The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Raging Moderates: Trump’s Epstein Problem
Episode Date: July 16, 2025Will the Jeffrey Epstein case tear the Trump White House apart? Scott and Jessica talk through the discord over the Epstein files inside the administration — and in the Republican base, and they dis...cuss why Trump is acting like a very guilty person. How can Dems tell the difference between what they should focus on to win elections, and what’s just a distraction? Plus — a new proposal in the House to finally do something about our gerontocracy problem. 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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In 2023, a 54-year-old man named William Woods told police that his identity had been stolen.
But there was a problem.
Another man said that he was the real William Woods and it was his identity that had been
stolen.
There's no way that two human beings could have the same name, the same date of birth,
the same social security number.
So someone clearly was not telling the truth.
Listen to our latest episode on Criminal, wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Raging Moderates. I'm Scott Galloway and President Trump is clearly in the upscene
files. Oh, good morning to you too, Scott.
Come on, come on.
That's why we're here, Jessica.
Today's episode, I was in Ibiza last week.
Word has it I did Molly and had an amazing time,
and I think I'm enjoying this more.
Yeah, it's just taking you to another level.
Oh my God, this is my hot girl summer.
Today, we're gonna talk about,
today we're gonna talk about MAGA revolting over the
Epstein files and all time high of Americans now seeing immigration as a positive for the
country.
Well, welcome to pulling your head out of your ass and a proposal to evaluate lawmakers
cognitive fitness for office.
That's ageist, Jess.
That's ageist.
Anyways, let's get right into it. The president
is once again at odds with his own base. This time it's over Jeffrey Epstein. But we should
really be focusing on Rosie O'Donnell. I think that's not a distraction.
Our favorite Irish lass, Rosie.
Yeah, no, that is not an attempt to distract and say, look over here from the fact that
he is clearly in the Epstein files after the DOJ released a memo
concluding Epstein died by suicide
and had no secret client list.
Trump urged supporters to move on
and defended attorney general Pam Bondi
calling her fantastic.
He also claimed critics were just selfish people
trying to hurt him, but MAGA world isn't buying it, Jess.
At Turning Point USA student summit,
the crowd booed Bondi's memo accusing Trump
of breaking his own promise to release the full files
and influencers including Steve Bannon and Laura Loomer
are openly criticizing the administration.
Loomer is now calling for a special counsel.
Who the fuck cares what Loomer wants, but anyways.
Trump cares.
Together, yeah, fair enough.
There you go.
The leader of the free world happens to care.
He cares. Inside the administration, Fair enough. There you go. The leader of the free world happens to care.
He cares.
Inside the administration, the fallout is even worse.
FBI Deputy Director and podcaster Dan Bongino almost resigned.
Almost.
Oh no, Dan.
We hate to lose someone as competent as you from our public reins.
He almost resigned after a tense blow up with Bondi.
He skipped work Friday.
It's just like one of these little tech Google bitches
doing a lunch walkout pretending that anyone cares.
Oh, he took the day off.
That'll show him, Dan.
And he hasn't spoken to DOJ leadership since.
He hasn't spoke to him in a whole four days.
Bongino's future is uncertain,
but for now he's still on the job.
Bondi's still in Trump's good graces
and even took her to the football game on Sunday,
which by the way was outstanding.
Yeah, it was kind of funny how he wouldn't get out
of the picture though.
Yeah, and he was booed.
That was my favorite part.
But this episode exposed serious fractures
within the MAGRA world and Trump's grip on it.
Jess, give us your thoughts on this.
I got this wrong.
I didn't think it was gonna be that big a deal and it's just blown up. Give us your thoughts on this. I got this wrong. I didn't think it was gonna be that big a deal.
And it's just blown up.
Give us your take.
Yeah, we are conditioned to think nothing matters
because nothing has mattered up until this point, right?
So you think, oh, this is a new story
for maybe a couple of days.
And you worry if you're recording something
that it's gonna be old by the next day, right?
But this one has had legs.
And a lot of that is because you have the luminaries, and I'm being generous with
that term, but you know, the faces of the party upset and the rank and file upset.
And usually those things don't coincide, right?
You get a few pissed off people here, but down here, everyone's fine.
Or down here, people are upset,
but up here, folks aren't.
And we have to be real about this.
There are folks who were very outspoken
about the Epstein files and being upset,
like Charlie Kirk, Benny Johnson.
They've already fallen back in line.
Trump called Charlie Kirk, apparently.
Then he starts posting, you know,
this isn't really worth
our time. And Benny Johnson, who had a four point plan to how the administration could make things
better, which also included, you know, something having to do with Bill Clinton, now is saying that
MAGA is taking this seriously. And apparently, Bondi is going to start dribbling out more
information. Or that that's what we heard
from Lara Trump.
But I'm kind of in two minds about it.
So the one mind, which I think is more like your Ibiza Mali mind, is I'm excited by this
because it also shows that for some in this movement, there is a bridge too far or a line
that you can't cross.
And there are a lot of people, especially the rank and file,
who are upset because this guy was running a pedophile rank, right? There were kids that
were being abused who deserved justice. And that that's something that should matter, no matter what.
The other side of that is that it obviously exposes that Trump, someone who has managed miraculously,
to market himself as someone who isn't just in it for himself and isn't part of the swamp
and the cabal of powerful people that will protect themselves no matter what,
is exposed now as someone who's just your run-of-the-mill, you know, sharky salesman, right?
That's how it always was.
And for those of us who aren't particular fans of his,
that's how we saw him from the jump,
not even just with the Epstein stuff in general,
especially if you'd been around New York,
you knew exactly who Donald Trump was.
You know, the guy who's stiffing his contractors,
who's saying disgusting things about women,
who's, you know, cheating on everyone he ever married.
And that never penetrated.
So I kind of just gave up hope, I guess,
that people would see that aspect of his character.
And that has been affirmed now that people are seeing this.
The other side of me, which is a bit of a Debbie Downer,
and I hate to bring the mood of the pod down
because it has been snappy to begin,
is that I'm also concerned that we're gonna spend
all this time on the Epstein files and it won't matter,
and we'll forget to talk about real stuff
that actually affect people's pocketbooks
and how they're gonna vote.
And we'll show up with campaign posters for 2026
that don't say, he took away your Medicaid,
and then it'll say like, Pito Island or something. It won't be that extreme, but you know, being
relentlessly focused on the things that win elections are how you capture
people's attention. And this is it's an enjoyable sideshow, I guess is how I
would describe it. So what are your feelings besides elation?
how I would describe it. So what are your feelings besides elation?
Well, so I teach a session on crisis management
and there's sort of just three basics to remember
and they're easy to remember, but they're hard to do.
And the first is to acknowledge the issue.
The second is to take responsibility
and the third is to overcorrect.
And I would imagine that the vast majority of people
who went to this island or accepted
private jet travel with Epstein did not engage in pedophilia.
I mean, there's a lot of strafe here.
A lot of people have been caught up in this who, I mean, should wealthy, powerful people
do enough diligence on someone to recognize, okay, if he's been convicted of a sex crime
or has questionable activities, I'm not going to fraternize with him.
If the president, in my view, it's always the cover-up.
It's not the scandals to cover up.
And if the president had said, you know, when I was younger, I liked to party.
I met this guy.
He was fun.
He was known for having a good time.
He was giving money away.
He seemed legitimate.
And I spent time with him, went to the island,
did not engage in any of these illegal activities. It was a huge error in judgment and I apologize.
I think this whole thing would blow over. And if he said, even if he didn't mean it,
and I've instructed my AG to release the files or look into it, and then just like he said
he was going to release his taxes and never did, I think he'd be fine. But he could not be acting more guilty.
Oh, wait, wait, wait.
Let's cancel Rosie's citizenship.
Look over here.
Nothing to see over here.
He could not.
It's when my dog gets into the trash
and I walk into the kitchen,
I know my dog has gotten into the trash.
I mean, she could not be more transparent in her guilt.
And it's as if a communications consultant has said,
okay, do you wanna come across as guilty as possible?
Do you want it to seem like in fact,
you weren't just down there,
but there's some really ugly information about you
in these files, okay, then act like this.
And this is exactly what he's acting like.
I feel as if he has such strong political instincts
in terms of his base, and here he's just,
he literally looks like guilty.
And now I believe there's something more here.
I used to think, okay, you know,
all of these guys accepted a party,
they liked to have a good time,
they liked to be around hot people,
and I would imagine just in terms of probability, the majority of
them did not engage in a crime.
I'm sure some did, but this feels like this guy is scared to death of this thing
coming out and he comes across as really guilty having said that.
And then this is my prediction around this and I'm curious to get yours.
Every time I'm hopeful that Senator Susan Collins actually gives a goddamn about her constituents, or Senator Murkowski is going to find a backbone and realize that this is really counter to the
values she espouses too, and then they all fall in line. And I think the same thing's gonna happen
here. And all of a sudden, Charlie Kirk's saying,
after trying to stir this conspiracy outrage
and everything about the election being stolen
and a pedophile ring in a basement
that is non-existent of a pizza shop
where Secretary Clinton was drinking the blood
of sacrificed children,
it is very rewarding to see the snake eating its own tail here.
But I think eventually he calls them and they all snap and fuck in line.
And this just, we just move on.
Your thoughts?
Yeah.
I mean, I largely agree with you.
It doesn't mean that you can't enjoy something fleeting.
Revel in it.
Like we all love Chinese food, right?
And then we forget that we ate an hour later.
CB It's Christmas for Jews, Chinese food for everyone.
MS Yep.
So enjoy it.
Like the turning point clips will live forever of, you know, Steve Bannon and Megyn Kelly
and Tucker Carlson, though I'm very confused about the Mossad connect, you know, that he
was a intelligence asset,
also worked for the Israeli government,
but, you know, I'm happy to indulge in some more conspiracy.
But yeah, I generally think that they're going to fall in line.
And part of that is that there's no alternative.
And I'm not even talking about, oh, you're going to wake up
and you're going to vote for Democrats.
Donald Trump has so completely owned the right wing of the country
that you've got nowhere to go.
There have been many moderate Republican soldier that has tried to stand up there
and say, Hey, look over here.
There are other people who believe in concern, quote, conservative values.
And you could give it a shot.
Nikki Haley, Chris Christie in 2016,
everybody in their mother tried, right?
Ted Cruz even won Iowa.
And he has captivated the attention and the loyalty
of this group of Americans in a way
that I certainly haven't seen politically,
at least in my time.
And so they don't really have an alternative of somewhere else to go.
And MAGA, more so than the Democrats, which we talk about this part all the time,
they don't run purity tests the same way we do.
They allow for ideological inconsistency.
And yes, I think that there are going to be people that don't move past this,
but it is going to be a drop in
the bucket compared to the general MAGA movement because they've got no other optionality.
And we'll see what he essentially makes Pam Bondi do to try to paper over this because
they're saying now that there's going to be more releases coming.
And I'm not sure there has to be a sacrificial lamb.
If there will be, I think it's Pam Bondi.
And if I were to put on my conspiracy theory hat,
which is very chic, I would say that my old colleague,
Jeanine Pirro, would be a wonderful replacement
for Pam Bondi if she ended up exiting stage left in all of this.
I'm not sure if you're being serious or not. You're being serious?
No, I am being serious.
You think that Janine Pirro would be a good attorney general?
She wouldn't be our choice necessarily, but I think that Pam Bondi has seemed
miraculously unserious in this role for someone who had a very important job,
obviously, in Florida, was instrumental to Trump in being able to win the state,
and she's been a bit blah, right, in this role. She doesn't even perform that well
in the cabinet meetings. And, you know, Jeanine Pirro is now the U.S. Attorney for
D.C., so she is in the administration already. And it wouldn't surprise me, is what I'm saying.
So yes, I am being serious about that.
You know, none of these people would be our picks,
but the Wall Street Journal even wrote a piece
about how much the DC office is loving having Piro there
and how they have been surprised by her seriousness
and she's reverted back to what she was like
as DA in Westchester.
So anyway, I'm just throwing that out there.
Well, at 74 should be one of the younger people
in government.
There you go.
Yeah.
That's exactly what people want it.
Janine, you look fantastic.
74.
But do you think someone is going to have to go,
that there'll be a Mike Waltz?
There'll be a blood offering.
It's a really interesting one.
I just don't, I have a striking inability
to predict what's going on here.
I don't know, I guess it depends how long it goes.
What do you think of this effort
by a couple of Democrats to force a vote?
The Ro Khanna vote?
Yeah.
What do you think of that?
Do you think that's a good move politically?
Yeah, I mean, it happened last night.
It got voted down.
That's right.
Shocker.
Well, they're in charge.
I mean, this is why you gotta win fucking elections, right?
Because then you have the votes to do things like this.
Right on, sister.
Yeah, it's a well-timed F-bomb.
That's right.
That's what we're supposed to do, like one per day, right?
I think it's the role for Democrats, that was mine.
But yes, I think it's right to be drawing attention to this.
And I also think the attitude the Democrats have had
about this consistently,
which is put it all out there. There are going to be some folks on our side that are in these
files. I don't even know. They're playing semantics with it. Is it a file? Is it a list?
And Alan Dershowitz, who defended Epstein and also has been accused of being part of
this cabal, has said in interviews recently, there's a list.
I know there's a list.
Galeen Maxwell is trying to get her story out there.
She was the front page of Drudge, which you know that things are going really badly for
the president when that's happening.
And you do have a person who is alive and for now, and hopefully stays alive, sitting
in a jail cell who probably knows a thing or two about this.
So I think Ro Khanna and folks should be out there really holding their feet to the fire,
not losing the plot.
They're cutting food assistance and Medicaid and giving tax breaks to
the wealthy and all these things that people actually vote on.
But this is a cultural moment, I guess, not only because the
Epstein files and did Jeffrey Epstein kill himself and all of that has taken on pop culture
relevance, but it is saying something generally about class warfare. And it is saying something
about where the president fits in that conversation that we don't usually have a chance to partake in.
It's usually just partisans kind of peeing into the wind
about it, right?
And it doesn't matter at all.
And now they're receiving a little bit of it.
Yeah, so just going back to Janine Pirro
as attorney general, I hadn't realized
that she was actually nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award.
So I do think she's qualified.
Yeah, and also her criticizing the prosecutors
as a January 6th defendant saying
they hadn't done their job.
She's clearly, yeah.
I just gotta ask you.
Matt Gaetz, Pam Bondi.
Yeah, you're saying-
You think he's gonna wake up and say,
I'd love her to really love Merrick Garland back?
That just feels like even the president
could do a little bit better than that.
But anyways, anywho.
Yeah, please move on.
So just some quick data here around this
that shocked me and you're a pollster,
you'll find this interesting.
According to new polling from Morning Consult,
Trump's approval rating has fallen about 6%
since his comments about the Epstein case.
That's a pretty big move, isn't it, Jess?
Yeah.
Things have been, at certain moments, in complete freefall for him.
We're going to talk about immigration, where that is very pronounced on the economy as
well.
But yeah, people are not into how this is being handled.
And you're completely correct that there was a way
to manage this properly, where you just said,
I wanna protect the victims, for instance.
And some people would say that's a load of BS,
but in general, the people who are prone to forgive him
would forgive him.
And certainly none of these influencers, I think,
would have been mad about it.
So it's completely relevant that you could go down six points that quickly.
And you know that his team is paying attention to it as well and saying, like, well, what
can we do to leak out enough that nobody is in criminal, we don't have to hand over the
proverbial list or files or whatever we're calling it and still be able to manage this base
because he has things that he's doing
that he certainly feels really good about, right?
That he has a couple weeks of good news for his side,
getting the reconciliation bill across,
there's gonna be the rescission bill, the Iranian strikes.
He'd love to be talking about all of those things.
And now this is all that he's getting.
I mean, trying to change the subject.
Now he's going after Adam Schiff for a bad mortgage in Maryland.
I mean, it's completely laughable.
So just a quick test of your political knowledge here.
There's only one cabinet member that has a net positive rating.
Any guesses who that is?
Rubio?
No, it's a RFK junior. What? RFK Jr. is the most...
He has not wild. He has a plus 5% net approval rating. It's cuz he's good looking.
I'm pretty sure that the pollsters asked Rubella and Measles, who their favorite
cabinet member, is okay with that. Let's take a quick break. Stay with us.
Just take a quick break, stay with us.
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Welcome back in a quiet but seismic shift. The US recently deported eight men to South Sudan, most of whom aren't even from there. Under a controversial third
country deportation policy, the legal experts say could amount to enforced
disappearance. Their words. Their families haven't heard a word since July 4th, and
now ICE has issued new guidance to fast-track similar deportations with
minimal notice and virtually no chance for migrants to object.
And that's just one piece of a much bigger picture.
Across the country, immigration crackdowns are intensifying.
The new remote detention camp in Florida, alligator Alcatraz, is drawing outrage for
inhumane conditions and the fact that hundreds held there have no criminal charges.
Meanwhile, the administration is appealing a court order to block race-based immigration
raids in California.
But a new Gallup poll shows Americans are more supportive
of immigration than they've been in decades.
Even a majority of Republicans now favor a path
to citizenship, and that's a switch.
But if you're wondering how far Trump might go
to flex his immigration powers, look no further
than his latest threat to strip Rosie O'Donnell
of her citizenship, yeah, that makes sense.
He called her a threat to humanity and said she should stay in Ireland where she moved
after his reelection.
Legal experts quickly pointed out that's not how citizenship works.
Still, it's a telling moment, one that shows how far the rhetoric and policy is escalating.
It's a weapon of mass distraction. Jess, how does the Supreme Court's green light
on third country deportations open the door
for more extreme removals?
And what legal or diplomatic fallout
do you think we might see if other nations
refuse to cooperate or detainees simply vanish
like in the South Sudan case?
I'm gonna say it again.
You gotta win elections
because then you get to appoint
people to the court. And we are so massively screwed because of this conservative majority.
And my expectation is that Trump will probably get another appointment before he finishes in
2028. And that really scares me. There are moments moments where you say like Amy Coney Barrett, I love you or whatever
not this one and the most disturbing part of it to me or the thing that I guess stuck out the most is
that as part of getting rid of this nationwide injunction that came from the lower court is that
It does away with having to give meaningful notice before deporting to a third country.
So what they've been doing is essentially running out the clock or having no clock so
that family and attorneys cannot get to a lot of these people who have been either wrongfully
detained or really should just be deported back to their country of origin.
And you hear this constantly, whether we're
talking about CICOT or detention facilities all over the US,
makeshift or permanent.
We'll talk about alligator alcatraz.
But nobody is getting their due process.
Nobody is getting time to talk to an attorney,
let alone to their wife or their husband.
And that the Supreme Court could be comfortable with that.
Even when I think about it, it was just a few months ago, right?
Where they seemed like some sort of arbiters of humanity about the deportations
to CICOT, where they said they have to make a meaningful effort to produce
Kilmar Abrego Garcia.
Now we have South Sudan with no call to your lawyer is fine.
Yeah.
It strikes me that in a weird way,
a lot of these things are interconnected.
And I've been thinking about, I hate anonymity.
And I'm interviewing today, Greg Lukinoff
is a big First Amendment guy.
And I imagine he'll give me a-
He runs fire, right?
Yeah, he'll give me a cogent argument for why anonymity
is so important.
But my sense is our fidelity, we or conflating free speech with anonymity has led to an environment where
people will weaponize millions of trolls to create intimidation and shape the discourse
around what's advantageous for some folks who don't have America's best interests at
heart.
I don't think people would ever behave this way if they had to have their identity released online. And in general, I think that almost anything involving a government
investigation, there might be a quiet period for security reasons, but I think there's no reason
not to release everything. I just, I can't understand why any file isn't ultimately released
at the FBI aggregates unless they see it as a security concern.
And then more generally, what do storm troopers ice the KKK and weirdos not letting Jews access certain parts of UCLA have in common?
And the answer is masks.
And when I think about what's been a hugely creative or beneficial move for our men and women in blue,
our trust in police
forces around the nation. It's been body cams and the fact that they have their badge number
and their name right on their, visible on their chest and they're not allowed to wear
a mask because they have to take accountability for their actions. And it's been, I think
one of the greatest innovations in law enforcement that if you're going to apply force or you're
here to protect and to serve,
that you need to show all of your actions in 4D color.
And what do you know?
ICE enforcement agents are wearing masks,
which tells you, in my opinion,
everything about how they're acquitting themselves
or what they're doing.
They wouldn't dare want anyone to actually know
who they actually are.
So this to me comes back to a basic trend in our society that's a wrong trend, and that
is an acceptance and even reverence for anonymity as opposed to forcing people to take accountability
for their actions.
And people will come back and say, well, what about the civil rights lawyer in the Gulf
that needs to protect our identity?
We could absolutely have anonymous accounts online and ensure that people are using them
for reasons where they would need anonymity. But when you go onto your feed, and Jess,
I imagine you get a lot of this because I've found a disturbing trend online where women
are subject to more hate-filled emails and rhetoric and threats of violence
by virtue of the fact that they're women. I don't think it's healthy, this protection.
I think every social media platform should force identity
and age gate and accepting a federal agency
that now has greater funding
than the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
not doing covert or national security work,
but treating people.
You just wouldn't see them putting their knees
on the heads of people or separating women
from their 13 year old screaming daughters if they actually had to show their fucking faces. So whether it's the Epstein files
and a belief that, oh, something should stay out of public view or masks covering the real identity
and thereby reducing the accountability of this enforcement agency, which we are paying for,
I think all of it comes back to the same place. And that is we have gone way too far with a reverence and an acceptance for
anonymity and not connecting identity to people's actions. Your thoughts?
I think it's an incredibly important point, and if you, you know, wanted to get
into the nuance of what is, has to be for national security, what actually needs to
be put out in the world, I think that you can have those conversations on a
case-by-case basis. But in general, you know think that you can have those conversations on a case by case basis.
But in general, you know that society would run
a hell of a lot different if people had to show themselves,
if they had to own what they're saying in person
and online behaviors.
And you're completely correct that it is a complete cesspool
of what goes online, especially when it comes to misogyny
and harassment.
I'm going through this right now.
There's a large conservative account that posted a picture of me with my ex
boyfriend and a picture of me with my husband.
And the post says that I cheated on my first husband.
I don't have a first husband.
I only have one husband.
And, you know, it gets worse.
We're talking whore, the C word, all of it. And this is because I responded to the news
that Ken Paxton, AG in Texas, his wife has filed for divorce after 38 years together.
It has been rumored for a long time that he cheats on her. And she's just had enough at
this point. Anyway, so I wrote the
party of family values strikes again because we're constantly lectured by
conservatives about how Democrats are folks that are part of a pedophile ring
and it has unleashed a torrent online that I haven't seen worse than actually
when the president of the United States of America comes after you. A lot from
women, a lot from good Christians, right?
You know, I'm the best Christian there ever was,
and you're an enormous whore,
and can't get it taken down
because of what goes on on social media now
and the changes that have happened under Elon Musk.
And so I'm kind of just sitting here having to take it.
The algorithms love this type of-
Yeah, outrage.
This type of incendiary ridiculous content.
And first off, I'm sorry you're going through this,
but to anyone that doesn't have their head up their ass
realizes this is all total bullshit.
But what this continues is a long tradition of misogyny
that has gone just ape shit online
where people don't have to take accountability for their hateful, weird rhetoric, which sometimes can
be very, it's not only damaging emotionally and mentally, it can put people in physical danger
because people start believing this shit and then a crazy person picks up on it. But it continues a
long tradition that has gotten much worse online, which a bunch of dudes refuse to address because
it's difficult to imagine what it's like to be a victim of this when you've never been
a victim of this.
And the misogyny here is just so stark because according to online trolls and especially
the right, infidelity is a feature not a bug for men.
And it's a crime against humanity for women,
so why not just accuse women of something,
whereas it would be a compliment?
I mean, that's a real man on the Republican side, so.
He should even be president.
Well, the people who are making these comments about you,
one, I don't know if it's a media organization,
but effectively this goes back to Big Tech. The platform platforming this clearly false content, most likely, and
it sounds like it's Twitter, the algorithms see it like how much activity it's getting.
And so they elevate it and they give it more organic reach than it deserves on its own.
There's no veracity here. People wouldn't be spreading this type of information as far and wide organically.
But because it invokes a lot of reactions and back and forth, and I'm sure people
are weighing in and defending you, the algorithms love it.
So they spread it further than it would go on its own, thereby disparaging your
reputation and also creating emotional harm.
When you algorithmically elevate content,
you are now an editor and there's no reason
you shouldn't be subject to the same liability
and slander laws as traditional media.
Fox News, including your endorsement for attorney general,
she was named in a case for spreading misinformation
about Smartmatic, purposefully and knowingly
spreading misinformation around a company, purposely and knowingly
spreading misinformation around a company
knowing that it was false information
that caused material and economic harm.
This is happening to you right now,
but because it's happening to you,
Twitter knows this is bullshit.
And it's very easy to see that this is causing real harm
in disruption in your life.
But because they're quote unquote,
a nascent technology company,
which is what it was called in 1997,
when this ridiculous 230 law was passed,
they are not subject to the same liability as Fox News
when they spread misinformation.
So this all comes back to big tech,
figuring out a way to weaponize Republicans and Democrats
to avoid any real responsibility or liability for things that
traditional media has been responsible and liable for.
It not only tears at the fabric of our society and coarsens our dialogue, but creates a post-truth
society where nobody knows what to believe anymore because the reality is if somebody
sees a story over and over, it becomes, in their mind, naturally, less of a lie.
It's like, oh, I'm seeing this everywhere.
There must be some truth to it.
No, it just means the algorithms have
decided regardless of how disparaging or slanderous it is,
if it creates more engagement,
we're going to spread it far and wide.
So I kind of lay this at the feet not only
of the people who created this false narrative,
but the fact that one, the social
media platform doesn't force identity when people weigh in and say vile things about
you.
We should know who they are.
They should have to stand behind it.
And also, this organization or the people posting this content or the platform specifically
should be subject to the same laws as traditional media.
Anyways, I'm sorry you're going through that and I hope you recognize that in the moment
everything seems worse than it actually is.
This isn't that meaningful and everyone will forget about it and move on.
Yeah, I hope so.
Yeah, and I'm, you know, it's been a few days and you've learned to move on quickly, which
is probably another statement on how society works.
But I just wanted to add to your analysis to say that a critical component of why things are so bad is that
we are so intellectually lazy now that no one wants to even Google something.
You know, this happens constantly and I understand that it is baked into the job for me to bring
information that is different from the mainstream conservative point of view that my colleagues are espousing. But because you don't want to spend any time
taking a look at what Quinnipiac is saying or taking a look at what Marist
is saying or even the Fox News poll, you just immediately dismiss anything that
makes your antenna go a little haywire. You loop it back to the immigration issue, Trump has blown his best issue in historic
terms.
I mean, he's negative 27 on immigration now with Gallup, negative 16 with Quinnipiac,
negative nine Marist, Fox News minus seven.
Totally lost support of the Hispanic votes.
Remember, that was one of their favorite things to talk about how the hombres actually wanted this. Well, it turns out the hombres
are not actually interested in the way immigration law is being enforced at this particular moment.
It probably has to do with the fact that 70% of people who are being detained haven't been
convicted of anything. So they say, oh, well, people are pending charges. You can say whatever
you want about someone. Like this is the United States of America.
You have to be convicted of something, not just that they're floating the idea that you
did a very bad thing.
But you talk to the strongest section of his base about this, of Trump's base, those poll
are, they're all fake news polls, right, if they even exist.
And they haven't spent any time actually going around and looking
at a source that doesn't confirm their immediate bias.
And to the masking thing with ICE agents, I don't know if you've seen these stories,
but there are people impersonating ICE agents, just like putting on masks and robbing, throwing
people in trucks.
I mean, and some folks don't even know if it isn't actually an ICE agent that is doing
something like this because the reality on the ground is that there are folks that are doing this.
And Brian and I were talking about this over the weekend. We hadn't been seeing that many stories
from New York City about these immigration raids, like hearing a lot about what's going on in Chicago
and in Boston. And I heard from a friend that apparently in big immigrant neighborhoods out in
Queens in particular, that there are ICE agents everywhere there now.
So the city is, is not being spared because Eric Adams is a friend of the Trump
administration in any way.
And I assume that the stories are going to start rolling in of these terrible
things happening,
you know, all over the subways and it's just, I'm not saying that immigration law doesn't need to be enforced,
but I don't want our country looking like this.
Yeah, but it's so gross.
It's performance and pageantry and fear and not really addressing the issue because going to the very core of the issue,
while most people acknowledge immigration has been the secret sauce for American prosperity or
one of them, what they don't want to have an honest conversation about is that the most
profitable part of immigration has been illegal immigration.
And we didn't just wake up with tens of millions of illegal immigrants.
It's a flexible workforce that comes in, pays social security taxes, commits crimes at a
lower rate, and then melts back to their own country when the work dries up.
It's been this unbelievable profitable flexible workforce.
And where I see the far right go is they say, look, and it's a solid argument.
Theoretically, they broke the law.
They broke the law.
They knew they were breaking the law.
They should be subject to enforcement.
But they never want to talk about, well, based on that law, shouldn't we be prosecuting all the employers who knew they were employing
undocumented workers? And by the way, that is a crime. But we don't talk about
that. We don't talk about the cut-and-dry, the employers, whether it's
fast-food restaurants or families employing undocumented workers. We seem
to forgive those less brown, older, less, less vulnerable people.
Right.
So we're just not focused on the right thing.
If you want to talk about an alien invasion, if you want to talk about
millions of people storming the shores and offer their services for free, you
want to talk about disruption.
What if seven or eight or 10 million immigrants storm the shores, just
overwhelmed the United States.
And we're willing to work for free 24 by 7.
What would that do to certain industries?
Well, it's here, folks. It's called AI.
And instead of focusing on AI and taking some of that
$12 billion and upscaling people and training to be
critical thinkers and understand AI and how to leverage it
and job training to get people out of things like
trucking, which clearly AI is going to just decimate.
We want to scare the shit out of people and
increase inflation by getting rid of 3% of
America's working population, which is
ISIS goal, which will be somewhere between 5 and
15% of the agricultural and construction
communities between tariffs on drywall
gypsum, Canadian lumber, and then emptying out
construction sites of which 15% of the workforce
is undocumented workers.
And by the way, when you lose 15% of your workforce,
the industry kind of collapses for a while.
You're going to see massive inflation,
and you're going to see huge economic strain.
But instead, you know, instead of focusing on our economy, instead of focusing on how we would use
that money to upscale people and protect jobs, I just think the president, I think they love this
macho mass big guys ripping families apart that they're, I think so many Americans are so angry
and upset that they actually
enjoy some of this footage.
Like, oh, we'll show those, you know, those criminals.
But you know, the nice, the nice white family that owns
the car wash has been hiring undocumented workers
and wink, wink, everybody's put up with this
for a long time.
Leave those good Americans alone.
I wonder what's gonna happen.
I think at some point there's gonna be a confrontation
that's gonna turn violent in the United States.
I think people are so correctly horrified.
There was a really interesting video taken in a hospital
where doctors just surrounded ICE and said,
what are you doing?
Get out of here.
And what is going on here is so craven
and so aggressive and so upsetting.
I mean, at least the brown shirts and Nazi Germany showed their faces.
You know, these guys showing up with masks and the militarization.
I mean, it's happened incrementally, so we're not a shock, but if someone had
played just a few years ago, what was going to happen here at car washes and
Calabasas or to, you know, Uber drivers Uber drivers or people showing up for their citizen hearings or
church. I think we would have just said, well, of course that would never happen in America.
Well, it is. Anyways, with that, we'll take another quick break and we'll be back in just a moment.
It's Today Explained. What's going on, my boys and in some cases, gals? Recently, one
of you emailed us with this request.
You've got mail.
Hello. I'm an avid listener, and I strongly believe you should cover the story of Curtis
Yarvin. It's important to explore who he is and how he has influenced the MAGA and
the Tech Bros movement.
Curtis Yarvin is a very online far right philosopher whose ideas include the
fascinating, the esoteric, the absurd, the racist and so on.
Six months into the Trump administration, there's evidence that he is influencing
the MAGA movement and even President Trump.
JD Vance knows him and likes him.
Elon consulted him about this third party idea.
Yarvin can take some credit for inspiring Doge.
And as you'll hear ahead, one of Trump's most controversial,
doesn't even begin to cover it, ideas may have come from Yarvin
or someone who reads his sub stack.
I can almost guarantee you that Trump does not.
Everything's computer.
Today Explained, weekday afternoons.
This week on Network and Chill, we're diving deep into Trump's one big, beautiful bill,
the sweeping legislation that promises to reshape America's economic landscape.
From tax cuts to student loans, I'm breaking down what this massive piece of legislation
actually means for your wallet, your investments, and your financial future.
We're going to find out who wins and loses in this economic overhaul, analyze the market
reactions that have investors buzzing, and discuss whether this bill will deliver on
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Just because you're not on Medicaid doesn't mean this doesn't impact you.
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Listen wherever you get your podcasts or watch on youtube.com slash your rich BFF.
Hey, this is Peter Kafka, the host of Channels,
a show about media and tech
and what happens when they collide.
And this may be hard to remember,
but not very long ago, magazines were a really big deal.
And the most important magazines were owned by Conde Nast,
the glitzy publishing
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The way Conde Nast elevated its editors, the way they paid for their mortgages so they
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became seen as this kind of enchanted land.
You can hear the rest of our chat on channels wherever you listen to your favorite media
podcast.
Okay, welcome back.
Before we go, Washington representative Marie Gleason Camp Perez, she's doing a few lawmakers
have dared to do publicly question whether some of her older colleagues are still mentally
fit to serve.
The 36 year old Democrat is pushing a proposal to allow the house ethics office to assess to do publicly question whether some of her older colleagues are still mentally fit to serve.
The 36-year-old Democrat is pushing a proposal that would allow the House Ethics Office to assess whether a member's cognitive decline is impairing their ability to do the job. An idea that was
quickly swatted down by her colleagues and committee. Are they really fucking old people?
Seriously, it's become...
Actually, no.
Really?
They're not really fucking old people that swatted it down.
It's people who want to hang out for the next 50 years in Congress.
Or who are scared of the really fucking old people
who wield a tremendous amount of power as well.
Fair point.
Her call for cognitive oversight lands in a moment
when concerns about mental acuity and government
aren't just theoretical, they're fueling investigations.
Republicans are now probing whether Biden was mentally fit
enough to authorize and determine clemency decisions, claiming staff may have used an auto pen without his direct input.
Biden says he made every decision himself and slammed Trump and his allies as liars.
Still, the broader question remains, when is it too old to govern?
Kieris on your thoughts on this, how realistic is Perez's proposal and could it actually
break an unspoken code of silence
around age and capacity in Congress or will it just be another flashpoint that fades without
reform?
What do you think, Jess?
It's definitely not going to pass ever.
But I do think that it's important for people to show who they are and their morality and
their beliefs.
And that's what she's doing.
She's just making a public declaration.
And this is coming from her constituents
who were all deeply concerned about President Biden
and his mental fitness as millions of Americans
were yourself included.
And she's putting her stake in the ground
where she just says, this is something
that we need to be talking about more
and to be thinking about.
And maybe it's not the end of the world
if there's some mechanism to step in
when there's a problem.
And the argument against it is, well, we have elections
and they have to stand again and get voted back in.
But in a lot of these districts,
they're rubber stamps for whoever's in the majority.
You're talking about D plus 30 districts.
And if someone isn't getting primaried,
then that carries on.
There's a lawmaker, I think she's 86 years old,
who's been flirting with maybe I'm gonna run,
maybe I'm not gonna run.
Her staff has to kind of clean up
after she makes a comment about it.
Now she's decided that she's gonna run again.
Maxine Waters, she's 86 years old.
I get it, these are only two year terms,
so she'll be out by 89 or whatever.
But like, some things just don't feel appropriate.
And I also think that there is an unfair
sliding scale for folks.
Like I interviewed Greg Kassar for our podcast and he wants a new generation of
leaders. He's part of that. He's on the progressive left of the party. He's been
on tour with Bernie and AOC. So I say, you know, Bernie's 82 years old and he's
gonna run again for his Senate seat. Well, there's a carve out for Bernie because
Bernie has a ton of energy. And yes, I get it. Bernie
Sanders, you have a lot more faith in his ability to survive
a term than you did necessarily about Joe Biden. But you either
have a standard or you don't have a standard. And that's
where this representative, Glucyn Camperez is kind of
putting her stake in the ground and just saying, we need to have standards
that everyone abides by.
And then you can plan for what life after Congress
looks like for you, if it's just retirement,
or maybe you want to go into the private sector,
or you want to go back to teaching if you're a teacher,
or maybe want to travel the world, whatever it is.
But a lot of people have been talking a big game
about passing the torch and a new generation of leaders
or what it takes to do this job,
which is an incredibly special elite job.
There are only 435 people with this job on the Senate side.
Only 100 people in a country of 330 million
who get this job.
Take it more seriously.
I love this.
And I think it's just insane that we've decided that a 34-year-old doesn't have
the cognitive ability or life experience to run for president, but someone, 81,
can do it.
16 years, term limits, or 18 years and 75, you're out.
It's just insane to me.
We have, we educate all sorts of tests,
whether it's pilots, whether it's CEOs of public companies,
and we've decided that arguably to your point,
the most important decision,
we're not gonna have age limits on.
And it really hurt Democrats.
I think five representatives died.
I think it's three.
Was it three?
I thought it was five of them passed away.
Like since the term, yeah, three.
Is a lot of people.
I mean, I joked I'm going to go see the F1 movie and I'm like, I think it's hilarious
that Brad Pitt is an F1 driver who clearly, I can spoil our alert, I'm pretty sure he
probably wins the race, but in 10 years his kids are probably going to take his driver's
license away.
It not only creates a situation where you have people who are cognitively impaired and
make poor decisions, including to run again.
Bernie should not be allowed to run again.
That's insane because biology is undefeated.
And by the time he's 86 or 87,
he's probably gonna slow down
and not be able to represent his constituency very well.
And there will always be examples of the 100-year-old
who runs a marathon, but in general,
we've decided that 17-year-olds
don't have the cognitive capacity
to decide to join the army for good reason, or that they, you know, kids should not be able to access pornography,
at least theoretically.
We age gate all sorts of stuff on the bottom end and the cognitive decline is just as severe
on the back end.
Of course we should age gate this.
And the dialogue I believe has actually progressed.
When I first said that Biden was too old to run on
Bill Maher two and a half years ago, it was called
an ageist and how dare you.
And okay.
In addition to the cognitive decline, which puts serious
strain on the public having to put up with individuals
who no longer have good judgment or even just the
capacity to do their jobs.
It creates an environment where we're not thinking long term.
Two-thirds of Congress will be dead within 25 years.
Are they really that concerned at the end of the day
about deficits and climate change?
And they get all indignant and clutch their pearls
that they got as a wedding gift in the 30s
and say, okay, you're being
ageist. We care about climate change and our grandchildren.
No, you don't listen. Listen to young people talk about the
deficit and the climate change. They're going to be around to
have to pay this shit back. They're going to be around when
everyone has to move out of this forced mass migration and an
unbelievable tax on everybody when we,
when we have to pay for disaster relief on super fires that are happening every other week.
So we absolutely, we need a representative democracy in the average age of our elected representatives across the world. This is a global phenomenon has risen from 55 to 62 and the U.S.
has the oldest, I believe of any, any G7, any G7, except we haven't taken a note from other countries.
Most countries, there's age gates.
You know, firefighters in the U.S. have to retire at 57.
You have to retire from the armed forces at 64,
because you might make bad decisions
to kill other people when you're 84.
But we've decided, no, you can make decisions
about who gets food stamps or what nations
we do or do not declare war against.
Finland requires medical testing for driver's license applicants after the age of 45.
England has an age limit of 75 for sitting on a jury.
They realize at 76, you may not have the cognitive ability or the physical stamina to pay attention
to ensure that an individual is acquitted fairly through the court process.
86 members of the House and 33 members of the Senate are now over the age of 70.
In the House, the average age is 57.
In the Senate, it's 65.
And this is the third oldest Congress in 1789.
Enough already.
Enough already.
We need age limits. If we have them
on the bottom end, there is no reason we shouldn't have them on the top end.
It's also a worse problem on the Democratic side than it is on the Republican side.
Fair.
Trump aside, who's obviously an incredibly old president, but the rank and file, and
this they're doing as well with the Supreme Court nominations too.
I mean, I could see a world in which we were in power and we're like, I'm really
into this 65 year old, I think it'd be great on the bench.
I'm like, take the teenager, put the teenager on the court.
Put in representative Talarico.
That's a great plug.
Yeah.
We have them on the podcast on Friday.
There you go.
This is how you've got to be thinking about it.
I do want to say something positive about the current state of democratic politics.
Go on.
Because we don't do this nearly enough and these are fundamentally our people.
There's new polling out from Tony Fabrizio, Trump's pollster, showing that Republicans
are trailing on the generic ballot in 28 house battleground seats.
There are huge amounts of pickup opportunities, especially with the big,
beautiful bill.
Don't blow it by only talking about Epstein.
And one thing that I saw that I thought you would really like is there's this up-and-coming
ad-making firm that's cool campaigns, Van Ness Creative, and they have basically issued a warning saying that
if you're not gonna get online,
then you just need to retire.
That no one should be making you ads
or supporting campaigns of people who cannot communicate
the way that the world is getting information
and ingesting it.
And there's an effort that you can make if you're older
and all you can do is hold a camera up to your face
while you're sitting in a car or whatever
that's still making some sort of effort,
but there are actually pretty high numbers
of folks in elected office who don't even want to partake
in the main vehicle for political communication
at this point and that those people need to retire,
along with the 85-year-olds.
I agree. Across both chambers,
there are 20 members who are 80 years or older
who likely think CHAT GPT is a venereal disease.
I mean, the Congress is beginning to look like
the waiting room at a cardiologist in Boca Raton.
It just, for God's sakes, enough already.
All right, Jess, that sakes, enough already.
All right, Jess, that's all for this episode.
Thank you for listening to Raging Moderates.
Our producers are David Toledo and Eric Gennikis.
Our technical director is Drew Burrows.
Going forward, you'll find Raging Moderates
every Wednesday and Friday.
Subscribe to Raging Moderates on its own feed
to hear exclusive interviews with Sharp Political Minds.
This week, Jess and I are talking with, we're excited about this, with Texas State Representative
James Tallarico. Make sure to follow us wherever you get your podcasts so you don't miss an
episode. Just have a great rest of the week.
You too.