Generative AI video, but now with Generative AI sound to
go with it.
This is video from VO3.
What do you think about the idea that we're just a bunch of prompts?
If I'm generated from a prompt, how come I don't have six fingers?
So is this.
About to do the first plunge into an active volcano.
Let's send it.
And this.
Breaking news, the Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, has died after drinking an entire
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A Slop Monger's dream, says The Verge.
It might actually take my job, says YouTuber Matthew Berman.
The world is not ready, says Mashable.
We're so cooked, says thousands of people on social media.
But are we?
Maybe not.
That's our take at Today Explained.
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Welcome back.
One of the most powerful alliances in American politics
just blew up spectacularly.
Donald Trump and Elon Musk,
once political partners and mutual hype men, are now trading
insults, threats, and even conspiracy theories in a very public, very messy breakup.
It started with Musk blasting Trump's GOP-backed mega bill as a disgusting abomination.
I think he said pork-filled disgusting abomination, which by the way, Jess, is the new odd derv
at TGI Fridays.
Trump hit back saying he was very disappointed
and floated cutting Musk's massive federal contracts.
Musk escalated, claiming Trump is in the Epstein files.
Oh, there we go.
That was the best.
It escalated to pedophile in like four minutes.
That's right.
And even reposted calls for impeachment
before deleting them days later. Meanwhile, Vice President
J.D. Vance tried to play peacemaker saying Musk's criticisms were understandable, but that his loyalty still lies with Trump.
Jesus, could you sound more mealy-mouthed? The online war briefly paused after intermediaries from both camps reportedly got on the phone,
but the damage appears to be done.
This just isn't about egos though, Jess, the fallout threatens major legislation, billions
in government contracts and the balance of power
in the GOP, just as Trump pushes for his biggest
domestic win yet.
Jess, is this feud really about the mega-bill
and government contracts, or is it about something
else? What are your thoughts?
I think it's about both.
And everything is tied together when you're
dealing with the president and his co-president
for a time.
You know, there's the money of this, which matters a huge amount.
You know, Tesla is not Tesla without those EV credits.
And I think Musk did a lot of the Democrats' messaging work to say things like, well, you
didn't touch oil and gas, so why are you coming after clean energy?
You know, in some ways this happens regularly,
but your opponent gives you some good tips
on how to message about these things
when they have a break and are morally clear out loud
every once in a while.
And I just think like, write that down.
There's that great SNL skit,
there's a Melissa McCarthy one from years ago.
It's about Hidden Valley Ranch.
Everyone should go watch it. It's very funny.
But she keeps saying like write that down, write that down.
And as Musk is talking,
I'm saying like write that down, write that down.
Because somebody that's on the inside is exposed to
things that we haven't been necessarily as the formal opposition.
And if it's something that's affecting Elon Musk, it's affecting other Republicans as well,
that there are other people within the party or in the GOP infrastructure who are thinking
similarly. So I'm team Ro Khanna on the engaging Elon Musk. I don't think that we are in a position to write off anybody that might help us defeat
this bill or win future elections.
And it does seem like the protests in Los Angeles has kind of brought Trump and Musk
together a little bit.
You see Musk posting on Twitter, you know, that it's a good thing that the troops are
there and oh my God, I can't believe that cars are on fire,
they're waving Mexican flags, et cetera.
So I think it's doing some of the repair work
that Musk decided that he wanted,
but Trump wasn't necessarily ready to talk,
which I think is so funny,
just in terms of the breakup vibes of it all.
But what really stuck out to me, I guess, is twofold.
So one, that they both think the other is completely depraved.
Right. Elon Musk, at core, thinks that Trump is a pedophile. Right. Someone who's on the
Epstein list was happy to be engaging in that kind of behavior. And Trump, when pushed,
thinks that Elon Musk is a drug addict who isn't making good decisions,
but they'll come together for the purposes
of accumulating power no matter the circumstance.
And that is the lesson in all of this.
I know politics makes strange bedfellows,
but I like to think that if you believed somebody
was doing it with 14-year-old girls,
that you probably wouldn't want to be
in political bed with them.
And that if you thought that someone else was really losing it and couldn't get through
the day without being on ketamine, that you wouldn't want to put them essentially in charge
of government or giving them such a big job.
So that was one lesson from it.
And the other lesson of this for me is that Donald Trump is really scared of Elon Musk.
So his response was so much more muted than we have seen in the past when someone pisses him off,
let alone someone turning against him that has that much access to power and that he felt was that close to him,
you know, having him in the Oval, having him at Mar-a-Lago, bringing his kids around, et cetera,
or kid, I should say,
only one of them gets to come out in public.
And so you could see that, that anxiety about what Musk
could do from funding challengers to the Republican Party
to what he could do in space that he could,
turn off the grid, right?
Like this guy has immense power
and he needs the government contracts,
which is Trump's card to play,
but he seemed genuinely petrified of what a life
with Elon Musk against you looks like.
If this thing were any gayer,
it'd be a show on Bravo sponsored by Grindr.
I just can't get over what total bitches these two are.
And I say bitch androgynously as people acting
like total children and not like grownups.
I think this is so embarrassing
that these are the two individuals
that the majority of young people are supposed to look up to,
the president and the world's wealthiest man.
It has nothing to do with the bill.
Musk knew about this bill.
If Musk gave a good goddamn about the deficit and this pork,
he wouldn't be recommending that we cut 40 to 50% of the IRS.
I mean, there's estimates that there's a $600 billion a year tax gap,
and that is our inability because of the neutering
of the IRS, our inability to actually collect
the taxes that are owed.
So the notion somehow that he just can't handle the deficit
and what's happening to our country,
that is so fucking ridiculous.
He kind of got what he wanted.
They have neutered and basically fired every inspector general
that's going to get in the way of his autonomous driving regulations or any
case against him has kind of magically gone away.
So the notion that somehow he's just outraged about the bill, oh, and that
he just figured out that Epstein was guilty of sex crimes on an island.
A jury of Trump's peers found that he was guilty of sex crimes on an island. A jury of Trump's peers found that he was guilty of sex crimes on an
island called Manhattan.
What?
He didn't know that.
Like he just figured that out that this guy has a past that is really unsavory.
But he decided to work with them when, when he'd been convicted of sexual
assault, but now he's just, he's outraged by the pork in this bill.
And he's upset at Trump's past.
And then Trump goes immediately to let's deport him.
Let's cut his subsidies.
And it's just, you know, when I think of what it means to aggregate power,
one of the real opportunities and signals that you've attained power in a thoughtful,
high integrity way is that you
get to be a peacemaker. Your job is to deescalate. If you have real skills on a board of directors,
you're asked to mediate between the rest of the board and the CEO. And the President of
the United States, more than any individual in the world, is asked to step in and deescalate
conflicts that could ratchet up to nuclear war.
Naturally, when Pakistan and India get into border skirmishes, it could go a very ugly
place.
Usually you think of bringing in the Secretary of State of the United States under the auspices
of the president to try and deescalate.
This person has the most skills and the most resources and the most respect globally to
deescalate, to turn the heat down.
And we no longer occupy that position when these two get into this ridiculous love quarrel. That's how I can see it. Musk wants Trump's relevance and Trump wants Musk's cult or vice versa.
And the fact that they would immediately digress to these types of personal statements and indictments against each other is just evidence that neither commands the position they occupy.
And it's just such a bad look.
The war between Musk and Trump reminds me of the war between Iran and Iraq, and that is
I'm rooting for the bullets.
I gotta be honest, I'm enjoying it.
And unfortunately, it's a distraction from this tax bill, which is a transfer of
wealth from poor to rich, young to old, future to past.
But Trump is scared of the guy because Musk was correct.
He probably got Trump elected.
He probably swung the Congress to the Republicans.
swung the Congress to the Republicans.
So Musk can rightfully claim credit or is responsible
and accountable for what's going on right now, because he did weaponize his platform, quarter of a
billion dollars.
He probably did have a big impact on the election,
which speaks to God, we need some sort of reform
around Citizens United.
I mean, we really can't have
one person electing the president, and then that
person wanted to be president.
I think what really happened here is he wanted
more input on his NASA pick, he wanted to be
involved in the pick for the CIA, Besant said no,
you don't get to pick the new head of the IRS.
He wanted to be in on China briefings.
He basically wants to be an unelected president.
And a lot of his cabinet members threw up on that.
Supposedly there was actually a physical altercation
between him and Bessent.
Yeah, with Bessent, right?
And also the thing that kind of explains a lot of this
is that according to the New York Times
and Wall Street Journal,
Elon Musk is a rabid drug addict.
And I don't know if you've ever had a drug addict in your life.
I have.
It is striking.
I mean, it is sort of unbelievable what inconsistencies, irrationality,
weirdness, ability to lie through the teeth through the people they love
most in the world can happen when drugs take over.
I mean, you lose your shit.
If you look at what this guy is tweeting out and then in a moment of sobriety, deleting,
that's what we're dealing with here.
We're dealing with children.
This is bad for both of them.
They both lose.
I think Musk, to a certain extent,
is doing what a lot of CEOs would like to do.
And that is just to hit back.
But Elon Musk doesn't need the money.
He's got control of his board.
It doesn't matter that he lost $150 billion in Tesla market cap in one day
because he controls the board.
He doesn't need more money.
He's not scared of his board.
Every other CEO would probably get fired if they did this.
They'd be like, look, good for you. I hope that was fun. But our stock's off 14% today because you can't hold your
tongue. So this is, it's, it's theater, but you come out of the theater just thinking, oh wow,
how do I feel nauseous? What a waste of two and a half hours. Yeah. What a waste. What a waste of
drama here. I do think that part of what we are seeing on Musk,
not to give him too much emotional credibility,
is his disappointment for the way government works
and the realities of what's happening
within the government itself.
So he was angry, rightfully so,
that they were only gonna codify $9 billion
in the quote unquote savings that he found.
And I think it is important that a Doge employee
who has been Doge'd himself said, quote,
I personally was pretty surprised actually
at how efficient the government was.
Fraud was minimal and abuse was, quote,
relatively non-existent.
So I think that Musk came in with this vision
of what it was going to be like, and that
he and Trump were partners, and that everyone really believed in Doge, and they were going
to do their best to make sure that these cuts were codified, and he faced resistance internally
in some cases from the other cabinet secretaries, the courts certainly, but then also the fact that the
government is much more efficient than anyone expected. And that is a very difficult needle
to thread for the Democrats because nobody wants to hear actually that this enormous behemoth
of a federal government is doing as good as possible or as well as possible. I should say
my English should be better.
But I think that that is an important component
to the breakdown that he had, frankly,
that he walked into a pretty well-humming machine
and then was minimized by the man
that promised him the world and that he paid $294 million
or whatever it was to get elected.
You know, I love that. I think it's a Buddhist saying that the man with good health has thousands
of problems and the man with bad health has one problem. Actually, is that appropriate here?
Basically, I'm trying to get to there are so many injustices just flying under the radar right now
because of the weirdness and economic threat
and usurp of congressional power,
that we're missing a lot of stuff
that is, in my opinion, just so outrageous.
And I was especially incensed by something that happened
last week, the first week of Pride Month.
I don't know if you're familiar with Harvey Milk.
Harvey Milk served in the Korean War.
He went on to be an elected US supervisor, one of the first openly gay elected officials
in America.
He served his country and his reviews in his military record, he actually worked on a submarine.
He was promoted.
His reviews say he was outstanding, he was promoted to officer.
And then in 1954, he was outed as gay and was given a decision by his superiors to
either resign from the military with less than honorable discharge or some weird
thing that basically is not an honorable discharge or face court martial.
And so he decided to resign from the military, forgo all of his military
benefits, and then went on to be an activist and was
the first openly gay elected official or one of the first in San Francisco to the Board
of Supervisors, which provides huge comfort to, I think, a lot of gay people who thought
that they were never going to have real robust representations.
As I like to say, he was gay before it was cool. He was out when it was a real risk to your reputation and your personal safety.
And he was murdered along with Mayor Bill Moscone by actually a fellow supervisor.
And the U.S. Navy, they put in a request, there's a process for putting in a request
to name a ship, so they put in a request in 2017 that Harvey Milk,
and some small nod to his service and his memory
that they name a ship after him.
So they named the USNS Harvey Milk,
was christened in 2021.
And just a nod to the inclusivity
that the armed services are known for.
And Secretary Hegseth decides the first week of Pride Month to rename that ship,
which is just such a giant unnecessary fuck you to the gay community. It's not only cruel and
unnecessary, it's really fucking stupid because we are in an environment right now where 70%
of the men who show up to a services recruiting office do not qualify to be a
private in the army because they are either obese or can't pass a basic mental
wellness test.
And we want to say to America, of which most surveys show somewhere between five and 8% of America identifies as gay,
that you can come here, serve proudly.
And if by chance you get something named after you, by chance, you get a medal,
the moment we let far right weirdos whose heart is full of hate,
they might embarrass your, your descendants and pull your name off a shit.
It's not only stupid, it makes us less safe.
And as somebody who interacts with our service personnel
all the time, and you know, I don't know how to say this
without sounding stupid, some of my best friends are gay.
I'm pretty sure gay people are just as good
at defending our borders and killing people as straight people. I have
seen no difference in their ability or their skills to serve on the ground, to be paratroopers
or to be fixing planes. I have never seen, I don't, by the way, I don't think they're
any better at it, but I'm pretty sure they're not any worse at it. And so when you say to
a population,
a huge population in America,
you really aren't welcome to serve.
It degrades our ability to defend our shores
and kill bad guys.
It's just so stupid.
And I don't wanna,
I wanna move away from the democratic playbook
of moral indignation here,
but unnecessarily unrequested pulling someone's name off an unimportant ship
under the auspices of trying to restore, he says,
this notion of a warrior mentality.
What?
What the?
Yeah, it flies in the face of the argument
that they're making, which is we don't care who you are
as long as you're good at your job.
Well, guess what?
Harvey Milk was good at his job and he happened to be gay.
So, I mean, and they did point out
that the timing was intentional.
You know, they're not embarrassed
of doing these kinds of things.
And I'm glad to see that recruitment is up.
I think it's important, et cetera.
And this was a trend that started
before Trump came in to office, but it has accelerated.
And the cruelty is the point. It's always the point. This is cruel and it's dumb. And
it shines a very negative light on the way that our armed services are being run.
Nat Senners Cruel and dumb. Let's leave it there. All right. That's all for this episode,
Jess. Thank you for listening to Raging Moderates. Our producers are David Toledo and Eric Gennikis.
Our technical director is Drew Burroughs. Starting this week, you'll find Raging Moderates. Our producers are David Toledo and Eric Geniches. Our technical director is Drew Burrows. Starting this week, you'll find Raging
Moderates every Wednesday and Friday. That's every Wednesday and Friday.
Subscribe to Raging Moderates on its own feed to hear exclusive interviews with
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You too.