The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Raging Moderates: Trump’s Trade Win or Spin?
Episode Date: July 30, 2025Did Trump really negotiate a trade deal with the European Union? Or was the whole thing just a delay tactic? Scott and Jessica talk through the politics of the U.S./E.U. tariff talks, and analyze Trum...p’s “zero-sum” approach to our allies and partners. Plus — the shifting sentiments on Israel’s culpability in Gaza, gender equity and economics in the dating scene, and… are we still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov. Follow Prof G, @profgalloway. Follow Raging Moderates, @RagingModeratesPod. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Raging Moderates, I'm Scott Galloway.
And I'm Jessica Tarlov.
Jess, we need to talk about your blouse.
Is this the Real Housewives of Tribeca?
What's going on here?
I am like luau chic for the day.
I think it's going to be like 98 degrees.
I had to do camp drop off.
So Brian got this for me as actually,
I mean, I don't want to defend it if you just don't like it.
I do like it.
It's a very nice dress, actually.
And it's flouncy, which is good for breathability
and the heat, but I don't know how often you buy
your partner clothes, but Brian relentlessly buys me
oversized clothes and I don't know what that's about.
Oversized clothes.
He likes a big flowy dress.
So here we are in the heat in a big flowy dress.
A six-four handsome guy that's really into buying
his partner clothes.
This guy's dreamy.
I mean, I did well, especially, you know,
for a later in life pickup.
Later in life, you're still pretty young.
I love that later in life.
How are you?
I'm good.
I too enjoy women's clothes.
I buy shoes.
I'm definitely-
You're a shoe guy.
I am. As my ex-wife said, gay by day, straight by night.
I love women's clothes and fashion.
And no, you look lovely.
I didn't mean to imply anything otherwise.
No, it's a bold print to say the least.
Like you couldn't wear this on cable, but because I'm a podcaster in the morning, I can wear this to come and record.
If you showed up like that, you'd look like-
Oh, straight out the door.
You'd look like the Democrat is just back from, you know,
sitting under a weighted blanket,
complaining into TikTok before her Ayahuasca trip,
and they just brought you on to make the other conservatives
look smart. Yeah, you can't show up with that.
No. I'll be wearing a plain colored pantsuit
by the end of the day, don't you worry.
There you go. In today's episode of Raging Moderates,
we're discussing Trump's deal with the European Union,
the mass starvation crisis in Gaza,
and if Trump will pardon Ghislaine Maxwell.
Ghislaine, Ghislani, Ghislaine, it's Ghislaine, is that right?
Ghislaine, yeah, I think so.
Ghislaine.
Not that I care that much about getting her name right,
but yes.
All right, let's bust right into it.
After months of threats, walk backs,
and last minute meetings, Trump says he struck a trade deal
with the European Union.
Standing next, the EU Commission President
at his golf course in Scotland, of course,
Trump unveiled a framework agreement
that includes a 15% tariff on most EU imports,
cars, medicine, semiconductors, and in return,
the EU has committed to buying hundreds of billions
in US energy and defense equipment.
Trump calling it the biggest deal ever made. The EU has committed to buying hundreds of billions in US energy and defense equipment.
Trump calling it the biggest deal ever made.
I'm not sure if maybe the Marshall Plan or the Treaty of Versailles.
But anyways, although the details are still murky, what's clear is that this move avoids
what could have been a major transatlantic trade war, especially with the Friday deadline
looming to slap 30% tariffs on EU goods.
But the new 15% rate is still a big jump from the previous 10%.
And some countries, including France and Germany, aren't exactly popping champagne.
Jess, what is your overall takeaway from this deal?
It's not even a deal, this framework, let's say that, but this framework.
Well, that is the takeaway.
And I know that the motto for the
administration is supposed to be MAGA, right? Make America Great Again. But I think it could
shift to the details are still murky because that's what you hear about every single trade
agreement that has been floated. And I wanted to talk to you, and I know that you've spoken
on your other pods about this, but we haven't yet on Raging Moderates. You know, this conversation that's going on now about why the economy is still chugging along, that we were expecting end of days
situation, we're basically business as usual-ish, right? Like the market is unbothered by this. I
know that we had the whole taco theme in conversation. I think that that is applicable to
what's going on. The Wall Street Journal had a great chart about what was promised, right? What he said would happen on Liberation
Day and then what has actually been executed and that he is 166 tariff letters short of
what he said he was going to send by this Friday, August 1st. I think he's only sent
25 at this point. But can you break down why you think it is that everything,
I won't say that it's fine because we have seen
a lot of enormous companies report billions of dollars
of losses, especially in car manufacturing,
Walmart with the headlines,
they're raising prices up to 51%.
But why do you think that the market and the economy
has been, I guess, more resilient than you would expect in the face
of the damage that the Trump team
has at least been promising to bring.
So I've said for a long time that I think
two of the most damaging metrics in the Western economy
are the Dow and the NASDAQ,
because they give us sometimes cold comfort
that the economy is doing well,
or the people are doing well.
10% conservatively of Americans own 90% of the stock, 50 to 90% own the other 10%, and the bottom 50 just have debt. So essentially the NASDAQ and the Dow have become not
indices on the economy, they become indices on the economic well-being of the wealthiest Americans.
come indices on the economic well-being of the wealthiest Americans.
And shocker, the wealthiest Americans keep hitting 17 new highs so far this year.
They're killing it.
And I worry that we're starting to the wrong test.
And that is we believe that because the NASDAQ is up that everything is fine.
And what you effectively have in the global markets right now is that 50 to 55% of global market capitalization is represented by the S&P 500
or by US publicly traded stocks,
which is just incredible when you think about it.
And then if you add in debt,
the way you value a company is you say,
what is the equity value of the market capitalization,
which is the price of the share
times the number of outstanding shares.
So if a company has a million outstanding shares
and it's trading at a hundred bucks a share,
okay, it's got equity value of a hundred million.
But if it's got debt of $30 million on some plans, property, office space,
then technically you're saying the enterprise value is a market cap plus the
debt 130 million. Cause the market's saying, even though it owes 30 million,
it's worth a hundred million more.
So we're saying this company is worth 130 million.
If you add in debt of American companies,
the total enterprise value of US companies represents
70 percent of the enterprise value of every company in the world.
So effectively, if someone came to you Jess and said,
all right Jess, you can own every company in America for $70,
or you can own every company in the world that's not in America for $30,
which would you choose?
Wait, actually?
Yeah, you can either own every American company for $70,
or you can own every company that's not in America,
China, Brazil, every company in Europe.
Sorry, I thought it was rhetorical, the second option, right?
Yeah, I would argue that's a better deal.
Yeah, okay.
Well done.
Sorry, no, I thought it was one of those.
You turn the same color as your blouse
in about three seconds.
That's like 80 different colors.
I didn't know if I was getting
like a Scott Galloway, Ted Talk thing,
like, come on, you idiot, or it was actually.
Where I ask questions, but I don't want an answer.
I just want to talk to myself.
Well, that happens sometimes.
No, that happens a lot.
I'm guilty. Okay.
Anyways, you're right.
You're correct.
Ding, ding, ding, you advanced to the lightning round.
So American stocks are just quote unquote
conservatively fully valued
and a lot of people would say massively overvalued.
And of the stock market that represents 50%
of the total market cap of the entire world,
40% of that value is represented in just seven companies.
And of those seven companies,
they are basically being driven by the promise
and unbelievable performance so far
and the understandable excitement around AI.
So AI is not subject to tariffs.
AI just churns on.
Trump just announced basically
that his new quote unquote AI regulation is no regulation
and says that AI can crawl this podcast
or your books or your TV shows or recreate a Rihanna song.
And there's not a lot of recourse from the artist.
It's basically a giant transfer of value as I read it from New York and LA and the creative
community to his buddies in Silicon Valley.
So the economy grinds on.
When I got off of Twitter, what struck me was one, I didn't miss it.
And two, how small a world it is that it's a small number of very vocal people
in the chattering class. I didn't miss any economic opportunities.
I didn't miss out on any information.
All that happened was my mental health got a lot healthier.
And what I think we're seeing with the Trump administration and generally in
government is that the economy grinds on and that maybe these policies don't have as big an effect.
And also because of the taco effect where people don't believe Trump anymore, the economy
kind of grinds on.
If you look at the real economy, consumer price index that recently came out, there's
something in it for everybody.
What do I mean by that?
Catastrophists like me who don't like Trump look at the more inflationary
subject items and they are starting to spike.
Okay.
That's evidence that inflation is starting to kind of register or get traction.
And it was going to take six to nine months as it worked through the supply chain.
General Motors just announced a billion dollar reduction in profits and they
squarely blamed it as did Stellantis on tariffs.
So you're starting to see the tariffs kick in,
but at the same time, inflation was only about 2.7%
and the majority of the world would pray for 2.7%.
So, and to be clear, the markets went down
and then have ripped back.
It looks as if the markets are doing one of two things.
They're either saying these tariffs aren't that bad,
the economy grinds on, you, Scott Gallo and other people,
you're catastrophes and there was no reason to be this worried.
Or, quite frankly, the markets in these companies,
specifically AI companies who are immune to this,
are just fine.
But the real economy, the stress on families,
supposedly this EU deal is going to result in about $2,000
in incremental costs for American households.
So I worry more generally
that we are studying to the wrong test.
I would love to see a mental health index.
I would love to see the number of people
the index around self-harm among teens.
I would love to see an obesity index.
Most people know can tell you where the Dow
or the NASDAQ is approximately,
but they can't tell you that, oh, 70% of Americans are obese or
overweight and that, you know, X percent of households are single parent.
I feel as if we're tracking the wrong metrics, but of the metrics we track,
the companies being largely driven by AI continue to march on and the
underlying economy is showing signs of
strain from the tariffs, but it really hasn't shown up yet.
There's nowhere near the catastrophe that people like me were predicting.
Uh, did I, did that help?
No, it definitely did help because there was something for everyone in there.
And you admitted the potential that what we were talking about on liberation
day and for the month afterwards may not come to fruition and that a lot of people
may have had an unnecessary meltdown,
but that we don't know what this will look like
in two to three months.
And there are a lot of very smart people
who are the heads of these companies,
the other great businessmen and businesswomen
who are saying that they can't even do
their Q2, Q3, Q4 predictions
because we live in perpetual chaos.
And that is not the job of the commander in chief.
It's one thing to say, I want someone to come in and shake up the status quo.
It's another thing to say, I want someone to come in and make it impossible for me to
run my business effectively.
And we're not even talking about the impact of the immigration policy on running these
businesses effectively, which is absolutely
massive.
But you're seeing this break between what the average person, the everyday Americans
are feeling and what the talking heads are saying, whether they're catastrophizing or
saying he's God's gift, which is what it looked like on CNBC yesterday.
Jim Cramer even cursed on air.
He was so excited about this EU deal.
But the American public has been beating a consistent drum
about tariffs, saying there are tax on Americans,
that they disapprove of how Trump is handling it.
60% disapproval.
You were right, the Yale Budget Lab are the ones
that's saying this can be about 2000 extra dollars
per household.
And Donald Trump really showed his hand with this idea.
Now, did you see that he's floating rebate checks?
I didn't see that.
He realizes that he needs a good PR stunt,
like the COVID checks, right?
Where he put his signature on something and sent it to them.
So they're talking about $600 rebate checks.
Josh Hawley, our favorite flip-flopper,
wants to get in on it because he knows
that that's the only way he'll be able to run
as an economic populist if he undoes the damage that his votes do
all the time by rewarding you with something.
And there's just no way that Donald Trump would be talking about a rebate check unless
he was doing something to screw over the American public.
It's just impossible.
And so when I get that $20 billion in revenues floated to me, and I heard it yesterday on
the five, I said, well, what's up with the rebate checks then?
Right.
Why is there a direct correlation between us, quote unquote, doing well, and us having
to say to the American public, oh, don't worry, we're going to figure this out for you?
And because it's early stages, $600 would feel like a lot to people when you get up
to $2,000 and then factoring in also the premium hikes that you're going to have from your health insurance deductibles
going up and then after the 2026 midterms that you're just going to lose your health
care generally, they're going to owe people a lot more than that.
One thing that I was thinking about with the EU deal and the French and the Germans in
particular have come out absolutely fuming at the European Commission for accepting
this is we now live in a world where what's good for us has to be bad for the people that
we do business with.
Yeah, it's real some.
That's right.
And there's something so, I mean, the cruelty is the point, right?
There's no bigger or more apt truism about this administration. Because you hear Donald Trump out there saying this is the biggest deal and this is the point, right? There's no bigger or more apt truism about this administration.
Because you hear Donald Trump out there saying this is the biggest deal and this is the best
deal that could have ever been imagined. By the way, the deal that we had, which was 1%,
that seems a lot better than 15%, which is what we're going to be paying. But there's
something about stomping on the economic graves of people who have been great allies with us,
who have been great trade partners with us,
that feels so short-sighted and low and crass.
And I just can't get used to it.
You know, the scene of him sitting with,
I always mispronounce her name, Ursula Van Lyon.
Yeah, her.
And just barking at her about how good it's going to be.
And you can see the abject terror in her eyes because she knows not only does she have to make
an economic deal, but also she has to protect NATO, which is being really under discussed in this
because he showed up at the NATO summit and he got a 5% pledge from a lot of these countries.
And the Europeans are having to do a very delicate dance to
make sure that he doesn't pull out of NATO completely because he's pissed
about whatever happens in his manufactured trade war.
You touched on a lot of important points.
So with respect to Ursula, I think it was less terror than it was disgust
and disbelief that the greatest nation in the world decided that this village
idiot should represent us.
And I mean, there's a few things here.
One, your zero sum game analogy is a fundamental flaw in his approach to business.
And it was like to try and turn this to a learning.
Up until about the age of 40 or 45, I thought that business and capitalism was about,
I get the better end of every deal, that I negotiate everything,
and if I can hire someone who's really good
and pay them 150,000 and their market value is 200,000,
I'm winning.
And the moment I'm paying them above market,
I'm losing and I need to have a conversation with them.
And every time I talk to a vendor,
every time I try to buy a car, everything,
trying to negotiate the best deal possible,
hoping that the person on the other end
is almost a little bit pissed off and disappointed
because I got the better of them,
that it was a win-lose.
And what you realize is that the amazing thing
about capitalism is it's a construct.
And Pat Connolly, one of my mentors,
who was the CMO of Williams-Sonoma,
one of my first engagements was to do
Williams-Sonoma's internet strategy back in the 90s.
And we wanted to charge him, I think, a quarter of a million dollars.
And I called Pat and said, like, you're an amazing client.
I need mastheads.
I'm a 27-year-old running a strategy firm.
We'll do this for 100 grand.
He's like, no, we're going to pay you a quarter of a million dollars
because we want our partners to do well.
And that struck me that this was a great company that had said,
okay, our partners need to make money too.
We want good partners.
We want them to thrive.
And that slowly but surely started changing my mindset.
And the ultimate pivot in geopolitics that recognized
the opportunity for win-win as opposed to zero-sum game
is we said we can't have Versailles again.
We can't put the defeated armies in a box
and bankrupt them because we're so fucking angry. And we said, we can't have Versailles again. We can't put the defeated armies in a box and bankrupt them because we're so fucking angry.
And we took Germany,
which had obviously unleashed horror on all of Europe.
We took Japan, who quite frankly,
doesn't get the credit it deserves
for butchering and brutalizing Asia and Southeast Asia
through World War II.
And we said, here's an idea.
Let's flip the script.
Let's massively invest.
Let's borrow from American households and here's an idea. Let's flip the script. Let's massively invest. Let's borrow from American households
and let's rebuild them.
And what do you know, Germany and Japan
are now just such extraordinary allies.
Not only because they like us,
but because let's be honest folks,
Germany and Japan have outstanding cultures.
You can level their countries and within 20 or 30 years,
they are back in an economic powerhouse.
Whereas the majority of the countries in the world can't get out in their own
fucking way. This country can literally be decimated either of these cultures
and they build back to be economic powerhouses.
And now they are outstanding allies.
That is the definition of capitalism or the whole is greater than the sum of his
parts. And Warren Buffett just said something really dramatic.
He said when kids, if you believe that your economic policies
start extracting so much value from other nations
that those kids starve, to believe that our kids
won't at some point be a threat from other starving kids.
Look at the most unstable, violent nations in the world
that are thinking about terror cells
and how to bring down our buildings
and kill our soldiers overseas.
They have a disproportionate number of people
who just aren't doing very well.
And this is one of his fundamental flaws as he sees it as a win-lose.
I mean, a couple of things.
One, right now, France and Germany are saying, if you look at this deal on its
face, you have to give the Trump administration a win specifically on this
deal, not on the philosophy of win-lose, but it looks like they have the better end of this deal.
According to analysts, if this framework becomes actual law,
which it may not, this will reduce EU GDP by 0.5%.
That is a big deal in a place that's hoping for 2% growth.
That's a pretty big reduction.
The Prime Minister of France came out and said,
this is a dark day. And it kind of goes to game theory.
And that is when you're trying to organize 27 EU member
nation states to an agreement, it is very difficult to speak
with one loud, stern voice.
There is an advantage to being a United States.
And then the other point you brought up really is,
if you will, the elephant in the room,
and it's the following.
They're our largest trading partner. This is the largest trading relationship in the world.
So getting back to business, getting on with it, trading again,
letting businesses plan their business, knowing, okay, it's the devil.
This deal is the devil, but it's the devil we know.
We need to get back to work.
That's a good thing.
The elephant in the room also was that I do think that the EU
or the US had this hammer that basically, I would imagine,
part of this agreement is an informal or formal agreement
to say the US is going to continue to ship arms to Ukraine
and defend Europe against an invader
and to stop this nonsense bullshit talk about potentially
withdrawing from NATO.
And Trump fans are correct in the sense that his reputation for being a little
bit fucking crazy occasionally comes in handy sometimes.
These nations were not going to increase their military budgets to the extent
they're planning to under the Biden administration or Harris administration,
because they were never going to believe that our rich benign uncle was going to
cut us off, they just didn't believe it. our rich, benign uncle was gonna cut us off.
They just didn't believe it,
and they kept not paying, or not paying their fair share.
So to his credit, you are seeing a massive increase
in military spending among European nations,
which I think is good,
because they are, for the first time,
believe it's a credible threat,
that he just might stop sending arms to Ukraine,
or supporting NATO.
And I think this was an attempt to ensure
that continues to happen.
And then just the final thing here,
and I wanna get your response,
is there is a bit of a conspiracy theory
or a Machiavellian play in my co-host
on Profit in Market at Elson pointed this out,
that they have no intention of doing any of this shit.
They're just delaying 18 months until the midterms when there's a democratic Congress, none of this shit. They're just delaying 18 months until the midterms when there's a Democratic Congress.
None of this shit, which arguably should have congressional approval, none of it goes through.
And the EU has just basically said, let them put out a press release. And the most ridiculous
part is they're planning to invest, you know, 600 billion and then 750 billion into energy.
How do you even measure that?
What counts for that?
That's just a big fucking number to put in his press release
that he can say it's the biggest deal ever.
And they may have said, OK, just tell the ugly fat kid
he's good looking and that he's going
to get to play on the varsity basketball team
and we'll deal with him later because we have math and English
and we want the class focused and getting back to their schoolwork.
There's a theory that all of this, even the the protest from Germany
and France was planted and they're just saying, just placate this idiot.
And it's never going to happen. Your thoughts?
I'm not mad at it.
And certainly once I read the pushback from the EU Commission where they said none of this is a
guarantee, it's our intention. I'm intentional about a lot of things. I've been meaning to work out.
I am actually doing a juice cleanse right now, so if I get a little nasty it's because I'm starving.
But like we all want to do things, right? I'm sure that you would love a world in which they could
invest more in American made, et cetera.
But the truth of the matter is,
is that they can't compel private companies
and everything that he wants shows his desire
to be an authoritarian, right?
He wants to live in a world where governments
can push private companies to spend
hundreds of billions of dollars.
But guess what?
They can't do that. They can say, oh, it would be nice if you did a of billions of dollars. But guess what? They can't do that.
They can say, oh, it would be nice if you did a little more of this.
The same is true with the Japanese who I love when you see
the differences in the readouts and the Japanese have been
some of the most transparent about it where they just say,
no, actually that didn't happen.
We couldn't even get a meeting.
Yeah.
Right?
What? Yeah.
Or we showed up and they sent
a lower level guy and we don't really know what's going on
And Japan said basically the same thing as the EU
There's no guarantee of any of this
We're glad that we're at the table and if you keep him at the table and if the table happens to be at his own
golf club
Even better. I mean the optics of having this kind of summit at his personally owned golf club, which he continues to profit from
throughout the course of the administration, his family getting richer and richer and richer
as we go, is such a perfect summation or representation of what this administration is.
It's just about him and personal profit and grift and ritual humiliation of other people who are much more qualified for their jobs
and understand how the world works better.
Now, I'm a bit of a Pollyanna in life.
I know that I would not do as well in a boardroom
as a shark necessarily like Donald Trump.
And he does get a lot about human nature.
I've turned into a Hobbesian on this.
It's nasty, brutish, and short.
I think that was an infinitely female statement
and you should stop that bullshit.
You'd be out standing in a boardroom
and no man with a little dick and arrogance and Dunning
Kruger would ever say that.
Can I wear this?
You're absolutely going to be on boards
and you're measured and you're smart.
Anyways, I'm being sexist.
No, but in a good way.
Only thoughtful, self-aware women would make that statement.
A guy would be like,
I'd be great in a boardroom.
I'd show those motherfuckers.
I know, let me at them.
Anyway, you'd be just fine in a boardroom.
Those stats about applying for jobs
and what men see when they look at a job listing,
if they're missing like 80% of the criteria, they're like, that's the job for me. I'm qualified. And the women see when they look at a job listing, if they're missing like 80% of the criteria,
they're like, that's the job for me.
I'm qualified.
And the women see that they're missing maybe 10%
and they're like, oh God, I gotta read, or.
You know, on the flip side of that,
I'm going way off script here,
that's somewhat of a negative,
is if you present women with a guy
that has 80% of everything they want,
80% of them say that's not enough.
If you present a guy with a woman
who has 80% of what he wants, 80% say that's enough.
Really?
Women have a much, much higher bar than men.
Different talk show, anyways.
I mean, this is about human dynamics as well.
There you go.
And you know that if we could have a podcast
only about dating dynamics and things like that,
sign me up.
I don't know if you've been noticing all these editorials
in the New York Times about man keeping
and how men are asking too much of their partners now
because they don't have enough friends.
So they're actually talking to women about their feelings,
which I thought was the goal.
Like my dream scenario is that Brian has no friends
and has to talk to me about everything
because I stay up later than he does
and just want to talk all the time.
Oh, you're an eye person.
You like to chat.
Yeah, and he works market hours. So he's like, you're an eye person? You like to chat?
Yeah, and he works market hours.
So he's like, I'm going to sleep.
And I'm tired.
And you can watch the hunting club by yourself,
which is just soft core porn.
I don't know if you've seen it.
I haven't.
I watch it twice.
This is so off track.
I think we should explore this though,
because I think it's super interesting.
My TikTok or whatever it was that has kind of gone viral.
It's so weird. You never know what's going to go viral.
But the latest one is one I did with
this really talented podcaster named Liz Plank.
Oh, yeah.
It's a dating thing. I went on it.
No one wants to hear a guy my age talk about dating.
It's very cringy, but I like her, so I went on.
I said, I think men should pay for
everything initially in a relationship.
And I just did the math.
Okay, so women have a much shorter window for gestation.
If you would like to have sex at some point,
and that's the reason most men-
Go on a date.
Most men date the prospect of sex.
In addition, the downside of sex is so much greater for women than men.
The big point that it kind of punctures a myth, is that men get more from women than men. The big point that it punctures a myth,
is that men get more from relationships than women.
If you look at the data,
a man needs the guardrails and
the emotional support of a relationship more than a woman.
When a woman doesn't have a romantic relationship,
she pours that energy into work and
friends and can still have quite a nice life.
When a man doesn't have a relationship,
doesn't cohabitate or isn't married by the time he's 30,
there's a one in three chance
he's gonna be a substance abuser.
He pours that additional energy
into things like video games and porn and nationalism
and blaming immigrants and blaming women.
He just goes to a very dark place.
Widowers are less happy than when they were married.
Widows are happier after their husband dies.
So the reality is a woman's time, quite frankly,
is just more valuable.
The downside potential of sex on that date
is much greater for her.
And you are going to benefit more as the male
from a potential relationship,
which says to me that a means of establishing
that you recognize the asymmetry
and trying to compensate for that asymmetry
and the fact that her time during her mating years
is more valuable than yours as your window
for mating, quite frankly, as a man,
is about 50 years versus, say, 20 for a woman.
It's crazy, yeah.
Is, in my view, to start by paying.
And what I tell my boys, and this sounds sexist
and people are horrified that when you are
in the company of women, you pay for everything.
And they're like, dad, that's lame, that's boomer.
And I'm like, yeah, maybe it is, but it's as old as time.
Women are attracted to power
and someone who can take care of their kids.
And a way you show that you're serious about that
is you make an economic sacrifice called paying for the date.
And it exploded and a lot of people agreed
and a lot of people disagreed and say,
this is the patriarchy, you're trying to own us, da da da.
We don't wanna owe you anything.
And I'm like, that's not what I'm saying.
But I still hold to that.
I do think that men should pay on dates.
I don't know how we got here, Jess.
Do you have anything else to say about the EU tariffs?
This framework.
I have something to say about men paying.
Yeah?
I agree with you.
And what I would say is that I think too many men think
that the first aid or early dates have to be this
extravagance in terms of how much it costs.
It just has to be thoughtful.
So you should just live within your means.
Like a lot of my friends are doctors and they dated other doctors and no one is earning
any decent money for the first kind of 15 years, right, of your life.
But there are ways to have a great cheap bowl of pho, for instance,
and take someone to a restaurant that they may not have had on their radar,
or to do something thoughtful.
We want to laugh and have a good time
and have a non-threatening sexual encounter.
Not that difficult to figure out.
So I'm totally with you, and I think it is a nice gesture.
And then you figure out your lives together.
You figure out what, you know, who earns what, and how to make is a nice gesture. And then you figure out your lives together. You figure out who earns what
and how to make this fair and equitable.
That's right.
I've said around dating, I mean,
it doesn't have to be fancy, it doesn't have to be nice.
You don't want it to be fancy, just what you said.
But you need to take charge.
This is where we're going.
It's not, well, what do you wanna do?
No, no, no, no, no.
You are a player.
You have an idea.
You're gonna take her somewhere fun.
This is what we're doing.
How does that sound?
I'll pick you up at this time.
But you're the dude.
You take charge.
You're in charge here.
All the date needs to know is that she's gonna have
a great time, that you're polite, you're considerate,
she can feel safe around you, but you take charge.
The worst thing I think, in my opinion,
well, what do you wanna do? Well, fuck you, you're the dude. Figure it out. How are you gonna take charge of our worst thing I think, in my opinion, well, what do you wanna do?
Well, fuck you, you're the dude, figure it out.
How are you gonna take charge of our life
and protect our children?
And you have the rest of your life together
to say every night, what do you want to eat?
That's all we do, right?
That's right.
What are we gonna watch on Netflix?
We need a show, what are we gonna watch?
Oh, you're asleep already, no big deal.
There we go.
All right, Jess, let's take a quick break. Stay with us.
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Welcome back.
It's been another week of devastating updates out of Gaza.
Local health officials there say people are dying
from mass starvation and malnutrition
with the toll rising over the past week.
This despite Israel's daily pauses in military operations,
which haven't translated into meaningful relief.
Roughly 100 aid trucks made it into Gaza over the weekend,
but experts say that's a fraction of what's needed.
In a policy shift, President Trump now says
the US will open food centers in Gaza,
even when it's far to say Israel has a lot of responsibility
for limiting aid, a direct break from Netanyahu,
who continues to deny there's any starvation happening at all.
And in another sharp foreign policy turn, Trump announced he's shortening the deadline
he gave Vladimir Putin to strike a peace deal with Ukraine.
What was originally a 50-day window is now just 10 to 12 days.
Yeah, good luck with that.
Jess, Trump is now openly contradicting Netanyahu on starvation in Gaza, is this political calculation or
a genuine shift in how he plans to approach Israel?
I think that it's both.
And I've been eager to have this conversation with you for the last few weeks because I'm
not sure if you're feeling what I'm feeling as an avowed Zionist.
People are very supportive of Israel, but I feel
like everything has changed. And I don't know if my algorithm flipped because there were certainly
people saying that Gazans were starving for a long time. And I obviously knew that there were
mass civilian casualties, but I was stuck on October 7th, which I think is important and a righteous
place to be stuck and that control is in Hamas's hands.
They could give back the hostages and we could end this, but considering who the players
are and it's a terrorist organization and it's the Netanyahu government
that I have been pushed to feel that there's no choice,
but to acknowledge that Israel is playing an important role
in making the lives of these Palestinians
absolutely untenable and impossible to carry on.
You look at that just in the deaths,
and on a monthly basis,
I think it was like 48 last month, 20 of them children. And
since we've seen the shift to Israel administering the aid, the establishment of this Gaza Humanitarian
Foundation, the reduction in aid that's getting into Gaza is
250,000 tons less from the last ceasefire. And that comes from the Wall Street Journal,
right? This isn't coming from the Gaza Health Ministry. We need more independent monitors in
there. We need the press to be allowed in. And I feel like I'm going through a period of complete
reevaluation of what I thought had been happening there the last 18 months. And it's heartbreaking for the Palestinians,
for the Israelis, many of whom have been saying
this themselves.
And I feel like American supporters of Israel
have to some degree just been having this bubbled
conversation about the realities over there.
And I don't know, it's not a mea culpa.
I just, I feel really lost and so sad about what's going on and understanding why this sea change is happening. And I hope that President Trump keeps
leaning into it and that we make it possible for everybody who needs to get food and aid to get it. And that there is also some way to hold Bibi Netanyahu back
because he is taking full advantage
of every opportunity that he gets to bomb somebody else,
to consolidate more power.
And I'm just, I'm really sad.
Yeah, it's, so I've been accused of whitewashing the situation in Gaza.
So I just want to acknowledge some of the, some of the data here of the 74
malnutrition related deaths that have occurred so far this year.
63 of them happened this month.
This includes 24 children under the age of five, a child over five and 38 adults.
About 20% of the children under five in Gaza are malnourished,
so one in five kids. This month alone, over 5,000 children under five have been hospitalized from
malnutrition. Since May 27th, more than 1,060 people have been killed and 7,200 injured while
trying to access food. On Sunday, Netanyahu directly contradicted these reports. He said
that there is no policy of starvation in Gaza and there's no starvation in Gaza, which
doesn't seem to foot to the data.
It's been 190 days since Trump was inaugurated.
On the campaign trail, he repeatedly
stated that he'd end the war on his first day in office.
Obviously, that's not going to happen.
Or about the same time the Ukraine War is going to end
or inflation is going to come down.
So when October the 7th happened,
I was very comfortable and felt like I had decent moral clarity going on a lot of talk shows.
And as someone who's seen, I think, as a moderate and someone who's an atheist and doesn't have a huge amount of connection to Israel or Judaism,
other than my mother was Jewish, and I feel as if I benefited a lot from Jewish culture, I was called on a lot to go on these shows. And I felt very comfortable stating that, look,
if you come in and butcher a nation
with a superior military infrastructure
and take the equivalent on a population adjusted basis,
the population of the University of Texas,
you butcher them the way they butchered them.
And then you take the freshman class of SMU,
hostage and hide them under tunnels.
The response that we would have levied on that nation would have been as or more severe. And I
felt very comfortable stating that war is hell and they have invited a severe and warranted response.
The problem for the diaspora now and that is Jews overseas, including in America, and I'll lump
myself into this group, is this
is becoming increasingly difficult to justify or defend.
And that is, I get the argument, well, okay, Hamas lays down their weapons and releases
the hostages and it's over, but the reality is they're not going to, or they don't appear
that they're going to.
And Israel now appears to be engaged in a wag the dog situation where you have an individual
a prime minister who is effectively running to stay out of prison.
If he loses the election, he may very well likely go to prison.
And he realizes the only way he can rally people around him is to rally them around
the flag and be in a constant war footing.
And also we need to distinguish the military operation against Iran and Hezbollah and what is going on in Gaza.
I think there's different levels of legitimacy and justification for each of those things.
What is happening now in Gaza is just near impossible for us to defend.
And I have been an ardent defender of Israel.
And the bottom line is it just feels as if it's gone too far. And personally, I lay the majority of this at the feet of Hamas,
who tried to inspire a multi-front war against Jews and Israel,
who are committed to the extermination of the Jewish people
and invited a terrible response.
But I also do lay some of it now at the feet of Trump.
We are the only nation that can pull and bully and pressure Israel and Gulf States
into what in my opinion should be happening right now.
And that is a pan Arab and American security force that takes control of Gaza and open
supply routes for aid and begins to talk about a thoughtful plan for reconstruction and at least locks it down and
stops the starvation. And I feel as if it would have, should have, could have, but I feel if Biden
were still in office or Harris were in office, I think we would be closer to that. I hope that
Trump is sincere about his concern around Gaza and that he has a plan in place, but I think a
multinational peacekeeping
force in there ensuring people are getting aid and beginning the process of reconstruction,
whether that involves a two-state solution, I don't know. But at a minimum stops the
starvation. You know, it's time and there needs to be leadership. France is fed up.
They've decided to recognize Palestine as a state.
Yeah.
And what people don't realize is there's hard power and soft power.
And one of the stupid things about USAID cutting it off is that hard power is
very expensive and rarely used.
Soft power is actually a better ROI.
Soft power, whether you think it's brand or philanthropy or foreign aid, the soft
power and the perception of Israel around the world right now.
It's a story of two brands.
On one sense, they see what's happening in Gaza and Israel has gone in my lifetime from
being the good guys to the bad guys.
That's just the reality.
That is going to cost them in terms of aid, how people feel about them, et cetera.
Their military strength and their unbelievable precise military operations, whether it's
taking in Iran's air defenses or the Pager operation, which took years
to plan against Hezbollah.
There's just no doubt about it.
I think the states in the Gulf just look at Israel
and go, okay, love them or hate them.
These guys come to play.
So, but what's happening in Gaza, I think it's become
near impossible for Jews, I'm not sure I've earned
the right to call myself a Jew, a Zionist to defend Israel.
It's just gone too far.
I agree with all of it.
And I would just say that the military precision
of Project Grim Reaper, the Iranian strikes,
that is to some degree a champagne story, right?
That's people who are sitting around and have the time to talk about it.
When they see starving children, that's a regular person problem.
And you look so out of touch when you do talk about those kinds of operations,
which I think left the world a safer place.
And I think it's important and you know, you need to talk about those kinds of operations, which I think left the world a safer place. And I think it's important,
and you know, you need to talk about the alliances
in the region and what is the potential
for a second round of the Abraham Accords,
which I think were an incredible achievement
of the first administration.
But you show someone the back of a kid,
the one from the New York Times story,
that's all that they see and that's all that matters.
Because we know if you don't have
food, you can't function. And shame on anyone who's saying, well, that kid had genetic abnormalities
on top of it. He also has no food and there's no denying the fact that these people have no food.
And Rost Duthot, who I always like, even though our politics aren't the same, wrote an op-ed
over the weekend, How Israel's War Became Unjust, and this line really stuck out to
me.
One can have a righteous cause.
One's foe can be wicked and brutal and primarily responsible for the conflict's toll.
And still, under any coherent theory of just war, there is an obligation to refrain from
certain tactics if they create too much collateral damage,
to mitigate certain predictable forms of civilian suffering and to have a strategy that makes the war's outcome worth the cost."
That doesn't exist anymore. There is no strategy and they have been admitting as much for up to a year.
There are Israeli generals who have spoken out to say,
this is not winnable.
And that's the problem with an intractable war, right?
That region, I hate to say it,
no one is really going to figure it out.
So you have to just get to a best case scenario.
And I think that the one that you propose
makes a lot of sense and hopefully Israel has garnered
enough goodwill with other partners,
or frankly is important
to them enough economically that they will help sort this out.
More Arab states need to take refugees than they are.
They have a thing against the Palestinians and they're going to have to get over it.
And maybe this pushes us in the direction.
But this inflection point, you're seeing it on every single level.
The average defenders of Israel.
My text messages are full of people who were unrelenting in this, you know, bring them
home. This is Hamas's fault. We're saying either that this actually is a genocide, which
I am not comfortable using that terminology, but there are people who think a lot like
me who are using it to, we have to be able to do more. The presidents of five Israeli
universities sent a letter to Netanyahu. They've never done this before about addressing the
hunger crisis. Israeli human rights organizations now, two of them released reports calling
it a genocide. That has never happened before that an Israeli organization has done that.
I think also Netanyahu is not going to do it, but when you have people like Ben
Gavir and Smotrich in your government, you are not acting as a good faith actor at that point.
Like these people that are saying that if 2 million people die, so what? We need to bring the Israeli
hostages home. They are hurting your cause more than helping them and they should be out. On Friday night, I was invited to a Shabbat dinner in Riverdale here in the
Bronx and Richie Torres represents the district and he was there. And the conversation was
around just this, you know, what's going on with Israel and Gaza? What's going on with our politics of this at home here?
And there are a lot of very concerned Jews sitting around that table saying that we are
surely losing public opinion at this point.
You know, Netanyahu is at record lows, deservedly so in my opinion, but within the Democratic
Party, it's even more bleak.
And you've seen Representative Torres, who, you know, we were lucky enough to have on the
podcast, doing more and more interviews where he's saying this is unsustainable and that the damage
done between the Netanyahu government and the modern-day Democratic Party is irreparable at this point.
And that's very concerning to me.
There was an Israeli at the table, left-wing guy has lived here for a long time, but he
was talking about the protests when Netanyahu tried to do the judicial overhaul.
Remember, there were hundreds of thousands of people in the streets on a daily basis
protesting against it.
He said that there were moments actually where Israelis were wearing MAGA hats because they feel like Trump is the only
person that can actually stand up to Netanyahu and that Biden would have been a lot more lax
about this, that Kamala Harris would have been a lot more lax about this. And that story about,
Axios reported it, that after Netanyahu bombed Damascus
for seemingly no reason last week,
that Trump got on the phone and basically said,
what the fuck are you doing?
That that isn't a call that Biden
would have necessarily made.
And that stuck with me,
because those are liberal minded Israelis, right?
Those are people who probably loved Obama,
wanted Hillary to win, et cetera.
And the imagery of seeing hundreds of thousands of Israelis sporting
MAGA hats is something that sends, you know, a real shiver up my spine.
And almost indicates that there might not be time left for us to be able to repair
this relationship, I'm saying this as a Democrat, and to be able to do the right thing in Gaza.
Yeah, I wonder if coming out of this,
I believe Netanyahu is likely gonna do more damage to Israel
or has done more damage than Trump
hopefully will do to America.
One, on the front end, Netanyahu's deal
with the Israeli public was always sort of this unwritten deal
of I'mwritten deal of,
I'm violating the constitution. I'm not very democratic. You may not like me, but I'll keep you safe. Right? Like every strong man.
Yeah. I'm a hard ass. I'll keep you safe. Well, the bottom line is he failed. I went to the Gaza
envelope. I toured some of the affected kibbutz. And the first thing you think you look out over
this field and across the field is is Gaza, is you think,
how the fuck did they let this happen?
Why were there not helicopter gunships here
within about eight minutes?
The day before the Israeli Listening Service,
the tracks communications, registered that 1,500 Hamas
fighters were changing their SIM cards.
Why would they be doing that?
And yet they were totally caught flat-footed.
So he failed in his promise to keep them safe.
And then I believe there's just going to be a flow of ill will towards Israel
and a flow of goodwill towards people who are looking to harm Israel
because of his actions.
I think he has been an absolute disaster for the well-being of Israel,
not only on the front end. He should be accountable.
Golda Meir was brought into office because there was a reckoning,
and Israel is good at this, they're better at this than us,
of after the situation is addressed, having a reckoning and really looking hard
at what happened and who should be responsible.
That's actually what brought Golden My Ear to power,
is the prime minister before her
was held responsible for tactical errors.
That's gonna happen here.
And quite frankly, the ramifications are probably
that he's gonna go to jail.
Not for that, but for, you know,
disassembling the Supreme Court
and all sorts
of other shit. But I can't, I just can't imagine anything that has been worse for Israel right
now than Netanyahu. Anyways, with that, any closing thoughts before we move on, Jess?
Just to say that the strongest argument for changing course and this has been actually returning to Jewish values
and that it is not Jewish to be withholding aid
from people in complete crisis
and through no fault of their own.
And Hamas is a evil terrorist organization
that did one of the most unthinkable attacks in history,
what they did on October 7th.
And they hide amongst civilians.
They don't care if they use as a human shield, schools, hospitals, it doesn't matter.
But our Jewish values demand that we rise above and that we do the right thing here.
And I'm glad to see that there are the beginnings of a policy
change. And I hope that that continues and that we see a world in which we can have a two-state
solution. There's the Pollyanna again, but that people like Netanyahu and Ben Gavir are no longer
in power. That's a good place to end it. Let's take a quick break. Stay with us.
That's a good place to end it. Let's take a quick break.
Stay with us.
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Welcome back. Before we go, we're going to check in on the never-ending Epstein saga because things escalated
again last week.
The Wall Street Journal reports that Trump was personally briefed that his name does
in fact appear in the Epstein files.
In response to growing backlash over how his administration is handling the case, Deputy
Attorney General Todd Blanch spent two full days interviewing Jelaine Maxwell.
She's also been subpoenaed to testify before Congress the week of August 11th.
Then on Monday, Trump told reporters he can pardon Maxwell, who's serving a 20-year sentence
for sex trafficking, but insisted that nobody's asked him to do it.
He added that it would be inappropriate to discuss
while of course discussing it.
Speaker Mike Johnson called the idea of a pardon outrageous.
Outrageous.
Jess, what are your thoughts here?
If he pardons Maxwell, it's end of days kind of stuff.
Like I posted on Twitter because I haven't had the mental
strength to remove myself from there, but that, you know, pardoning Maxwell makes pardoning
violent January Sixers look like good judgment. You know, this woman participated in what Epstein
was doing. She wasn't some administrative assistant. She was there in the room.
The Republican party are obsessed with groomers.
There's your groomer.
And she's sitting in a cell for 20 years,
which frankly seems short.
And Mike Johnson said that as well,
that he thinks that she actually
should have had a life sentence.
And I don't know, Trump regularly says,
well, I'm allowed to do it, I'm allowed to.
I don't know, I haven't really thought about it.
And he did that with everyone that he pardoned
from the quote unquote Russia collusion hoax, right?
Roger Stone, Manafort, et cetera.
Because of how bad the Epstein saga has been for him,
I actually think that the pressure will be enough
that he is not going to pardon her.
She's also a known liar.
It's a terrible witness. She's a perjury as well.
So when her lawyer says she spent nine hours telling the truth about up to 100 individuals,
there's no way that she actually was telling the truth about all those individuals.
And you can see it reflected when Trump says, I never had the privilege of going to Epstein
Island, which is such a weird way to talk about this.
Like he got left out of the trip to the Maldives or something like that.
But, you know, he's still focused on everybody else that would be in the Epstein files or known associates, especially the Democrats.
They're beating the drums as well about, you know, the quote unquote new intel, which is just recycled from before anyone actually did any
investigating what Tulsi has been rolling out. And basically anyone who is an honest
broker, which is limited these days has said, this is so dishonest of those Dan Abrams is
phraseology and you know, this has always been a wild goose chase. But they have a real
problem on their hands, because this is week three, going into week
four of it being the top story.
Donald Trump can't do anything.
He can't even announce this enormous win of a trade deal with the EU without someone asking
him about Epstein.
It's following him to Scotland, whatever trip he takes, whatever movement he makes, wherever
he goes, there's going to be a question about this.
The American public is pissed. You know, there's minus 37 in approval on this and
75% of Republicans, that's the biggest number you're ever going to get of
Republicans, are just satisfied with the way that he's handling it. Does that mean
that they hate Donald Trump? No, he still has like a 90% approval rating within the
party. But 75% is a force to be reckoned with. And these influencers who are, you know, they're not
actually in the cabinet, but they sure seem like they have the level of access and influence as
someone who's in the cabinet, or at least with a lower level cabinet job, are still beating this
drum. And they're talking about it on their shows constantly. Joe Rogan, he said like that this is the hard line in the sand and that the administration is gaslighting them.
And he's not wrong.
Okay, first off, they just decided to go interview Jelaine Maxwell?
Right. She'd been sitting there available for a while.
Though there was no reason to get information from her before.
The fix is in. Basically, it has been communicated indirectly. They don't even need
to communicate to her. Her own lawyer has said, hey, Jelaine, would you like to get out of prison
in less than 20 years? Yeah, that would be nice. How can we do that? Well, anything that you give
to the attorney general's office now in this two days of interview that sounds credible enough for them to release
and to the extent it can exonerates the president from pedophilia would have a likelihood, a high probability of not getting you a pardon tomorrow, but getting you a pardon in about 31 months before
he's about to leave office. And a lot of people have said, well, that would just cause a shit storm
and I don't think he cares.
In three and a half years,
he's going to be an 82 year old obese man
who has pardoned himself.
He could give a shit how many of his own party
or Democrats are clutching their pearls and saying, this is outrageous.
So I think the fix is in.
I think this is obvious.
They're about to announce that she has information and it'll be something along the
lines of while he was there and they were good friends.
And I did see him in the company of women.
There is nothing that shows, oh, and by the way, he never ever, or maybe even made some comments
that he wasn't interested in underage,
I stopped using the term underage women.
People in the comments reminded me repeatedly,
these are girls, these are children.
But the fix is in.
There's absolutely no reason to interview her
unless they saw political advantage in interviewing her.
The Department of Justice is not like our traditional Department of Justice where it attempts to go up the food chain and convince people along the way to turn in and to indict and to prosecute.
This is the opposite.
This is the opposite.
This is we're going to do everything we can, gymnastics, to try and figure out a way to, you know, turn this chicken shit of a scandal into chicken salad for the president, knowing, and this is the problem with an autocracy and a corrupt president.
Think about this. The president is scared shitless.
That's pretty obvious.
He wishes Jelaine Maxwell well.
He said that about her. He didn't say, I wish the victims well.
He didn't say, I hope the trauma that they have experienced,
that they find closure in this prison sentence.
The only person he has wished well in all of this is Jelaine Maxwell.
Because why? He's fucking terrified of what she might say.
And so to think that she and her defense attorney
haven't done the math here and to believe that this entire apparatus
that was one of the greatest apparatus in the world,
the AG and the Department of Justice,
which have been totally perverted and had turned it into a weapon.
I mean, this is just too obvious.
And then the pushback I get is, well, the base will go crazy.
He's going to do here what I would do.
And maybe it won't work is what he did around his taxes. Of course,
I plan to release my taxes, of course.
And then he never does it and he's never going to.
So of course I'm going to release the files or he releases the files in the
names Bill Gates and Bill Clinton aren't redacted.
And then everything else is redacted and then
everything else is redacted. And Larry Sumners and all these famous Democrats. But the idea
that he's worried about the backlash of what's going to happen to him, I just don't think,
I don't, I think Honey Badger don't care. I think if he gets to the end of his administration,
he's going to pardon her and then he's gonna go play golf
and die an obese old man alone, which is some compensation.
Well, I think, you know, putting the timeline on it
makes it a lot more feasible
that this could be the running out the door thing.
I think people are thinking about it
in terms of what could happen in the next few months
versus what am I gonna do as my final act
when I get thousands of people coming out of the woodwork, right?
Saying I need a pardon or, you know, my friend needs this.
So I guess that that is possible.
And I agree with you that he doesn't care.
And you see that even in the way that he treats people who could be or should be the heir of parents for the next administration.
Remember how you wouldn't even say like J.D. Vance would make a great president.
He's like, yeah, no, I'm in charge.
And that's how people who are smart analysts about the modern Republican Party
look at things. Like when I had Kellyanne Conway on asking her about the future of the GOP said is going to be pretty much lost in the wilderness, right?
Because they have no organizing principle besides Donald Trump.
And he is the kingmaker
for everybody, even if he doesn't necessarily help you electorally, as we've seen over
and over again in tight races. But he's the guy. And he's also shown an incredible capacity
to be able to live in a bubble quite happily. So if his bubble is going to be Mar-a-Lago,
which it should be, you're 82 years
old, you've got a bunch of grandkids, you have a members club where people come just
to adore you all the time, like I would want to live in that bubble too, then he especially
wouldn't care about something like that. So I guess I could see a pardon if it was a final
act. I cannot see a pardon happening right now. And you brought up we need to make sure that we say
that these were children. Teresa Helm, who was one
of the girls' children who was abused by Epstein
and Maxwell, did an interview with MSNBC.
And she said, it would mean the complete crumbling
of this justice system that should first and foremost
stand for, fight for, and protect survivors.
This crime is different than every other crime that we have talked about
in reference to Donald Trump.
It's not a white collar situation.
This is child abuse.
And I am in no way saying that he participated in that.
I have absolutely no idea, but we know Jeffrey Epstein did and we know
that Colleen Maxwell did.
Well, with her smug, there's fire.
Can you imagine anyone sounding more guilty
than this guy right now?
He has no crisis calms.
100%.
Person or ability.
He's not used to being held accountable.
That's the thing, because even with January 6,
getting impeached, et cetera, the Supreme Court
came and bailed him out anyway.
And then the electorate came and bailed him out
and put him back in office.
And he will not suffer the consequences
of any of the actions that he's taken.
And so I think that this is genuinely shocking to him
to have run up against something that seems to matter
in a substantive and enduring way to his base.
And he's floundering, he doesn't know what to do.
And suddenly words matter. They have never mattered before. When he was with Jonathan Swan and he's floundering. He doesn't know what to do and suddenly words matter.
They have never mattered before. When he was with Jonathan Swan and he made the comment about,
I wish her well about Colleen Maxwell. I don't think he really thought about it.
I don't think he genuinely wishes her well.
He's just never been held accountable for a single thing that he said. You know, Muslim bans, bad hombres.
Everybody moves on. It becomes baked into the Donald Trump cake
and we just continue to eat it over and over again.
Maybe until now.
Yeah, but even that, the words do matter
because he's not a guy who gives people
the benefit of the doubt.
The ordinary Donald Trump with something like this
would have said, oh, she's a horrible woman.
Hope she rots in prison.
Yeah, ugly too.
Instead, he's, I wish her well.
Logically, the only reason he would say that
is to try and curry favor with her
so she doesn't narc on them.
Or because they were genuinely friends.
Or they liked each other.
To your point, the guy has such incredible instincts
for the media.
And it's as if his comms people, he said to him,
I wanna come off as guilty as possible.
What do I say?
What is my body language?
Because if he had just said, in my view,
this is insane, these pedophiles, all these Democrats,
Bill Clinton, I think I saw the ghost
of Jimmy Carter down there.
I mean, if he just like went fucking crazy, right?
And angry and we're gonna release this thing.
And then we need to make sure we need to vet it
and then released it in six months and it was all redacted.
It would have been bad, but-
Oh, but people would have taken it.
No, yeah.
His base would have taken it.
Maybe thrown like left a couple names in there,
like, oh, Bill Clinton's on a flight list,
leave it there and go there, whatever.
Instead he's like, I don't think we should,
we should move on and look at like.
Like the first time ever that he's been thoughtful
about anything.
Yeah, it's just measured.
All of a sudden he's gotten very measured.
And it's just like, Jesus, this guy looks absolutely
so guilty, more importantly, is this the last show
of the summer that I'm on?
Yeah, I'm sad.
I mean, I'm happy for you.
Well, I like you and I have fun during the podcast.
And I'm excited that you're taking all of August off
and recharge your proverbial batteries,
but it will be a raging, moderate, lonely without you.
So folks, and this is a story of blessings and privilege.
I've decided from this point forward in my life, and I've done this last couple
of years, I take August off.
I closed the office the last two weeks of August, because people who work for me
should work harder than me.
It's God free August.
I take all of August off.
But in the reason I'm bringing this up is that we have some very exciting co-host.
Can you talk about any of them?
One of them is my literally my hero.
If someone, the other day on Pierce Morgan, they said, who are your heroes?
And I mentioned this person and the comments were like brutal.
Can you mention who our co-hosts are?
Well, I don't think this was your hero one, but I think you like them a lot.
We have James Carville next week.
Amazing.
We're going to have us an election.
We're going to count some votes.
Yeah.
We're going to have this election. That guy's count some votes. We're gonna have this election.
That guy's a fucking gangster.
He's not my hero.
Okay.
We have Hillary Clinton, who I think.
My hero.
Yeah.
I mean.
Incredibly smart, does the work, never lost her focus
and that is always helping women and children.
Would have been the most qualified president
in American history.
Literally. Flat out.
The most impressive person in my view.
I'm so excited. I'm so excited about this. Anyway, Secretary Clinton. Secretary Clinton. Flat out. Literally the most impressive person in my view. I'm so excited.
I'm so excited about this.
Secretary Clinton is going,
this is what you call a major upgrade.
Secretary Clinton is gonna be on this.
No.
Well, yeah.
I mean, yeah, sorry.
Let's be honest, yeah.
Anyways, folks, that's it for this episode.
Thank you for listening to Raging Moderates.
Our producers are David Toledo and Eric Gennikos. Our technical director is Ju Burroughs. 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. Oh my God, another hero.
Literally another hero of mine.
Senator Warner is our hero?
Senator Warner. I wanted him to run for president. He invited me down. He wanted to know about
big tech.
Oh, great. Guys, first off, he should be president. He's me down. He wanted to know about big tech. Oh great guys first off
He should be president. He's big and he's handsome
That's the primary consideration to be president definitely the guys a baller made a shit ton of money went into public service
He's so smart understands technology
Just a fantastic public servant or great leader
represents Virginia really well
Great gets how are we getting all these people? We're charming, Scott.
We're a hit on the Hill.
We're a hit on the Hill.
Dozens and dozens of fans on the Hill.
Make sure to follow us wherever you get your podcasts.
You don't miss an episode.
Just have a fantastic August.
I'm gonna text you.
I don't know if you're gonna reply.
I will read them all.
I'll see you Labor Day.
Thanks everybody.
I will read them all. I'll see you Labor Day. Thanks everybody.
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