The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Raging Moderates: Elon Musk’s Federal Government Takeover
Episode Date: February 11, 2025Scott Galloway and Jessica Tarlov break down Elon Musk’s growing influence in the government and the legal battles piling up against him and DOGE. They dive into Trump’s latest federal worker buyo...ut plan, his controversial comments on Gaza, and the Democrats’ strategy to push back. Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov. Follow Prof G, @profgalloway. 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 Tarlov.
Jess, did you watch the Super Bowl?
I did. It was so boring.
Yeah, it was.
It wasn't a good one.
We would do for a bad one.
Did you stay up?
You know, I wasn't planning to.
I'm not into sports and it started at 1130 p.m. and I made this big to-do about how it's
basically this axis of evil between shitty fatty food and the diabetes industrial complex
and that the game is boring and CET.
And then of course my 14 year old said,
dad, you want to watch Super Bowl?
I'm like, yep, let's do it.
And so I stayed awake until the halftime show,
which I thought was awful by the way.
And I get I'm not Kendrick Lamar's audience,
but I thought the whole thing was just a giant snooze.
What did you think?
The game itself, I wasn't much interested in.
I'm not the biggest NFL enthusiast.
I was like the side stories.
So, you know, I want as much Taylor and Travis as possible.
I thought that, you know, Trump was the first sitting president
to attend a Super Bowl, which kind of surprised me.
I'm not sure why that hasn't happened before.
So, you know, there were side stories going on
that were kind of interesting, but the game not so good, the halftime show,
I wasn't wild about, you know,
it wasn't Bruno Mars for me was such a good halftime show,
which I'm sure is a very lame pick in all of this,
or Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake.
Actually, a friend who was over was at that show
and got to see the nipple.
So, we talked about that for a while,
but overall not great.
We had a lot of little kids in the house.
We cooked a lot.
My husband made a great pasta carbonara,
rigatoni carbonara, or no, Lumaqui carbonara.
I'm trying to get my noodles straight.
All in all, whatever, I guess, but rah rah America.
There was one fantastic moment when, of course,
Taylor Swift got booed.
That made me happy. Why is that? Is that wrong?
Yeah.
Is that wrong? I thought that was hilarious.
Why?
I thought that... I don't know.
It's like the Roman Coliseum, except lions.
We have Taylor Swift, so occasionally,
I think he'd boo against the lions.
I don't know. I found the whole thing.
It's like America, where we sell boner pills
and opioid induced constipation medication
while giving young men CT, you know, America.
I just find the whole thing, I don't know.
I'm too cynical.
So when are you moving home?
I'm not sure, 17 months, three weeks and four days
is what is on my calendar.
Not that I'm thinking about it,
but I'm looking forward to getting back to the States.
Cause you know, things are going so well.
Totally. Yeah.
I would be desperate to come back at this particular moment.
Though I think about moving back to London.
And then I think I'll definitely want to, if we do,
that I'll want to come back to America as well.
So it's like-
I don't think anything makes you feel more-
The abusive relationship you can't quit, right?
Well, I mean, the reality is,
if you didn't know what was going on,
I think the reality for most Americans,
unless you're a veteran or a beneficiary of SNAP
or Head Start, which is a lot of Americans,
but quite frankly, if you're in our economic weight class,
you can shield yourself from this nonsense.
And I would argue you're probably at a beneficiary of it
and not in a good way.
But what I recognize moving to London,
which is in my opinion, the second best city in the world,
is it is really hard to be in America.
And that is if you like opportunity,
if you like a crush and a collision of culture,
grit, creativity, there's just nothing like America.
And my reductive analysis after I say this
and it triggers some people molesting the earth
for the last 30 years is that America is still
the best place to make money
and Europe's the best place to spend it.
So when you're going into your spending years,
absolutely spend time in Europe and go to Madrid
and get a great bottle of wine for 10 bucks, not 80.
Yeah.
Check out Munich, which is an amazing city, Milan.
Go to PSV game in Paris.
But if you're looking to advance your career, your influence,
your impact on the world professionally, everything here,
I would argue, is a kind of medium or second gear.
It just can't get out of second gear.
But I gotta be honest, I can't wait to get back.
I can't wait to get back to America.
Yeah, well, we'll be thrilled to have you.
No, I'm done with that part.
But I did notice that when I was in grad school,
that all of the top performers in my PhD class,
all desperate for American positions.
Like couldn't wait to be able to do it,
even with all of the problems with academia, but.
Yeah, well, that's the joke about Scotland,
that some of the finest minds in the world,
and they all have the same thing in common, they left.
Anyways, all right, enough of that.
Today we're discussing Elon Musk's
increasing government influence.
I don't know if you've heard,
he's this very wealthy individual
who puts rockets into space,
but doesn't live with any of his children.
He's this former South African slash Canadian
slash naturalized American.
Anyways, interesting cat, we're gonna talk about him.
Reminds me of this very popular guy
in the middle of last century,
who some people really loved.
We're coming in hot, I guess, right? You're going for it?
But most people, you know, most people over time found that, well,
it's interesting. They have the same hand gesture. It appears that they have the same body language.
Anyways, we're going to talk about Elon Musk increasing government influence, Trump's buyout offer to federal workers,
and the latest Democrats' effort to fight back.
All right, let's get into it, Jess.
I think we're already in, so go.
Go, yeah.
I've already, I've already dive in the shallow
and head first.
You gave away the game already.
We've already talked about 1930s, so yep.
Elon Musk's grip on the executive branch keeps tightening.
His Doja crew has been popping up at federal agencies,
snooping around sensitive systems.
And until last week, when a federal judge blocked his team
from accessing the Treasury Department's payment system,
my understanding is every time they run up against a judge,
they get blocked.
Trump defended Musk's efforts calling it part of his plan
to cut wasteful spending and praise Musk for his work.
But the AFL-CIO and the Department of Justice
are hitting back with multiple lawsuits.
And Elon got also a new provocative Time Magazine cover
that puts him behind Trump's desk.
Interestingly, Republican support for Musk's role
in the Trump administration is cooling off.
An Economist YouGov poll shows only 26% now
want him to have a significant influence.
That's down from earlier numbers, Jess.
Musk also tweeted at me and Kara,
funny, barely noticed my pivot co-host over the weekend
accusing us of threatening his engineers
just for calling out the harm they're causing.
So look, before I, I'm not gonna,
I don't wanna get into a back and forth here.
What I would say is that the comments made
were made by me, not by Kara. What I would say is that the comments made
were made by me, not by Kara.
And I find it sort of telling that he puts Kara's name
first and goes after Kara instead of just going after
the person who he has or should have a grievance with.
And that's me.
And anyways, I'll let you go first.
Any thoughts on what's going on with Elon, Jess?
Well, I have a lot of thoughts on what's going on with Elon.
I assumed that Kara came first in that because she
has long covered him.
And last week, she had a big interview
with Ezra Klein, which I thought was very impressive,
talking about her years of covering him
and being close to him.
So that was my assumption as to why that happened.
But yes, I have a lot of thoughts.
I don't want to steal.
If you have things to say about the tweet stuff,
or maybe you're saving for pivot when you too can talk
about it more in depth.
But I don't want to cut you off if you've got more on that,
because mine is not about the tweets necessarily.
You know, I don't have a lot.
At first, I started, this is what
happens when ever Elon tweets at me or gets angry at me.
And that is my phone starts blowing up with, are you OK?
Is everything OK?
And I'm like, I'm not on Twitter.
So I'm shielded from most of the toxicity.
And someone sent me a screenshot of the tweet.
And it had 11,000 comments.
I'm like, well, I bet those comments aren't fun to read.
But I mean, essentially, I start to get worried
and I start to get panicked and I start to get anxious.
And then I realize, OK, whatever you say about Kara and me
is we live with our children.
We don't sleep with a loaded gun next to us.
We're not severely addicted to a dissociative substance.
We're not making Nazi gestures.
And he's acting like these engineers are in
quantanimal bay when the reality is
that probably the most serious thing they're doing
other than denying children and veterans their payments,
trying to figure out if the meme
for Doge should be wearing sunglasses.
And just this notion of these billionaire tears,
where he can't decide if it's his struggling engineers
or just proper grammar.
Like pick a struggle boss.
It's like, well, you don't have auto correct.
I just, I start to read this thing.
I start to get upset.
I start to think about responding.
And then I think, I don't want to create a sideshow.
I want to focus on what I think is important.
And that is highlighting that we have somebody who was not
cleared or approved by government or Congress, who
is basically hacking into our federal systems.
If China did this, it would be an act of war.
Without the permission of Congress
and shutting off funds to veterans and children
in the neediest.
And I think that's where we have to remain our focus.
So Musk saying mean things about me,
that's a sideshow and it really doesn't matter.
It's not important.
And I'm not going to, other than,
I want to stay focused on, you know,
when you go into an emergency room,
there's a saying called stop the bleeding.
And that is if someone comes in with a gunshot and they are hemorrhaging blood, they don't take their PSA or their cholesterol level.
So my ego and me being butthurt or responding or getting into it with him on
Twitter, that's a distraction.
We need to stay focused on the fact that we are now in a position where we've
created a series of incentives,
where when we convict the president of being a felon and he gets reelected,
he has learned that the American public, as long as they control all three branches of government,
will not hold him accountable for trespassing or hacking into our most sensitive federal systems.
Now, if it gets to a judge, it gets pushed back, but they're kind of in this blitzkrieg moment
of let's ask for forgiveness as opposed to permission.
That's what I wanna stay focused on.
So I'm trying as hard as I can,
and this isn't easy for me as you know, Jess,
to put my ego aside and focus what limited audience
and bandwidth I have on stopping the bleeding,
if you will, your thoughts.
I applaud your maturity.
It wasn't what I expected.
I had a daunting walk down here this morning.
I was like, how do I avoid whatever's gonna happen
in the conversation about the tweet?
I don't, you know, I don't wanna get involved.
That's, it's your bag, but I like this attitude.
And I think it's honestly where the American public
is going to be best
served, A, because podcasts are the most important thing in the entire world and we can save
them all, but B, because the American electorate has basically told us that they're not interested
in a lot of the sideshows, right? They voted kind of singularly focused either on the economy
or on an immigration.
And, you know, that's what they deserve to have in their conversations.
That's what they deserve to have delivered for them in terms of policy.
None of those things have happened thus far in the first, I can't, I said only three weeks.
That's what's so crazy that this has only been three weeks since Trump was inaugurated.
But I think that's a very mature outlook on this.
And I look forward to listening to Pivot
where I'm sure you two devolve into the immaturity.
I'm just going to unshame Kara.
Just let her loose.
Well, she's better at counterpunching than me.
She does have good insults.
Yeah, she's fearless.
And I did, I mean, it's interesting,
I'm thinking a lot about men in masculinity.
It is interesting that the Doge team is all young men.
Yeah.
And I do think that at the end of the day,
the people responsible for this are the president
and Elon Musk.
And I think these, I'm gonna call them kids,
but these young men, young men are more risk aggressive.
Biologically, the prefrontal cortex doesn't catch up
until they're the age of 25 to a woman's.
It is interesting that there are no women
as part of this group.
But isn't this what you predicted to some degree
in talking about how disenfranchised
and out of kind of mainstream society, young men were
being pushed.
So they're looking for community, they're looking for fun and adventure and that high,
wherever they can find it.
And they've spent a lot of time on their computers and they're really fucking good, right?
They're the ones who are going to be able to hack into our system.
So it does seem, I think calling them hackers is probably wrong.
Hackers in a past life, and some of them have even been fired from past internships or jobs
for hacking or working at places where convicted hackers have been employed.
I mean, this is a motley crew in terms of resumes. And there are a lot of FBI agents, former FBI agents who have been speaking out saying, these are not people that could pass a conventional clearance, which seems like a problem world that you have been talking about for the last
few years and will be the subject of your forthcoming book, if you would like to plug
that.
Thanks for that.
So I think they should be held accountable if a law has been broken here and that anyone
who goes after the president or Musk for laws broken, which I believe they're trespassing.
I believe that they have purposely circumvented Congress.
We're in uncharted territory, because you don't know if that's an actual,
if that is a civil or a criminal offense when the president approves of it.
I think that's for courts to decide.
But I do think it's a sideshow, to a certain extent, to focus on these young men.
To be clear, the people accountable for this, the people who are orchestrating this,
are the president and Elon Musk.
And to a certain extent, the Democrats,
I don't wanna say who are enabling it,
but have been caught flat-footed
and have to figure out a way to strike back.
And we're gonna talk about that later in the show.
But it is interesting.
And just to be real here about these young men,
I was thinking about it.
I've said a lot, if I was born in 1920 Germany,
I'd probably be wearing a Nazi uniform
and probably would have died on a Russian field somewhere
thinking that I was serving the fatherland.
You are a function of where you grew up and in what time.
And you can see with a lot of young men,
these are really talented young men with a lot of opportunities.
So I don't feel comfortable grouping them into the bigger swath of young men in
America who have a lack of on-ramps to a good living, a lack of financial security,
a lack of prospects, a lack of an ability to meet a potential mate and start a family.
These guys are all incredibly talented and have a lot of opportunities.
And the only lesson someone called me, a radio show called me, I didn't go on,
I said, what would your advice be to these young men?
And I'm like, again, it's a sideshow,
but what I would tell any young man
is that we're in a high pressure situation,
do what I didn't do.
And that is assemble a kitchen cabinet of people
to advise you, say, this is what's going on.
Do you have any thoughts for me?
Whether it's your parents,
whether it's your parents' friends,
whether it's just friends.
Because I saw being a young man, trying to express my manhood
is quickly assessing the situation
and then making a snap decision and trying
to talk everybody into me being right,
whatever that decision was.
It is very hard to read the label, especially
as a young man when you're more risk aggressive
and quite frankly don't have incredibly good judgment
or reason, you're not that thoughtful,
you're not that measured yet.
It is really hard, if not impossible,
to read the label from inside of the bottle.
So the larger learning I would want to communicate
to all young men is do what I didn't do.
I would have saved myself a lot of heartache,
a lot of professional missteps,
a lot of broken relationships had I just reached out to people and said, this is the situation,
do you have any thoughts or advice for me? And you might decide not to change your mind about what
you're doing. But this is, you know, when you find yourself in kind of uncharted territory,
it's just a really good idea to check in with people
from different backgrounds and say, this is what's going on.
It's pretty intense.
Do you have any thoughts?
And I didn't learn that until I was much older.
And I think men have a much more difficult time
because we conflate strength and masculinity
with being decisive as opposed to being
thoughtful and listening.
Yeah, I agree with that.
And I think that Democrats really suffered
from a very effective smear campaign
of us being the feminine party,
because we were talking about issues
that God forbid affected women.
And men by extension, like when someone is pregnant
and there's someone who got her pregnant
and is sticking around, then it affects you too.
So I totally agree with that. And I didn't mean to paint with such a broad brush, but
I do think that there's the widest group of young men that you were talking about who
are lacking in opportunity and lacking in mobility and the chance to make meaningful
relationships and to live a full and loving and beautiful life that we all
want.
But then there is also a large contingent of these bro types who feel, even though they
have been afforded tons of opportunities, have had the best education and probably aren't
facing any student debt at the end of this, getting internships at places like Palantir
at 19 years old, who still feel aggrieved.
And a lot of that is rooted in the fact that they don't see a ramp to the level of success
that their boomer parents or late Gen X boomer parents had by their age.
I mean, thinking back to how enormous it felt if you could, as a parent, could earn a million
dollars in a year, and then how stifled people
who see themselves as upwardly mobile and are living in these big cities and maybe are
at a big law firm or in banking, when you say, oh, earn a million dollars a year, I'm
not going to have anywhere close to the life my parents had.
My kids are not going to go to private school, which is now, you know, $55,000 to $65,000
a year versus the $25,000 to $65,000 a year versus the
$25,000 when I was growing up as an elder millennial.
So I wanted to add that.
But something I've been thinking a lot about, and this is shifting gears a little bit, but
still about what's going on with Musk and co. is how much this moment feels to me like
it did when Trump and the array of lawyers that were fanned
out across the country after the 2020 election were getting to work to essentially poison
pill as big of a swath of the population as they possibly could to not believe that Joe
Biden had won a free and fair election.
They did it with vaccine skepticism.
Their power is strongest when
their supporters are separated from the rest of society. And I feel like we're seeing that
moment again. And JD Vance tweeted over the weekend after the judge ruled about the Treasury
payments. Not that Scott Besson couldn't access the Treasury payment system, but that you
couldn't have individuals that weren't fully vetted having access. And we'll see what happens.
I think today there'll be an addendum to that.
But he's tweeting saying that they're trying to control the executive's quote unquote legitimate
power.
And a lot of that is a reference back to the Supreme Court case where they basically gave
Trump immunity from anything or future presidents, but it was really about Trump.
And then you had, I don't know if you saw Kristy Noem, the Homeland Security Secretary was on with Dana Bash
this weekend.
And Dana-
People don't trust the government.
Right, and then Dana says to her,
sorry, I shouldn't have said Dana, it's Dana,
says to her, well, you are the governor.
You are the governor.
And then she spews drivel for 58 seconds after that
and shows she doesn't really know what she's talking about.
But she actually did say the important part out loud, which is they are creating an environment
and have fostered for years now an environment in which people don't feel that they can trust
the government.
And one of the first things Trump said when he started running for president was, I alone
can fix it.
And now it's I alone plus Elon and JD
and whoever is on board for all of this.
And I'm scared to see society perhaps even further
breaking apart along these new lines of who thinks
that the government does anything good for me
and who thinks that there is absolutely nothing
of positive note that the government delivers.
And that's hugely dangerous.
And I don't know, that's been the most disturbing part
for me that I feel like I'm back in November
and December of 2020, and I worry we're not
going to get these people back.
Well, this is a serious issue, and I want to apologize
for my Nazi references, because they're not funny, although it is clear that Musk and Trump have made a hard Reich turn and
also the, I don't know if you've driven the new model SS from Tesla.
And I saw on Twitter the-
Are you coming up with these on the fly or do you have a list of Musk Nazi jokes that
you like to make?
Yeah.
Well, you know, he's changed his pronouns to he and Himmler.
But anyways, there's a lot in there.
And I think that essentially you have, unfortunately,
everything reverse engineers to one key statistic, in my view.
And if we don't fix it, we're going to have some form
of revolution, famine, or war.
And that happens in every society, and it's the following.
The ultimate social compact is that my kids will do better than me. If I work hard, and it's the following. The ultimate social compact is that
my kids will do better than me.
If I work hard, I play by the rules,
my kids will do better than me.
The definition, I used to think the definition of love
was caring more about someone than you care about yourself.
And I've broadened that to, you know,
you give witness and notice to people's lives.
But the people who you irrational like love
are your children. They're, you know, I always say to my sons, you But the people who you irrational love are your children.
They're, you know, I always say to my sons,
you're the only people in the world
that don't want to be more successful than me.
And I'm embarrassed to say that, but it's true.
And when your kids aren't doing as well as you are,
we're at 30 for the first time in the nation's history,
it's just a breakdown in the social compact.
And people want chaos.
There's also, because we've had what I would argue
is the best functioning organization,
and let me go, I think the most impressive organization
in history is the wing of the US government,
and that's our military.
And I think in the top five is the US government.
And Mel Robbins, who I think is gonna probably
displace Joe Rogan if Stephen Bartlett doesn't,
has this new book out called Let Them.
And I'm sort of at the point right now
where the people who are under the illusion that Trump
represents them, the genius of the Republican Party
is they represent the top 1% in corporations.
And they've convinced the bottom 99 that you should endorse us.
Because once you get into the top 1%,
you're going to love it here.
And you have more of a chance with us.
And when Democrats keep spewing out this elitist dribble
and we continue to move towards a 30-year-old not doing as
well as his or her parents, then the parents and the people
under the age of 30 just want chaos.
And what I say around some of this stuff,
I'm at the point now where it's like, let them.
The states that went for Trump are the states
that are the biggest takers of federal assistance.
So just see what happens when Veterans Affairs benefits,
when we disrupt and shut down those people you can't trust.
Okay, let's see what happens to you and dad
and your neighbors and what happens in these rural dark red communities
when there is no head start.
See what happens when you shut down DEI
and there is no job opportunity for veterans.
Like I'm at the point where it's like, you know what?
You broke it, you own it.
You're gonna get to find out
just how quote unquote incompetent government is.
You're gonna find out that government
is a lot more competent than you had originally thought.
And you're gonna get a very ugly awakening in my view.
And I'm sort of at the point of, all right, it's time.
You really wanna see what life is like.
In these red states, the people who are most rabidly for Trump,
who tend to be in rural areas,
tend to be quite frankly have a larger body mass index,
are more dependent upon Medicare,
are more dependent on government services.
The biggest takers from a state perspective
are the ones that went hardest towards Trump,
which means when these payments
and these programs get shut down,
they're gonna, this isn't gonna hurt us, Jess.
I mean, we're upset about this
because I'd like to think we have some fidelity
to America and the Constitution
and wanna pay back based on the prosperity
we've recognized because of this incredible system
and rule of law and democracy.
But quite frankly, this isn't going to really hurt you or me.
We're not, our kids aren't in SNAP.
We're not getting veterans' affair payments.
We're not getting Social Security payments, right?
We're not dying of malaria in Malawi or wherever, right?
This won't affect us.
It's just fascinating though that the people who I think are about to get the biggest dose
of like, wow, be careful what you ask for, are the ones that are most rabidly pro-Trump.
So my sense is at this point, you know,
as Mel Robbins would say, let them have at it.
You asked for it, you got it, Toyota.
That's definitely the big debate, I think,
amongst people who voted the way that we did,
that balance between wanting to live in a society that uplifts everybody, which I feel like is so core to the Democratic Party, and then thinking we are never
going to have a reversal of these kinds of electoral outcomes unless there is real suffering.
And that feels like a terrible place to be.
I don't want to be someone that wishes a bad economic outcome on anyone.
I would love a world in which everyone can succeed to the utmost level. But it does seem
like there has already been a bit of this. I don't want to go as far as saying buyer's
remorse, but you're seeing these videos coming up on TikTok. I don't know. There's a farmer
who relies on this cost sharing program that gets funded
through the Inflation Reduction Act that has been frozen and gone away. And he's talking
about potentially losing his farm. He was someone who voted for Trump. Katie Britt, the
senator from Alabama, is out there talking about how we can't have the NIH go away, the
new policy of getting indirect costs down to 15%, which
will basically mean that we have to shutter labs that are saving us from every disease
under the sun and our huge economic boom for the country.
I was astounded to see that for every dollar that we put into society from the NIH that
we get $2.46 back, and it generates nearly $93 billion
in economic activity in the US, and also is what keeps us the leader of the pack, our
competitiveness.
It's so funny to hear Republicans bemoaning how far we're falling behind all the time,
and then they're like, you know what we'll do?
We'll slash NIH funding.
That'll be the way that we'll really show
the rest of the world.
But in a more personal level,
I talked about two or three months ago
to a college student from the Midwest.
He reached out, he watches the five,
is thinking about a career in politics,
they're really interested in political communication.
We got on the phone and he emailed me last week, and he said that
I could share this.
I really appreciated hearing what you have had to say the past week on The Five and your
podcast with Scott.
So, yeah, Scott.
You really opened my mind on certain things that are currently going on as someone who
voted for Trump, and you have been communicating a lot of frustrations I've been feeling alongside
some family and friends who didn't expect all the chaos.
And then he puts in parentheses,
not to mention the tariffs as our family owns
a small business where all our products are made in China.
So this is a 20 year old bro, right?
From the middle of the country,
comes from a conservative family, they love Trump.
And it only took that, I got this a week ago, so it only took two weeks of this
level of chaos for him to feel strongly enough that he would write that down.
Right, that's not a casual comment.
And he told me that I could talk about it, that I could put that out on air.
So it's obviously something that's very emblematic of not only what's going on in
his life, but what's going on in his orbit.
Elon Musk's popularity has gone from in 2016, it was plus 29 when he was the SpaceX guy,
down to negative 11.
So something is happening.
There is pushback out there and the realization that, yeah, maybe there are cuts we should
be making, but this wholesale approach to just move fast and break things is not something that works for the public
sector.
Well, you're already starting to see it and it kind of goes to
and we'll talk about this in a bit potential solutions. But
basically sales of Tesla cars are diving in the EU. Electric
vehicle market declined by 6% overall in January, so there is a structural decline.
But sales of Tesla are down 63% in France, 44% in Sweden, 38% in Norway, 42% in the Netherlands, and 12% in the UK.
And as someone who has worked with automobile companies, they measure share in sales and basis points.
And that is if year on year, you're down a half a percent, the person running that country is sweating.
I mean, these are, I mean, these literally are kind of implosions of sales.
So it does appear that finally what, you know, everyone's been outraged
at the lack of outrage on the left. It does appear that people that the been outraged at the lack of outrage on the left.
It does appear that the bloom is off the roads here.
People no longer seem as a provocateur and innovator,
but as someone who is a threat, and that they just
don't need to own his car.
I'm curious, with all of these lawsuits
and the DOJ investigation piling up,
how serious do you think the legal
threat is to Musk and Doge and what could the long-term fallout be other
than obviously his popularity is going going down? But I'll put forward a
thesis. When you send, when you tell someone you can be a convicted felon and
then re-elect them, he's essentially decided the incentives and disincentives
no longer apply to me, that I can break the law with impunity.
Do you think there is a bridge too far here
around these court cases?
Well, so far, like you mentioned earlier on,
the courts have gone against them in all of these instances.
But the problem is that the courts move slower
than 20-year-old kids that are in the Treasury payment
system to some degree, right?
It's already disrupted people's lives.
Funding has been cut off, even if it is then getting reinstated.
There are all these lawsuits with harrowing testimony from people who work for USAID and
are stationed abroad and are saying, you're sending me back to America.
I haven't lived there in 15 years.
We have no infrastructure.
We have no family.
We have kids with special needs,
and if there is a disruption in their care, I have notes from their doctors about the
long-term suffering that they will endure.
Nobody in the government seems to care at all about that.
So the courts are great, and we're going to have Mark Elias on the podcast in a few weeks,
and I'm really interested to talk to him about the legal approach to all of this.
But they're moving to some degree too quickly and I think on the fundamental level what's
most disturbing about all of this is that they are going for a two branch approach to
government.
I think they don't care at all about Congress because appropriated money means nothing to
them.
And we should note as well that the government is only funded through March 14th.
So they're offering buyouts to people.
They have no cash to pay them for the next eight months.
So Democrats actually have a lot of power in that respect.
And some of them are already talking about
shutting down the government
to be able to shut down Elon Musk.
So I think that they are looking at a world
of essentially one and a half branches of government.
So they want the most powerful presidency or executive
that you've ever seen in your life.
And then they want about half of the judiciary.
They want the good judges, right?
Which is always how Trump talks about things.
Says, well, of course we want immigration.
We just want the good immigrants, right?
And of course we want this,
we just want the good ones.
So he wants the judges probably that he picks.
So he wants Eileen Cannon and the Supreme Court and the rest of it can kind of go to hell.
And that's really new territory for us looking at a world in which the executive has no interest
in having checks and balances with the Congress and who may openly flout these judicial decisions.
We'll have to wait and see in terms of how they approach it.
Even this week will be an interesting incubator for that.
But I think that they are so far emboldened even from where they were in
2020 when they were getting bad rulings that we could see something completely unprecedented.
Bill O'Reilly recently said that he doesn't believe Musk has as much power as we
think. And then Time magazine in the same week puts him on the cover behind the
president's desk. Do you think we're overestimating Musk's influence or
underestimating it?
I'm not sure. Listen, Time magazine wants a good cover. It was a good cover.
It definitely pissed Trump off, even though he said like, oh, are they still in
business? You know, who reads that anymore?
But he definitely when he got Time Person of the Year just a month ago was super psyched about Time magazine
I'm sure the answer is somewhere in the middle
I think you don't want to be the person that went out there and took a big swing like Elon Musk actually doesn't have that
much power you can even see from the level of disruption that we've had that he has that power.
And also that he swayed the election like this.
You know, $290 million, whatever algorithmic changes to social media that will probably
never understand the true impact of that or the gravity of that impact when, I mean, you're
not on Twitter anymore.
I still am.
I need to be there for work.
It's A, a cesspool.
But B, I can barely find content that I need to be able to do my job.
Reporters that I follow are not showing up even in the, you know, the for you column.
It pales in comparison to what it used to be, which was, I thought, the best news gathering site.
You could always find what you needed right away
when you logged onto Twitter,
and it's not like that anymore at all.
So I'm in the middle on it.
What do you think? Are you a Bill O'Reilly or a Time magazine?
I don't know. I know that the staff in the White House
is more worried about trying to calm Trump down
when he's angry because he doesn't drink or do drugs,
whereas with Musk, you just give him
a ketamine-infused juice box.
There goes the bigger man.
That bigger man part of the show is over.
He's back, that's right.
Anyways, with that, let's take a quick break.
Stay with us.
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When you sit on your aeroplan points, it's like you're sitting on your next trip.
Like a sunny getaway sitting on a terrace.
But instead, you're sitting on your aeroplan points.
So the only place you're sitting is in your car coming back from work.
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Welcome back.
Over the weekend, Trump made history
as the first sitting US president
to attend the Super Bowl.
He also said he planned on announcing a 25% tariff
on all steel and aluminum imports into the United States.
Meanwhile, Trump raised eyebrows last week
by suggesting he could turn Gaza into the Riviera
of the Middle East.
During a press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu,
he floated
the idea of the U.S. owning Gaza and hinted at relocating 2 million Palestinians before
walking back comments about deploying U.S. troops. And back home, a federal judge temporarily
blocked Trump's federal workers bio plan, delaying a decision for the 2 million eligible
employees. 65,000 have opted in so far.
Trump's recent comments about the US taking over Gaza
have sparked a media backlash.
I would argue, Jess, that this is another just weapon
of mass distraction, and that it's just so ridiculous.
I don't know, it's just sucking oxygen out
of the room of the real issue, which is this digital coup,
if you will.
But how might this negatively affect the ongoing, in your view,
ceasefire between Hamas and Israel?
Or does it have any impact on the conflict or the tension
in the Middle East?
The thing that it does in the immediate term,
even if he says it's not something
that he was completely serious about,
and you saw that Caroline Levitt, the press secretary,
had to walk back his openness to boots on the ground
the next day in the briefing, because that
was something that freaked even the biggest warmongers out
there.
They were like, no, actually, we are not
putting boots on the ground in the Middle East.
But this helps Bibi in the immediate term
in shoring up his right flank, which he definitely needs
if he's going to be able to stay in power.
And Trump always just has that side door available to him where he says, you know, well, it was
a negotiating tactic, right?
We just needed to see what Egypt and Jordan are really made of.
The former Deputy Prime Minister of Jordan said that this was a declaration of war on
the Arab people.
That doesn't sound good. Even if that is the place that you are starting at, that you can even think
of a world in which you're going to move two million people out of the place that they live.
And this is not about defending Hamas, staying in charge, or anything of that sort. But just Egypt
and Jordan have been very clear about this. Saudi got involved and said, we're not doing this either.
The Arab world has not been open to taking Palestinians
for a very long time,
which is one of the endemic problems with this conflict.
And I don't know what the solution is.
We all wish that there was going to be able to be
a two state solution with a neat bow,
and we can't get there.
There are people who have dedicated their lives to it,
like Tony Blair, for instance, and we have not we can't get there. There are people who have dedicated their lives to it, like Tony Blair, for instance,
and we have not been able to get there.
But I think that it's a little too easy to just say that it's a distraction or it's a
sideshow because it is forcing people to have to deal with it, first of all, which makes
a big difference.
Like Marco Rubio is going to have to say something about it, right?
And people like Tom Cotton are going to have to say something about it, right? And people like Tom Cotton are going to have to say something about it.
The administration is going to have Pete Hegseth over at defense.
People are going to have to prepare themselves for the fact that his mercurial or herky-jerky
approach to foreign policy might not go your way all the time.
And we did talk about it as maybe it's one of the advantages that our enemies have no idea what he's actually going to do. But there are real implications for
this and his words matter. As much as we'd like to pretend that they don't and he says
a lot of shit and he throws stuff against the wall and sees where whether it sticks
or not. You cannot with a serious face say at this point that Trump is not interested in being
a modern day imperialist, at least to some degree.
The amount of times that he's talked about Greenland, he's talking about the Panama
Canal, now he's talking about whatever he wants to do in the Middle East, which is Jared
Kushner's vision.
Jared Kushner said there's a lot of waterfront property that'd be available.
And it was interesting, my colleague on the five, Jesse Water, said something
about, well, Albania has said that they'll take people.
And a couple of weeks ago, there was a story in the New York Times about how
Albania gave the go-ahead for a $1.4 billion luxury hotel investment for Jared Kushner.
So it always comes back to money.
It always comes back to business prospects in all of this. And I don't think this is something that's going to happen,
but I don't think it behooves us to just kind of push it under the carpet or the rug and just say,
oh, it's a complete impossibility.
So to your point, the premise, it starts from what I think is a legitimate premise, and that is
the path we're on now.
Like, okay, the way I would see right now the Middle East or the problem in Gaza is
there's no moral clarity.
And that is when World War II ended, we had the Nuremberg trials, and we basically said
this was genocide, and we're shaming you and
punishing you and the world came to some sort of moral clarity. We don't have that
coming out of this conflict and it feels as if all we're doing is just setting up
the exact same thing to happen again in two, five or ten years. That Hamas will
rearm, there'll be people sympathetic, they will use aid and their popularity
with their domestic population who are feel,
understandably agreed and the same thing is gonna happen.
So the notion that we need to be creative
around doing something different,
that the status quo, the wash, rinse and repeat,
we are going to see the mother of all shampoo effect here.
It's just gonna happen again.
That what, the current construct just does not work.
Now, but this notion of a two state solution
where the two states are either Egypt or Jordan, neither,
I mean, here's the problem
of relocating these 2 million residents,
whether you wanna call it ethnic cleansing
or some sort of a part,
whatever you wanna term it or relocation
or condo development or a creative solution.
The problem is these 2 million people don't wanna leave
and even more, nobody wants to take them.
Albania, what's the population of Albania?
I don't, look at the border.
You wanna see a fortified border?
Look at the border between Egypt and Gaza.
Albania is 2.7 million.
And we're talking about 2 million people
who need to go somewhere.
What Egypt and Jordan have decided
is that the elements of this population
that they cannot risk incorporating
is chaos and violence.
So this just doesn't seem like what I'd call a viable solution for anybody.
So until we have, do we need to be creative?
Yes.
But I find this most of this just sort of kind of ridiculous that,
okay, you're going gonna relocate two million people and then put up a bunch of residence inns
and Trump towers and, you know, Western hotels
and then invite the rich ones back?
I don't, it's like, okay, walk me through
how this logistically actually makes any sense.
So I don't see any viable path here.
What do you think is the significance
of the judge blocking Trump's federal worker buyout plan and how could this play out in
the coming weeks?
Well, I think it's significant and I already mentioned this, that I know this is Elon's
playbook and he does it all the time. He did it with Twitter in 2022 as well, but the cash
isn't there to do it. So it is pretty significant. I think there is a pretty strong case for saying, you know, you're not even talking
about money that's been appropriated.
Are you paying out of pocket?
He's a very rich guy, richest man on the planet.
Maybe that's what he intends to do.
But going out to people and saying, you can go on that trip you've always wanted to take,
I don't know, actually, you have no salary to be able to do that, is pretty duplicitous.
The big question is, what orders are they going to abide by?
And what orders, frankly, are they going to be using the younger dogeys to get around?
What will be authorized?
What will the actions from the top level that look pretty normal, right, post-rulings be, and then what
are 20-year-old kids that can hack into anything able to actually do.
And I know that it's not necessarily to turn us into a technocratic state.
Maybe that is for some people's vision who are involved in this.
But I think that because Trump is a lame duck,
we have four years essentially to break as much as possible
that they will be looking to push boundaries
in ways we haven't seen before.
So while they might have abided
by some of these rulings before,
they're gonna push the envelope even further, is my feeling.
I mean, I guess the question is their attitude is it doesn't matter if it's legal or illegal.
If we make an offer and people accept it, then it's done.
So before you can get caught robbing the bank,
just spend the money and enjoy yourself.
And then if you get caught, OK, we'll give the money back.
There is definitely a kind of like a move fast and break
things kind of element here and have no regard for institutions
or process, just see if you can get away with it. Whenever I see Republicans, I feel like they're
sort of like, I can't believe we're getting away with this shit. And it's like tickling their
sensors. Isn't this amazing? And I even, I don't know if I'm imagining this, but I'm wondering if
they're even getting a little bit nervous, like, Jesus Christ, I didn't realize it would be this
easy. But they are getting upset about things that matter to them. Like I already mentioned Senator
Katie Britt, Jerry Moran, Senator Wicker, who are big proponents of USAID programs,
had to go to Rubio and plead with him. Rubio was a fan.
Rubio was a fan last year. He was pushing Biden to allocate more money. And that links to the
problem. And I links to the problem.
And I know we're going to talk about the Democrats next.
Well, let's do that.
But first, we have to take one more quick break.
Stay with us.
Hey, this is Peter Kafka.
I'm the host of Channels, a podcast
about technology and media.
And maybe you've noticed that a lot of people
are investing a lot of money trying to encourage you to bet on sports.
Right now. Right from your phone.
That is a huge change, and it's happened so fast that most of us haven't spent much time thinking about what it means and if it's a good thing.
But Michael Lewis, that's the guy who wrote Moneyball and the Big Shore and Liar's Poker, has been thinking a lot about it.
And he tells me that he's pretty worried.
I mean, there was never a delivery mechanism for cigarettes
as efficient as the phone is for delivering
the gambling apps.
It's like the world has created less and less friction
for the behavior when what it needs is more and more.
You can hear my chat with Michael Lewis right now
on channels, wherever you get your podcasts.
The Republicans have been saying lots of things. Just yesterday, their leader said he wants to own Gaza?
The U.S. will take over the Gaza Strip and we will do a job with it too.
We'll own it.
On Monday, the Secretary of State said an entire federal agency was insubordinate.
USAID in particular, they refused to tell us anything. On Monday, the secretary of state said an entire federal agency was insubordinate.
USAID in particular, they refuse to tell us anything.
We won't tell you what the money's going to, where the money's for, who has it.
Over the weekend, Vice President Elon Musk, the richest man on earth,
tweeted about the same agency that, you know, gives money to the poorest people on earth.
We spent the weekend feeding USAID into the woodchipper.
Could gone to some great parties. Did that instead. We spent the weekend feeding USAID into the wood chipper.
Could gone to some great parties.
Did that instead.
But what have the Democrats been saying?
People are aroused.
I haven't seen people so aroused in a very, very long time.
Huh.
That's a weird way to put it, Senator.
We're going to ask what exactly is the Democrats' strategy to push back on Republicans on Today
Explained. game we all love. We cover the biggest stories, talk to the sport's biggest stars, and highlight the people changing tennis in ways you might not even realize.
Whether it's grand slam predictions, coaching changes, off court drama, or the moves shaping
the future of the sport, we've got it all.
This podcast is about having fun, sharing insights, and giving fans a real look at what
makes tennis so great.
Catch Serve with Andy Roddick on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, wherever you
listen, or watch us on YouTube. Like, subscribe, follow, all that good stuff. Let's get started.
Welcome back. Before we wrap, Democrats are stepping up their strategy. Rallies are gaining
momentum. Schumer is calling for opposition to every Trump nominee,
and Jeffries is making his stance clear
in negotiation letters.
Jess, do you think this is the right approach?
Do you think it'll be effective?
No.
Have you seen these rallies?
It's horrible.
So you have, John Stewart did a great impression
of Schumer of them, where, you know,
you have a guy in his seventies,
who's not the most charismatic, I'm being generous here,
screaming, we will win after we just lost everything.
And then you have Congressman Al Green shaking his cane
in the front of the frame.
So it's just Schumer's face with a cane going back and forth
or Maxine Waters, youine Waters trying to barge
into the Department of Education.
And I've noticed that all of the key speakers
at these rallies are safe seat Democrats.
And that's really the wrong approach to all of this.
I almost wanna see exclusively people
who have run tight competitive races
out there talking about what they think is the right thing for us to do. Because it's,
you know, it's all well and good and people are great communicators and you be on your
social feeds and everyone should be amplifying as much of the bad shit that Republicans are
doing as possible. But I feel like it just sends the message that we haven't learned that much from the election
and that frankly we're proliferating more hysteria
than the average voter is interested
in hearing at this point.
So it has to be so much more targeted.
I know Hakeem Jeffries put out a 10 point communications plan
but everyone has to see what their constituents are interested
in and what their temperature is in terms of Trump versus Elon. There seems to be a
big dichotomy there. Jared Golden, who is a Democratic congressman who won in a competitive
district, a Trump very rural district in Maine, said that all the calls that he's getting to his
office are about Musk.
People aren't upset about Trump.
They're upset about Musk.
And that's what he's leaning into.
And people have to find kind of their North Star for all of this.
But the thing that was driving me crazy in terms of the messaging is, I don't know if
you watched after the election, Tony Fabrizio, who was Trump's pollster, and Chris LaCivita, who was one of his campaign managers, participated in a panel with the
Democratic campaign managers as well.
And they were talking about, you know, what worked, what didn't work.
And they said that Project 2025 was destroying them up until a couple months before the
election.
So it had a 57% negative approval rating and that we were
doing a great job hammering it. That all of those, even if we kind of had rolled our eyes
at it, it had been hugely effective that every time we said, well, this is the Trump 2025
playbook. This is what they want. This is what they're going to do. And that has disappeared,
even as people who wrote Project 2025 are in charge of OMB,
Brendan Carr at the FCC.
And I want that messaging back en masse.
I want everyone talking about this to say,
Time Magazine did an analysis,
two thirds of the executive orders
that Trump has already implemented
are out of Project 2025 already.
I mean, I was happy to see those Democratic Congress people walk over.
I think at least I think they need to be seen doing anything,
but the optics here, I agree with you.
It felt like a senior's home when they found out water aerobics were canceled or
Jell-O night had been switched to Thursday.
I mean, it just felt, oh God, that's how we're gonna win this fight.
That's the army we're sending in.
You know, as we try and process this,
there's, I wanna move to like, okay, what do we do?
And there's, I would argue,
and I wanna put forward some potential ideas
and have you respond to them.
There's short-term and there's long-term.
And the first thing you gotta do in any sort of strategy
is you gotta determine where's the soft issue,
what's the leverage, what are our assets,
what can be exploited.
And Hicking Jeffries, I thought, was actually quite eloquent
and honest when he said,
they control all three branches of government.
There's just not a lot we can do
from kind of a legislative level.
And when the stuff gets to judges, it gets pushed back,
but they're moving at the splitscreek speed.
And my view is, okay, I think're moving at the splitscreek speed.
And my view is, okay, I think you go after the money, like what they're doing by hacking
and turning off these payment systems or intervening.
I don't know what the right term would be.
And I think you go after Musk's financial interests.
So it's already happening in Europe, as I previously mentioned, Tesla sales are going
down. I think that our congressional representatives and people who think what's
going on here is a total subversion of our democracy, to make it known that you probably
shouldn't sign up for T-Mobile right now, because T-Mobile has just struck a deal with
Starlink. You probably shouldn't be thinking about any advertiser
on Twitter. That's an obvious one. You should be thinking about, okay, United Airlines has just
announced a big deal with Starlink. How do you go after the pocketbook? I think that's really what
Musk cares about. It's already happening with Tesla. I don't see any reason. Should the department,
should veterans groups be doing anything around Tesla, Starlink,
any of his economic interests?
I think you go after the purse
because that's what I think these people care about.
Over the medium and the long-term,
I think you draft resolutions and say,
okay, if this unelected group of people can go in
and start turning off payments,
we're gonna start turning off payments, we're going to propose turning off payments or anything related to Starling.
Starling, I mean Musk to a certain extent is a huge beneficiary and I even wrote a post
titled Welfare Queen.
The notion that he's trying to cut off payments and claim the government is too big and that
its large S is wasted.
Meanwhile he's one of the biggest beneficiaries from this large S.
Should we be thinking about one, how do we go after the economic interests
of Elon Musk to say we're not down with this and use circumventing democratic
channels to implement what you think is right
and we're going to punish you and your companies? And there's nothing illegal.
You don't have to sign up for T-Mobile
that's introducing Starlink.
You don't have to fly United Airlines,
which has signed a contract with Starlink.
And then over the medium and long-term,
I think you just have to tell Republicans,
okay, you realize that if you can do this,
then we can shut off Starlink.
We have our own programmers,
and we'll find out if
a judge thinks that's legal or not. I do think though the nuclear option is now on the table
and that is I believe that the Democrats should credibly threaten to get in the way of blocking
the extension on our debt ceiling such that the next treasury auction fails.
Because at the end of the day,
the reason why the tariffs were rolled back
is the leverage in the people that Trump listens to
are corporations and shareholders.
And they called him around these ridiculous
Canadian and Mexican tariffs and said,
do not do this, this will have an immediate impact
on the stock market.
The adult in the room is the stock market and the 10 year bond.
And he basically got these kind of non, I mean, these illusory
symbolic concessions and then walk them back.
And I think if the Democrats say, okay, you want to play Russian roulette.
Uh, we're going to,, we're gonna load the chamber around
the upcoming treasury auction.
And if you want to call all your buddies
and tell them that interest rates are about to spike,
which will take the stock market down,
and I'm still trying to figure out
if that hurts the 1%,
but 1% of America's population owns 90% of the stocks.
So I think that the real leverage here is around money
and is around, you know, you want to shut down the economy,
you don't believe in a democratic process, fine.
We're going to shut down the economy
and you're not going to be able to make the interest,
the upcoming interest payments.
And you're going to be the president
who the first time was so offensive,
was so non-democratic that we felt we had no choice
but to get in the way
that you're about to be the first president
where a treasury auction, where America did not pay its debts.
And let's see what happens, boss.
But I'm trying to think of where we have leverage,
and those are the only places I can think of,
because per what Hakeem Jeffrey said,
us just screaming outrage and waving our cane
in front of a federal building, that's
not working, right? We need to go after the money and we need to say you're going to be
the president that takes the stock market down, you know, 8 or 10 percent on the opening
bell next Wednesday after a failed treasury auction. Your thoughts?
I love that idea. And I'm sure they're considering that alongside the negotiations that are going to come up in March because the Republicans had these high hopes for one massive bill,
which seems like a really stupid way to be funding the government anyway.
But if you put those two things together, that'd be very difficult for Trump to weather
and he will be the person in charge if we fail at auction or if the government shuts down in general,
though it seems like he does want to furlough employees
anyway.
But I have an idea that maybe could be used
as a complement to this.
And I'm hoping that Democrats, I'm loosely calling this
the Democratic disruption plan, because everyone
loves this term, disruption.
It's become very chic, right?
And that's what the Republicans have run on, that we're just trying to disrupt
things. You got to shake it up because there's all of this waste in there that we can cut.
And I think that we need to counter program with our own doge. And you can go back to
the 90s and the Clinton administration did this. They called it the National Performance
Review. I didn't realize it was as successful as it was. It made 426,000 cuts to the federal workforce going agency by agency. And they
did it with a lot of precision. They said, are there offices that can be closed, regulations
that we can cut? Are there programs that actually don't need to be funded within USAID of the
44 billion that goes out there? I'm sure there are cuts that we can make,
but we should be the ones to propose them.
So just take all the crap that they've been spewing
and throw it back in their faces.
And I think that that would be really effective
and show to the American public
that we are serious about governing,
that we do know that there is a huge waste,
fraud and abuse problem,
but that 66% of US spending
is untouchable. And that's the most important part that we have to be the party out there
saying they're lying to you about cuts that they can make. The stuff that they're talking
about are tiny, right? They're trimming like a dollar off of the budget, but we will never
let them touch your social security, your Medicare, your Medicaid.
And I think that that is a place where we can run and win.
And I wanna say as well,
on the Department of Education front,
I don't know if you saw this,
you know, the national report card test results came out.
And it breaks your heart to see stuff like this.
And I just- So just reference all time low for eighth grade reading levels, is that right? it breaks your heart to see stuff like this.
And I just- So just reference all time low
for eighth grade reading levels, is that right?
Yeah, well, since testing began, so 1992.
And when the Republicans come out and they say,
I want to abolish the Department of Education,
which by the way is in project 2025,
and you look at those test results,
you understand how average American parents
who don't have optionality to go to a fancy private school alternative are being denied
vouchers to maybe take a few thousand dollars and put their kids in religious schools, which
in general have been performing better than the average public school, that they say,
you know what?
Yeah, burn it all down.
Trump had a great line where he said about Linda McMahon,
you know, I don't want you to have a job for that long
because I want you to destroy the Department of Education.
And what they want in the end is for private equity
to own our education system.
That's what's already happening.
They have been making tons of money off of these schools,
specifically in the charter
school space.
But if we are going to have public schools under attack at this level and believe strongly
in making them better than they are certainly and hopefully taking them into some sort of
golden age, we have to play ball on the education front.
And we have to say, abolishing the Department of Education isn't the answer necessarily,
but these are our real reform policies.
And that includes going after the teachers unions
and saying to Randy Weingarten, no, this all isn't perfect.
We haven't certainly recovered from the lows of the COVID era
and all the damage that was done to those kids,
not only as academic learners, but as social emotional beings.
But that Democrats aren't going to be afraid
to touch that third rail anymore.
Someone like Josh Shapiro has done that.
He said before that he's for school vouchers.
Wouldn't you rather live in a world
where we have better public schools
and some kids have the optionality
to go to religious schools or private schools
with the help of the government
so that we can save the public school education system?
So a lot there.
I've felt that, I got into it a little bit on, is it Ronit Weinberg,
the head of the National Teachers Union?
Randy Weingarten.
I got that one close.
Yeah.
Randy Weingarten.
You were in the Jewish realm.
Something.
I was near, I was circling the white fish.
Anyways, I said that I thought that the union she represented
was using the kids as drug meals.
During COVID.
I'm sure she loved that.
Well, during COVID, she decided that we
have to protect the teachers.
And she was basically saying, is you've got to pay us more
and give us a ton of time off.
And the reality was that the population of teachers
in America is the youngest, is the
least vulnerable, it was the least vulnerable to COVID.
They were young, primarily female, primarily thin.
These were the least at risk people in America.
And she was using basically kids in their mental health, which we found were severely
impacted by being out of school, such that she could try and find a moment of leverage
to get more money for her dues paying members.
I think teachers unions and I'm casting a broad brush here across all of them, but we have a tendency to
sanctify all of them not recognize them. Some of these unions are just bottom line corrupt and really don't seem to care that much about
kids despite their hush grand motherly tones.
Where I would depart a little bit with you and it sounds like also Governor Shapiro
is I am very wary of vouchers.
Because I think effectively what vouchers do
is like everything else in our society,
the kind of the narrative of let's shut down
the Department of Education and let's take money
and just give people choice and give them vouchers.
I think theoretically it makes a lot of sense. There are instances where someone would say
I'd rather take the money, put them in a religious school or I want more choice. I get it. But
effectively on the ground, I think what happens is what always happens in our government the
last 40 or 50 years. It is nothing but a naked transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich.
Because the reality is the majority of rural areas
or poor areas don't have a private school option
where they could use the voucher.
The only reason they have a school
is because of federal mandated legislation
that they have to have transportation
and they have to have a school
and the school has to be funded.
And all you are doing when you give, say,
people a $10,000 voucher, and I'll use,
I was on the board of my kid's school,
there would be probably some people who are middle class
who would rather have the choice, we charge 22,000,
they come up with the 12,000,
it would provide access to a private school,
it'd be good for them.
But really what it would be is a $2 million giveaway
to the other 200 families that can't afford it, and it would be is a $2 million giveaway to the other 200 families that can afford it,
and it would just take income and desperately needed resources out of the public schools in
that area. So I get it theoretically, but I think on the ground all vouchers end up doing is to get,
again, transfer money from the poorest people in the districts that need mandated Head Start and
schools and transportation and food programs to wealthy people
who would just get, that would be, you know what that would be,
Jess, you have two kids, that would be a $40,000 gift to you
and me. My guess is, I don't know if you sent, do you send
your kids to private or public?
One isn't in school and one is in a private pre-K. She's
doesn't, there isn't public school for her yet.
So this is what a voucher program would be. It'd be a $30,000 gift from government to
you and me.
I totally understand what you're saying. And maybe I got a little ahead of my skis or I
didn't mean to say that I want to turn into the party of vouchers. What I wanted to say
is that if we continue to look so detached from reality, that we
are telling people that these scores are okay with us and we're going to do nothing about
it, which is essentially what we're doing without having our own reform policies, that
we're going to lose people forever because there's nothing that is more valued in society
than our children.
We have Governor Glenn Youngkin in Virginia,
because Terry McCall have got up there and said,
you know, the kids aren't yours, right?
They belong to the teachers when they go.
So I just wanna have the conversation about it.
I think it can be perhaps done in some sort of targeted way,
but we look so silly if we just keep saying,
we're gonna do it the same way. We're just gonna keep going down this path. That's what I meant. But I would like to see,
you wanna talk about a way to save government,
tens if not hundreds of billions of dollars
over the next 30 or 50 years?
Do what Japan does.
America has a 40% of its population is obese.
That is an enormous strain on the wellbeing,
the mental health and our financial system.
And one of the reasons healthcare
costs $13,000 a year here per person and 60% of the population is obese is because of an enormous strain on the wellbeing, the mental health, and our financial system.
And one of the reasons healthcare costs $13,000 a year
here per person and 6,500 in Japan.
You know what, we have 40%, 70% of America's obese
or overweight, 40% obese.
Do you know what the percentage of obese,
of the population in Japan is obese?
12.
Four. That's it?
And here's where it starts.
If you wanted to increase the well-being of children in America, you would do what Japan
does.
And that is you'd find the extra money to have a chef at every school and the chef has
one mandate.
Everything has to be fresh.
There are absolutely no processed foods allowed in school because this is what we do.
We give these kids shitty, sugary, cheap food.
They get obese, because the deal is, okay,
we can get them addicted to the food industrial complex,
who basically ran every fucking ad last night
on the Super Bowl, and then hand them over
to the diabetes pharmaceutical complex.
And that's the axis of evil.
North Korea and Iran are nothing
compared to the food industrial
and the diabetes industrial complex in this nation.
And in Japan, they say we're gonna spend the monies.
Have you seen those interviews
with the kids coming out of school?
What's your favorite food?
Broccoli.
Yeah.
Right?
And they say your job, at three in the morning,
these chefs get up at every school,
not hugely paid, but a lot of them do it, former chefs.
They go to the fresh fish market, they go to fresh,
and they have to find fresh food every goddamn day.
And these kids grow up with a different sense of nutrition.
I love the idea of thinking out of the box
and thinking long-term,
but corporate interests get involved.
And again, this is our school system and our children.
What I have found is that America is nothing
but a platform to transfer money to companies
and shareholders who trade
in traffic and addiction.
Addiction to food, addiction to opiates,
addiction to sex, addiction to dopa.
And we use the kids as basically body bags or dopa bags.
I have gotten so far off track, Jess.
No. Bring me back.
Reel me back, Jess.
I would just reel you back by saying,
as we are on the precipice of probably an RFK Junior
Health and Human Services Secretary,
that the case that you just made is why they should have
carved out a role for him at USDA
and had somebody who believes in vaccines.
He's great on this.
Yeah.
He's great on this.
Yeah, I agree.
There, did I bring you back?
I don't know.
Read us out, we gotta go.
Thank you.
Thank you very much. Let's leave it there. That's it for the episode.
Thank you for listening to Raging Moderates.
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with a fear or favor.
That's right, that's right.
The hit of the show, The One on Fox,
that's what's coming next.
And who is The One?
That's right, it's just Harloff.
We are immune, we are super power fucking fearless from tweets
from the wealthiest man in the world.
I'm not going to read any of those 11,000 comments.
I'm not.
You've definitely read them all.
I have not. I'm not on Twitter. I'm not on X.
I'm still calling it Twitter.
Anyways, and by the way, who sold his Tesla two years ago?
And before he sold it, took a big fat fucking dump in the passenger seat.
That's right. that's your man. Hit subscribe now. Jess, have a great rest of the week.
You too.