The Tucker Carlson Show - Ana Kasparian: Epstein Cover-Up, Israel Strikes Gaza Church, & the Great American Political Shift
Episode Date: July 25, 2025If you want to understand how fake the current political system is, take a minute to listen to Ana Kasparian and ask yourself how much you disagree with. (00:00) Why Americans Care So Much About th...e Jeffrey Epstein Case (07:18) The Growing Nuance of America’s Political Parties (14:33) Why Kasparian Admitted She Was Wrong About Defunding the Police (21:32) Americans Do Not Want to Be Involved in Foreign Wars (29:48) How Radical Leftist Ideology is Destroying California (46:51) Will Tucker Ever Run for President?Ana Kasparian is a political commentator and journalist who is best known as the Executive Producer and Host of The Young Turks (TYT). While her work for TYT spans nearly two decades, Kasparian also reports for Real Clear Investigations and is a host for the popular political panel show Her Take. Kasparian's sharp analysis and outspoken views can be found across multiple outlets, including CNN, The New York Times, Newsweek, Time and more. Paid partnerships with: MeriwetherFarms: Visit https://MeriwetherFarms.com/Tucker and use code TUCKER for 15% off your first order. Eight Sleep: Get $350 off the new Pod 5 Ultra at https://EightSleep.com/Tucker Beam: Get 30% off the American Strength Bundle using the code TUCKER at https://ShopBeam.com/Tucker Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So normally when I do an unconventional interview with like Putin or the president of Iran,
people get mad and they ask, you know, why are you talking to him?
This is one of those very rare, maybe unique circumstances where people are going to ask you, why are you talking to him. This is one of those very rare, maybe unique circumstances where people are going
to ask you, why are you talking to him?
Yeah, yeah.
And people are going to get mad.
People are going to get very angry. I know. And your producers had been reaching out trying
to get me to talk to you for at least a year and a half. And my feelings toward coming on your show went from I would
never in a million years to kind of giving myself the opportunity to listen to your podcast,
to figure out who you really are. Because of course I had very strong thoughts about
who you are.
Really?
Yeah. But I realized that it was based on clips that I would watch of you that had gone
viral and they had gone viral because they were offensive or you had said something that
was-
Viral like syphilis is viral.
I mean, pretty much.
I mean, you should think of it that way because it was mostly painting you in a very negative
light. And to be sure, you and I have some pretty deep disagreements. But I think that some of what you've been talking
about lately hits at the heart of what I care most about. And that's the importance of this
country representing the American people. The importance of the United States being a sovereign
country that has politicians and a government that prioritizes the American people as opposed to
a foreign government.
And speaking out the way you've
been speaking out about some of
these issues takes a lot of
courage because it goes against
the grain and it goes against,
I mean, decades of propaganda and
conditioning in American media.
And so to me, that commonality
that you and I share made me a lot
more open minded to coming on this
show, because I do think that
Americans from across the political
spectrum need to find areas of
agreement, especially as it
pertains to making this country better.
So we can apply appropriate
pressure on our politicians and
get them to represent us.
Regardless of the corruption,
regardless of the influence of
foreign governments, at the end of
the day, these politicians are
nothing if it weren't for
the American people, right?
So like right now,
what's really interesting is in Congress,
it appears that there's this bipartisan effort
to force a vote to release the Epstein files.
And the only reason why that's happening
is because there's a very loud and aggressive portion
of the MAGA base that's demanding it
and they're not letting it go.
And I commend them because I agree with them.
I think we need transparency.
We need to know whether or not we literally have members in our government or influential
people in the periphery of our government who are pedophiles.
I wanna know.
I think that's fair.
Yeah.
It's interesting the framework that you laid out. The government of any country ought to be sovereign, which is to say it should make
most of its big decisions on the basis of what's good for the people that it represents.
And it's bad when foreign countries control your country.
Those are not, those don't strike me as hateful statements at all.
Those aren't expressions of animus against anybody, are they? I don't think they're hateful statements at all. Those aren't expressions of animus against anybody, are they?
I don't think they're hateful
statements at all.
I'm an American,
I love this country.
I love the people in this country.
And I don't want to live in this
ridiculous perversion of
the American government where they
pretend to represent us.
But in reality,
Americans are on the back burner.
Our tax dollars are being taken
from us not to help Americans who
need help, but to give all sorts of
subsidies to private industries
that are already doing really well.
Okay, they don't need extra
subsidies or tax cuts or
things like that.
But in addition to that, all
the foreign aid that we're pumping
into the Middle East, Israel, right? Oftentimes when we talk about foreign aid in addition to that, all the foreign aid that we're pumping into the Middle East,
Israel, right?
Oftentimes when we talk about
foreign aid that goes to Israel,
at this point, I believe it's about
what, $4 billion a year,
on top of all of the military aid
that we've been pumping into
Israel over the last two years.
I mean, it's unacceptable to me
that we're doing that.
And in the backdrop of that,
you have the United States Congress
cutting $1.1 trillion to Medicaid.
Really, that's the problem?
That's where we need to cut
funding from.
By the way, also cutting funding to
food assistance.
How do you justify sending tens of
billions of dollars to Israel in
the last two years alone, while
targeting cuts to Medicaid and food stamps. It makes me beyond angry.
I think it's so unbelievably unjust. And if you speak out about it the way I'm doing right
now, I'm sorry, I'm getting like kind of aggressive.
If you speak out about it like I am right now, people try to smear you as an anti-Semite.
And you know what? I'm not an anti-Semite. I know what's in my heart. And I'm not going to let those smears stop me from saying what I know is correct and what's
morally just. Is it possible that people are slandered in order to prevent conversations like
this from happening in the first place? So you said I was hesitant to come on the show.
I mean the reason we wanted to book you and a bunch of people who worked for me had the same feeling is that
is what you just said like we can disagree on all kinds of things, but if the fundamental orientation
is the US government ought to make a good faith effort to improve the lives of Americans,
that's not a partisan statement.
That's not a crazy out there sentiment at all.
And we saw that, it was like, oh yeah.
And then you're like, yeah, but he's a Nazi.
I can't do the Nazi show.
And so you sort of want, like I have all kinds
of stupid opinions.
I've said all kinds of stupid things.
I've had ugly opinions in the past.
I'm not defending every opinion I have had or even currently have.
I'm merely saying to reduce someone to a caricature is a kind of tactic to prevent anyone from
having a real conversation with the person.
It's meant to discredit and yeah, you're right, it's meant to stop these types of conversations
from happening.
Now, you are very conservative. Now you are very conservative.
I'm not very conservative.
I have some views that lean more conservative
than progressives feel comfortable with and that's okay.
But at the end of the day, what drives my politics
is this desire for everyone to thrive economically.
And you've been speaking out about that.
So what is the difference?
If I could, I mean, I would hope that would be
like everyone's desire.
It's not.
It's not, no.
Right, at all.
But what does it mean to be,
not to get too philosophical here,
but what does it mean to be conservative or liberal,
like at this point?
Well, I don't think that the political labels
that we currently have in this country
make much sense anymore, to be honest with you. So
But I'm talking about like traditional conservatism, you know, I believe in reproductive rights to a point, right?
You know, I know that you're anti abortion big time. Yeah, so like that's a disagreement
We have and I'm not at all going to like come on this show and capitulate on my beliefs, right?
But I think that those are important issues, I'm not minimizing them.
But I feel that we can't even really engage in a real debate about policy or specific
issues unless we know we're living in a sovereign country and we have a government that actually
has interest in representing us.
Right, cuz it doesn't really matter otherwise. Right. If people keep voting for different things, but get the same result.
Exactly.
Then the system is fake.
And that's the point where people start to go crazy and do radical violent things, which
I'm completely opposed to.
I just want to say that the outset, I hate violent radicalism more than anything.
And I feel like that's the result of people realizing their system is fake.
So you have to make it kind of real.
You're right about that.
And, you know, we've been saying more and more political violence in this country,
and it's terrifying.
I mean, I'm not justifying it, but I can explain why it's happening.
For sure.
You know, and I don't want things to devolve further.
And here's the other reason why I decided to come.
So I knew that you moved here.
You moved to like a rural part of the country.
And I live in a big city.
And I think that living in a big city and spending most of your
time in a big city kind of blinds you to the rest of America.
A lot of Americans live in rural parts of the country.
And I want the opportunity to speak to them,
get to know them, understand where their hearts and their minds are at.
And so I saw it as an opportunity to expose myself to people that I otherwise wouldn't
get an opportunity to speak to. And I think you've hired drivers to bring people to where you're at.
It's very far away, yes.
Yeah, the airport's very far. But I love that because they're not like, they're not Uber drivers.
They're like unemployed loggers and stuff.
No, but they are.
I know.
I can't tell you how much I've enjoyed having conversations with them. So
one of the drivers who picked me up, Jen, she mentioned the big, beautiful bill that just passed.
And I can tell she identifies as Republican and
she wasn't happy with that bill. And I suspected that most ordinary working class Americans,
whether they're Democrats or Republicans, are not happy with that bill.
Yes.
The $1.1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid, that's what she brought up. She brought that up.
And I thought that was really fascinating. Now, if you talk to someone who identifies as a liberal Democrat,
they'll probably think, these Republican voters, they're so greedy.
All they want is tax cuts.
They want to cut the social safety net.
But no, actually, when it comes to ordinary people, there's a lot of agreement,
a lot of agreement.
A lot of people are suffering right now.
And you have all these different industries,
especially beginning in the 90s, offshoring,
all these jobs that have been destroyed. I mean, most people work in the service sector
at this point, and manufacturing jobs are gone.
I think that's part of the reason why Donald Trump has been so appealing to the MAGA base. Without question. Right, and so I want ordinary people to just consider
the contradiction here.
So if you're a liberal Democrat and you're under the assumption that
Republican voters are just greedy and they want to cut the social safety net,
why would they love Trump so much who ran as an economic populist. Now, I don't think that Trump has carried out his promises because of,
well, there's a lot of different examples I can cite, but
the most recent is the so called Big Beautiful Bill.
Yeah, there are some provisions in there, no tax on tips.
It's gonna be means tested and it also expires in four years.
Whereas the tax benefits that disproportionately benefit the wealthy are permanent.
The no tax on the elderly or social security, that also will expire and it's up to a certain
amount. I think it's like $6,000 if I'm not mistaken. The child tax credit, I think was
just peanuts compared to what I think this country could afford in helping families.
You want to encourage people to have kids.
Okay, best way to do it is to create an economic situation where couples feel comfortable bringing
life into this world.
And then no tax on overtime.
That's another example.
That's also means tested.
And that's a provision that will expire in 2028.
It's just interesting to see which
provisions are permanent and
which are set to expire in four
years when Trump is done with his
term.
So if you really want to represent
the working class, you got to put
your money where your mouth is.
And I haven't really seen it to
the extent that Trump claimed he
was going to help the working
class in this country.
Interesting.
Yeah.
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So when did you, like, have your views changed?
I have some views that have definitely changed. Yeah. I wouldn't say that I, like, swung from
far left to far right. Yeah.
I don't even know what that means, actually. I mean, I don't think I can answer the question,
so I don't know why I'm asking it of you, but like, what do the terms mean now?
And for whatever it's worth, I've settled on people who are honest, people who lie.
Right.
And that's like the only division, maybe have the honest party, the liar party or something,
you know, in the future.
But clearly you've started thinking things or thinking through things that you hadn't
before and God bless you,
that's like the greatest privilege of adulthood. You get to think for yourself. It's happened to
me a lot. But how did that start? Well, I mean, it started with,
it started with like personal experiences and it often does, right? Like often your
like personal experiences and it often does, right? Like often your policy preferences will slap you in the face. And then you're like, oh, I don't like that. You know?
Right. No, I get it.
You know, because sometimes there are unintended consequences. I'll give you a specific example.
So I was very much supportive of the defund the police movement in 2020. And it was because you see this video of a man dying on camera
with a police officer refusing to ease up on him.
And it really made me angry.
I felt that it was, whatever you think about George Floyd,
I don't care, right?
What was happening in that moment, in that video,
was so disgusting to
me and so unjust.
And so I was like, no,
I totally bought the narrative
that it's not actually about
abolishing police.
It's about taking some of that
funding and investing in social
services or in social workers.
So social workers respond to
certain calls instead of the police.
That actually has ended up being pretty disastrous in California, in Los Angeles
in particular, because I've seen it firsthand.
And you're from there.
I'm from there.
My best friend since childhood, she's a social worker herself.
And I've talked to other social workers about what their experience has been like.
And they're like,
I actually interviewed one for
a piece I wrote for
Real Clear Investigations.
And she told me, look, it hasn't
really worked out the way people
have thought it would work out.
Oftentimes we'll go to a call and
it's supposed to be a nonviolent
person or yeah,
a nonviolent call someone's having
a mental health episode.
But they'll show up and
oftentimes it'll be someone who
does have a weapon, it's not a gun
but it's maybe a knife or and
they feel threatened.
So they have no choice but
to call the police.
And so in 2021,
the Los Angeles City Council was
inspired by BLM
and they decided to take $150
million away from the LAPD's
budget and instead invested in
other services.
We're spending more on police,
more on the LAPD than we ever have,
record amounts. And the reason why is because We're spending more on police, more on the LAPD than we ever have,
record amounts.
And the reason why is because you
have to really ask yourself before
you make these decisions, okay,
do we need this many officers?
Let's compare Los Angeles to other
huge cities, what's the police
officer sworn officer to citizen
ratio?
And in LA, it's always been
historically lower,
much lower than other major cities.
So at the peak of the LAPD and
the number of sworn officers in
the LAPD, we had about 10,000.
After the cuts and after all
the difficulty in recruiting new
sworn officers, because people
don't want to be police officers anymore for understandable reasons. It's not a desirable job when you have
people constantly talking about how terrible cops are. So now we have about 8,500.
And as a result, the remaining sworn officers are working insane over, like crazy. We have one police officer in the LAPD,
I think his name is Nathan Corey.
He made $600,000 one year because of
police overtime.
So right now taxpayers in Los Angeles-
He made $600,000?
Yes, yes.
So right now taxpayers in LA are kind
of confronted with this situation
where they're paying far more for less
as it pertains to policing. Since there is a shortage, there's longer wait times if you call
911 and you need help. Some people complain that they'll call and if it's not like, let's say
someone was the victim of a burglary, obviously you're not in imminent danger. So they'll call
the cops and hope that
someone will show up, take fingerprints and maybe find who burglarized them.
They never do, but they don't show up for hours and people get really upset and
they're like, why is this happening? And what's really interesting is I try to
explain why it's happening and I get called all sorts of names for doing it,
but I don't care. The truth is the truth. Wait, wait.
What do you, I mean, okay.
First of all, why are you one of the only people willing to admit you were wrong about
defund the police?
Why were you willing to say, again, bless you, it's the beginning of growth, but I've
done it myself many times, but why were you willing to admit that?
Because at the core of who I am, I think as a journalist, I didn't enter this line of
work to be a mouthpiece for anyone. I really care about the truth. And I feel that if you
want to live in a democracy, you have to make sure that people are getting accurate information
to make the right decisions for themselves once they're casting a ballot.
And so I felt angry because I felt misled by the media.
And now, it was partly my fault too, because I was in a bubble and I was only getting one
side of every story.
And even if I agree with that side,
I should at least hear what the opposing argument is and
I wasn't going out of my way to do that before.
Now I do and so I see things as far more complex and nuanced.
And it's hard to make an argument that's going to appease any
audience at this point because I think a lot of Americans have been conditioned to be partisan and
prioritize partisanship before truth.
And I think truth is what will set us free genuinely.
Truth will help us ensure that we have a better government.
And I'm sorry, one side or the other does not have a monopoly on the truth, they just don't.
And one side might get something
right one time, the other side
might have a good point when it
comes to a different issue.
And I think we just need to be
open minded and more importantly,
we need to have conversations with
people.
Because if you just rely on what
the media is saying about a
particular political figure or
particular media figure. Why are
you letting them tell you what to think about individuals? Why don't you actually do a little
bit of digging or have these conversations yourself and try to figure out who these people
really are?
The speech you gave at turning point, you said a few things in there that I might not agree with, but like the overall
message was so courageous and I never thought in a million years I would hear it at a conservative
conference, never.
It's just interesting. Well, I mean, you know, the truth is wherever it is and you try to
recognize it, but I hope I'm going to give you my text and I want you to text me if you
will, criticism of what
you're saying now.
Okay.
Because I want to keep a list of people who are offended by what you're saying just in
my head.
Like, how could anyone be offended by what you're saying now?
Yeah.
Well, it might not be-
I mean, you're not the criminal here.
Yeah.
Well, let me just be honest with you.
I think that most people who are going to attack me aren't even going to listen to this
interview. It's just the fact that we're having a conversation
with each other. But I take offense to people trying to police who I can talk to. In fact,
the more they try to police me, the more I want to talk to the person they forbid me
to speak to. Honestly, I've always been like that. I've been like that since I was a kid.
My mom knows it better than anyone. I'm just a little bit rebellious and I don't like to be
told what to do. I hate it. And what to think. Yeah.
And who you can talk to. I mean, that's like the most, that's a core decision. Who do I associate
with? Yeah. Who are my friends? Who am I having dinner with? Who do I marry? I mean, if you allow
other people to make those decisions for you,
you're not free.
No, you're not.
And, my God, what a terrible career path to be a journalist who doesn't get to
have conversations with people that they're curious.
I'm curious about you.
I am.
You were a neocon.
Yeah, I was.
It's hard to believe that.
It is hard to believe that.
I became politicized in the lead up
to the Iraq invasion in 2003.
Yes.
I was in high school and
I remember in 2002,
I went to like a hippie magnet
school and we had peace date
annually.
And I remember giving a speech in
2002 to make the case against the preemptive war in Iraq.
And I remember, you're gonna laugh at this. I remember in English class, we were reading a
play, The Glass Menagerie, which I found deeply boring. And I had like-
Fair.
Yeah, I had a cutout of a New York Times article in which Bill Kristol was one of the people the reporter interviewed. And Bill Kristol loves war, loves war, hardcore neocon. And I just remember just sitting in that
English class reading his quotes and seething over it. And thinking to myself, I can't wait
to one day get an opportunity to confront him. And I actually did get that opportunity. It wasn't about war, but
it was a politic on panel debate about healthcare. And I kind of brought up the fact that Israel
has universal healthcare and Americans don't.
What did he say?
He was so unprepared. There's like a picture of him like he has index cards, like someone
wrote notes down for him and he's just like fumbling with the index cards. He doesn't
know what to do.
And then once the whole panel discussion was over, someone who was with me overheard him
say, damn it, she came prepared.
Something along those lines.
It's arrogance.
It's people who've been told since they were small that they're brilliant.
Bill Crystal, Ted Cruz.
I mean, it does distort you and it actually makes you dumb paradoxically over time.
Definitely. Yeah.
Because you're never pressed.
You got to stay humble.
I completely agree with you.
Yeah.
It's not hard for me.
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Okay, so you, I just wanted to emphasize that point.
You came to the conclusion that you were wrong
and you said so out loud.
Yeah.
And to me, that's the acid test. Is someone honest? I don't know. Will that person admit
being wrong? That's when we know.
Yeah, totally.
And okay, so you live in the same place. That's also hugely helpful because you can see it
over time, the same place.
True.
You know Ventura Boulevard, you've lived near it your whole life.
Right. So what did you start to notice? What is it like? What are the effects?
Well, I started noticing that homelessness really exploded in Los Angeles. It's always been a
problem in LA. But it now touches every square mile of that county. And it's just gotten, during COVID, it was
unbelievably bad. And I just felt like it was inhumane seeing what was going on.
And it wasn't just that there were a lot of homeless people. It was that there were a
lot of homeless people with severe, severe mental health issues. And they can't make
decisions for themselves.
They're like literally, I can't tell you how many times on my way to work on the freeway,
I almost hit a mentally ill homeless person who's on the freeway.
1405?
Yes, yes.
And I can't imagine what I would go through for the rest of my life if I ever hit someone
with my car.
But why are we living in a society that thinks that this is okay?
This is not okay.
This is not okay.
The drug addiction, not just in LA, all across the country, has there been any effort to
do anything about this?
And it makes me really angry.
The Sacklers are still billionaires.
Yep, exactly.
And it's just, I find it to be, you wanna talk about treason, politicians who let
this kind of stuff happen to the Americans they're supposed to represent. And people mistake that as
me being anti-homeless. No, no, the people who defend what's happening right now, they're
anti-homeless. Seven people died of drug overdose on the same corner near where I live in a two week
span, seven people, same corner.
That wasn't a big scandal.
The city council member who
represents my district wasn't asked
about it.
She didn't have to defend herself.
She's one of these city council
members who keeps voting on
the dumbest policies that do
nothing to actually help these
people, but somehow justifies the continuation of the same failed policies that do nothing to actually help these people, but somehow justifies the
continuation of the same failed policies that have led to all of these overdose deaths,
all of these people with mental health issues not getting the health that they need.
It's awful.
The whole situation is awful.
I mean, I lived in LA as a child.
I've worked there on and off my whole life.
I really love Los Angeles.
I'll admit that. I really love Los Angeles. I'll admit that.
I just love it.
It's just in a truly American city.
The architecture is unique to LA or was.
It's just an amazing, it's what an ambitious, hopeful, affluent country builds when they
get to the end of the continent.
Yeah.
It's like, wow, there's nowhere else to it.
Let's build something amazing.
And they built Los Angeles and I just, I've always loved it in my heart.
So I go back there, I'm going back next month and I'm shocked by it.
I can't even believe it.
The encampment outside the veterans building in Brentwood.
I'm like, what is going on here?
And no one ever says anything.
Well, but I don't live there.
You tell me, do people talk about this a lot?
They talk about it privately.
But it's really interesting because while there's
this openness in regard to the failed policies
in private discussions, no one wants to say anything publicly
because you'll get the kind of treatment I've gotten.
The people are dying on the street.
Yep.
Seven people at one intersection.
Yep.
Seven people, Americans, and that's like verboten
to talk about? How? Why? Oh, you're stigmatizing your unhoused neighbors. I can't tell you
how many times I've heard that statement. You're stigmatizing your unhoused neighbors.
It's like, no. They're dead and I feel bad about it.
Yeah, no, I'm stigmatizing the very politicians who think that this situation is okay. The
same politicians who took our tax dollars, $24 billion worth of California's taxpayer money, okay,
squandered it by funneling it to these NGOs and nonprofits
that are run by their friends.
Oh, of course.
They fattened up their pockets.
They didn't do anything to actually help those people,
nothing.
So when you say that at dinner,
Yeah. What's that like?
I mean, again, I don't have dinner with idiots, okay?
So I'm not gonna have dinner with someone who's like,
no, I think we should keep stealing money from taxpayers
in the highest tax state in the country.
I'm not interested in that,
but when I do have dinner with my friends
or with acquaintances or even even people that I just met,
but for whatever reason our paths cross and we're having dinner, they all agree with me.
Most people agree with me. And I don't think what I'm saying is at all offensive, which
is why I keep saying it. I'm not gonna stop saying it just because some idiots are going to try to smear me for doing it. No, I don't care. Like these issues go way beyond me. You get what I'm
saying?
Well, not only is it not offensive, it's pro-life in the truest sense. It's pro-human dignity.
You don't want seven people to die in an intersection. You're shocked and horrified and saddened
by it.
Definitely.
That's not shameful. That's evidence of
decency and compassion. I don't understand how that just got inverted.
You know, I don't want to go back to the days where we were criminalizing people who were
suffering from drug addiction. Right.
But what we're doing now is, I think, far worse.
Oh, of course it is. You know, because at least
if someone was using publicly, which by the way, right now happens all the
time, you see people, it's really devastating.
You see people smoking meth publicly.
You see people-
You do?
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
You see, do you know what the Fentylene is?
Yeah, I've seen it.
Yeah.
It's all over Ventura Boulevard at night.
And it's, I don't know, it's like-
We describe it for people who don't know what you're talking about.
It's basically fentanyl. I guess it does something to your body where after you take it, like,
if you see someone who's literally standing, but they're like hunched over, like folded
over-
Like a scarecrow.
Exactly. They're on fentanyl. That's what fentanyl does to their body. And I never saw
that once until recently, and now it's just all over Ventura Boulevard in the San Fernando
Valley at night, specifically. You don't see it in the daytime. And it's the most heartbreaking
thing ever. These people are, they're dying, very likely they're gonna die.
That's someone's child.
Yeah, yeah. And no one cares. No one cares. I can't tell you how many times people just
kind of like, you'll see videos of this online. People will have to walk over a guy who looks
like he might be dead sleeping on the sidewalk. You know, like it's. It's made us almost numb because it's so much of our
lives now. It's a regular occurrence. So when it's a regular occurrence, it becomes normalized.
It degrades everyone.
Exactly. And I'm worried that since it's so normalized, nothing's gonna be done about
it. And I just find it immoral. And I find that it's wrong
and I'm disgusted with our politicians. I don't think I could have put it better.
Every word you said, I agree with passionately and I don't know how this wound up a partisan issue
at all. I think it's because it's the Trump era. Trump offends the sensitivities and sensibilities of
self-identified liberal democrats so much that they think they have to automatically
take the opposite stance of what a conservative would say or what a Trump supporter would say.
But that's why I want people to start talking again. And not make Donald Trump like the nucleus of our politics.
Because I think that, again, on a lot of the important issues,
there's a lot of agreement among voters.
They just have to allow themselves to think for themselves.
Think independently.
I would say the most important issues.
I mean, if you've got seven people dying in one intersection in Los Angeles, you're not going to tell me that Iran is a greater threat to my country
than that.
Exactly.
I can't think of a greater threat to my country than that, actually. And so, and I don't have
any idea why that's partisan. I'm interested in the governor. I know the governor of the
state. He's got some, I know Gavin Newsom, he's got some talent, I think, and charming for sure.
But like, what is going on?
Is he aware of that?
I've asked him and I can't get it.
You really find him charming?
Well, in a kind of reptilian way.
I mean, charming in the sense that his whole life is devoted to winning people over.
Yes.
Kind of like Bill Clinton was any, I think he's good at it.
But I also think someone said to me the other day, Newsom could pass a lie detector test
on any saying anything like there's a coldness inside that allows.
He's a sociopath.
I think I think he's a snake oil salesman.
I think he's a liar.
And I think that he destroyed the state of California full stop.
I've got no love for Gavin Newsom.
I think that people tend to fall for appearances and he's for whatever reason people think
that he's attractive or something.
I don't find him attractive because I know who he is and what he's done.
He has shafted Californians who have lost everything
in wildfires. The fire in Paradise, California was absolutely devastating, an entire community
burnt down as the results of PG&E, Pacific Gas and Electric, that's the utility company,
refusing to upgrade their aging equipment. Their equipment is over 100 years old.
And so what started that fire was this metal hook that had eroded to the point where it broke.
Power lines come crashing down onto dry brush. It sparks a fire and destroys an entire community.
Okay, so you would want PG&E to suffer some
consequences for that, right?
I think.
Well, Newsom bailed him out because it's one of his biggest donors. He recently in an interview,
I can't remember, he's been doing these like podcast interviews to kind of rebrand himself
as like some sort of common sense guy.
I've turned it down.
Yeah. Don't fall for it because it's total BS. But he said something along the lines of,
I take personal accountability. I made a big mistake by getting caught.
I was at the French laundry, it's like some ritzy fancy restaurant.
During COVID, after I told Californians, don't get together with family members during the
holidays, it's very dangerous, whatever.
He said that he was having dinner with friends,
it was his friend's birthday.
No, no, no, he was having dinner with his donors.
So even in the context where he's pretending to take
accountability, he's lying straight to everyone's face.
And I can't stand it, I really can't.
I want real authenticity, I want real accountability.
I want politicians who are willing
to see that the policies they
advocated for aren't working quite
as they intended and
they're willing to recalibrate,
admit that maybe they got something
wrong.
I want humility.
I want this country to improve for
the people in this country.
And unless we are willing to be
honest, unless we're willing to tell the people in this country. And unless we are willing to be honest, unless
we're willing to tell the people trying to smear us to silence us that they can F off,
nothing's going to improve.
Everything's going to keep going down. Everything is going to continue devolving. In my lifetime,
this country has only gotten worse, not better. And it's going to keep going in that direction.
And I want that paradigm to shift. I want it to change.
Why do people disagree with that? Do you think?
I don't know. I think there's something psychological about it. I think that we've been conditioned
to think of politics as black and white, good and bad, but I think it's more complicated
than that. I think most Americans are good people who want good things for everyone.
But I think the media kind of conditions us to hate the other side, whatever the other
side really is. I certainly had those feelings and things are different today compared to when I became
politicized during the Bush era.
Yes.
I feel like during the Bush era, it was a little easier to see good and bad, right?
So for instance, even among Republican voters, I think people had woken up to the fact that
the neoconservatives had dragged us into wars that we shouldn't have
been fighting. That a lot of people, Americans and civilians in these countries we were invading,
were suffering as a result of this ideology. But things have gotten a little more fractured.
I think within the parties, there's like multiple parties, you get what I'm saying?
I do.
But when it comes to the two establishments, the Democratic establishment, the Republican
establishment, there's a lot of
similarities between the two.
They're in alignment.
Exactly, on the big issues that
matter.
War and the economy.
War and the economy.
The biggest issues.
100%, they love to distract us
with shiny things.
Yeah, have a race war, totally fine.
100%, all these social issues,
by the way, social issues are
important, I'm not minimizing
them. But the way that they're framed by the establishment, I think is interesting because
it's intentionally meant to get us to fight each other constantly.
Of course.
Instead of considering what the big issues are and how we might actually agree on those big issues.
What we can do to work together to, again,
apply pressure to politicians to demand that they represent us
instead of their donors, instead of moneyed interests,
instead of a foreign government.
So I think people are waking up for the first time.
I'm a little bit excited because the kind of speech
that you gave wouldn't have happened five years ago,
10 years ago. No, I think that's right. you gave wouldn't have happened five years ago, ten
years ago.
No, I think that's right.
And I wouldn't have, though.
I'm just struck by how normal and non-threatening and non-hateful and just basic most people's
views are, including mine.
I don't have any complicated views about anything.
I'm not a very deep person at all. And I don't know why
we've all internalized this shame that like some things must not be said. And it's like, why?
I don't hate anybody. In fact, I'm on guard against that. I refuse to because of my
religious beliefs. It's like, I'm not hating anybody, period. But I'm also not going to be
shamed into like ignoring obvious stuff.
None of us is paying very close attention during the summer. The news cycle calms
down, families travel, people relaxed, you're at the beach. It's all great
except the people in Washington never stop. It gives them a chance to advance
their agenda without you noticing because you're on vacation. That means
new regulations, more censorship, the continued erosion of the Bill of Rights,
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Can I ask you something real quick? So I heard that speech and by the time I finished listening
to it, I thought to myself, he's going to run for president. That was a presidential
speech.
Really?
Yeah.
No, that's literally the last thing on my mind. I would never do that. No, I mean, unless
I was told to buy a higher power or something, but no, I don't
think I'm suited for that.
Of course, I don't want that.
I have a lot of happiness and balance in my life.
I have a huge family.
I'm the oldest male in that family, so I feel like I have a lot of things I'm paying attention
to.
I have dogs who I really love.
So no, like nothing about that is appealing at all.
And I would never, I've never had any political ambition of any kind. And I have even less now. I mean,
I, I'm known a lot of people who've had that job and it's just, it's really hard.
Oh, I would never want to, I would never want to. Are you kidding me? No.
And also the idea that like kind of 350 million people, I'm the most qualified to lead.
Well, there's plenty of people who think that.
I don't think that. Yeah. And I mean. Well, there's plenty of people who think that.
I don't think that.
Yeah, no, and I mean, think that about themselves.
I do not think that.
Yeah, like Ted Cruz thinks that.
Yeah, well, exactly.
Yeah.
And it's just sad and they're compensating for something.
Some of them, I guess, I'm not gonna be mean,
but I'm not compensating for anything.
So I have no interest.
But here's my question.
So you said the media are a huge part of this,
which is undoubtedly true. I've been in the media for 35 years. I know everyone in the media
pretty much. Mostly they're not evil. They're just kind of dumb. Okay? There are some evil
people. I could name them like Joe Scarborough or something. You know, it's like obviously
really bad, but most people are not. But they go along with this. And the question is why.
And one of the reasons is because they don't want to alienate their audiences.
You are on one of the biggest, maybe the biggest, certainly one of the biggest liberal podcasts,
progressive podcasts, the Young Turks.
You've been there for almost 20 years.
I was amazed to find that out last night at dinner.
Yeah.
18 years.
18 years.
I don't know how old you are, but I was shocked by that.
But it's one of the biggest and you are one of the biggest.
And maybe our audience doesn't know this because they don't watch liberal podcasts, but you're
one of the biggest.
So you start saying stuff like this, you're going to lose audience, you're going to lose
money, like actual money.
Has that happened?
Do you worry about that happening?
Yeah, that's happened. Let me just say that for whatever anyone might think about Cenk
Uygur, who's the founder and CEO of the Young Turks, he's a very, like he's sometimes brash,
combative, loud, and that turns people off. And I get that, they might not agree with
his politics, but I just wanna talk about who he is as a person. Because if it weren't for Cenk, I wouldn't have the
confidence to publicly admit I'm wrong or the confidence to be genuine and honest about what
I really think. Because he provides a platform for you to actually say what you think and not get
punished for it if it hurts the business and it did did hurt the business. Wow. Yeah. So we lost a portion of our audience for sure.
Based on what you said? Based on what I said. And more importantly-
What did she say that alienated people? I mean, okay, I would say that the straw that
broke the camel's back was I agreed to go talk to Glenn Beck. He invited me to go on his podcast.
I obviously have disagreements with
Glenn Beck, but
I was actually shocked at how much
we agreed on.
We talked about war, we talked
about all sorts of things.
And there were areas of agreement.
It was a pleasant conversation, but
I didn't capitulate my values at
all.
Just because I'm talking to him
doesn't mean I've done anything
wrong. My views are my views, his views are his views. We had a conversation. my values at all. Just because I'm talking to him doesn't mean I've done anything
wrong.
My views are my views,
his views are his views.
We had a conversation.
Well, I come home thinking nothing
of it.
And one of our employees,
someone who's a contributor to TYT
or was a contributor to TYT,
decided to take that as
an opportunity to make a big
spectacle about the fact that he's
quitting because I decided
to speak to Glenn Beck, who's like a threat to black bodies or something. I don't know,
but he just, it was-
Is Glenn Beck a threat to black bodies?
I have no idea. Is he? I mean, I didn't get that. I don't think Glenn Beck's much of a
threat to anyone, to be honest with you. He might have some ideas people don't like, but
okay.
But it was nothing that you specifically said.
It wasn't like, no, nothing, nothing that I said. I mean, no one was citing anything I said during
that interview that upset them, that was so offensive that it was worthy of publicly condemning
me and making a big spectacle about how I can't work here because of Anna. And she spoke to this
dangerous, dangerous man. Did Beck say anything like so over the top that you were supposed to respond to it or something?
No, no. I mean, Glenn Beck.
He's a pretty moderate guy.
He's, I mean, I don't, I mean, he might have some views that aren't moderate,
but we didn't talk about any of those things. Like the conversation was
really not offensive at all, in my opinion. And-
But they didn't cite anything. he didn't endorse Hitler or anything.
It was just the fact that I spoke to him. But you know, unfortunately, you know, when
you have someone make a public spectacle about quitting and making it seem as though I had
done something so wrong, it signaled to a portion of our audience like, oh, maybe Anna isn't who she says she is.
Maybe Anna is like a secret, like far right winger or Nazi or I don't know.
How long had you been at the show at this point?
17 and a half years.
It wasn't too long ago.
So that's deep cover.
So you've been a secret Nazi for 17 and a half years.
Yeah, I'm really good at what I do.
You're playing the long game, baby.
Yeah, yeah.
But, um, let me just say, the long game, baby. Yeah, yeah. But- I'm starting to laugh.
Let me just say this.
I started working, as you mentioned, I've been there for 18 years, started working there
in 2007, okay?
When TYT was basically a startup that no one knew about, the revenue for TYT at the time
came from Air America.
Air America had gone bankrupt a few months
after I started working for them. And Cenk Uygur is amazing because he's like, I'm gonna
make it work. I'm gonna find a way to keep this company afloat. And he did to his credit.
But I can't even explain to you how much of a grind it was building TYT. It was a grind,
long hours, like blood, sweat and tears.
But we believed in it and
we loved it.
And I actually have great memories
of those years.
We barely made any money at all.
But we believed in what we were
doing and there was something
really exciting about that.
I went through all that.
I helped build what TYT is today.
And the audacity, the audacity of anyone coming in as a
contributor or anything else to tell me who I can and can't
talk to is that's offensive.
That's offensive.
Okay. I earned this.
You're not going to come into my house and tell me what my
beliefs should be, who I should talk to.
F off.
Good, good, good riddance.
Go.
Go.
I'm not going to be censored by anyone.
Not my audience, no one on the right.
I don't care.
I don't care.
So sometimes when people sell products on TV, I love this product.
I use this product.
There's the question in the mind of the viewer.
Does this guy really use the product? Does he really love the product? Would he keep the product at home? Ask my dogs
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I have a nephew who loves you and he's always, oh, Tucker, you gotta interview this chick.
She's amazing.
And I'm so glad.
Sorry, excuse me.
I just, it just makes me laugh.
I mean, I just, I love what you're saying, of course But you also are making a point about the guy you work with you start the company notes company
Who even after some of your audience bolted? Yeah over this?
He didn't call you in and say knock it off
No, never never that's not who jank is and by the way
I mean he's had hosts on our network who he vehemently disagrees with.
And he's had other hosts come in and demand that those hosts get fired
because of what they're saying, it's offensive and Cenk's like, no, we don't do that here.
And I think what informs Cenk's behavior, honestly, is the fact that at one time he was
a self-identified Republican.
This is when he was in college and stuff. And he and I have a lot of these heart to hearts because
I have these days when I am down about everything that's transpired. Because I do feel like it's
unfair to paint me in a certain light just because you don't like the people I'm talking to.
But whenever I need a little bit of a pep talk, he'll mention what it
was like as a college Republican. And he's like, Anna, it was unbearable because they wouldn't let
me talk in class. They would do everything possible to prevent me from being able to speak.
Who's they?
Like other students or professors who didn't like his point of view.
Okay, liberals. Liberals, yeah. Yeah. So, and that really, really frustrated him. And so now as the CEO of the Young
Turks, he's not going to turn around and censor other hosts because he disagrees with them.
A lot of people do though. A lot of people do, but to his credit, he doesn't. And that's why
I've been there for 18 years. There have been other opportunities to make a, I love when people call me a grifter.
I could have been a millionaire by now.
I'm not a millionaire because I want to speak my mind and TYT has been the only place that's
allowed me to do it.
Good for you.
Yeah.
I don't think, I mean, most people don't host shows so they don't know the feeling.
I have hosted shows, so I do know the feeling.
If your audience starts to move out from under you, boy, that is, because that's your strength,
that's your core, that's your revenue, of course, but more than that, that's your moral
backing. They may not like what I'm saying, but my people do, my audience does. And so
if they bolt in meaningful numbers, boy, there's nothing scarier. I mean, I get it.
Yeah, it is scary.
I'm not going to lie about that.
I mean, being scared didn't deter me, but I was more concerned about what it was
going to do to the company overall because if things were bad enough and we
didn't have enough revenue to keep every employee, people are going to get
fired or laid off. And I would really struggle with the guilt. I would feel responsible for that.
And so I'm glad that that didn't happen. And we're currently rebuilding. And it's a dream
come true for me because I want to build an audience of open-minded people who aren't going
to run for the hills the second they hear a point
that they disagree with.
Or that they haven't heard before.
Or that they haven't heard before. Exactly. Yeah.
Because I think there's a lot of that where if you get past the initial shock, like you'll
say something like, well, first of all, you're not allowed to say that. Second, I've never
heard anybody say that. And I kind of hate you for saying something new. But I do think that wears
off after a moment and people are like, well, actually, is that crazy? Is that hateful? I don't
think it is. And you can kind of convince them after that. You have a decision to make. You can
either build a niche audience. And I think that's the worst option because a niche audience wants to
be catered to and you have to be very careful to follow
a very specific script. I'm not interested in that. And I think that I personally went
through an era of being a little bit radicalized on the left. And I regret that because I unwittingly
did build a bit of a niche audience. But those folks-
What do you mean, radicalize?
I totally bought the narrative that like everyone on the right is racist, everyone on the right
is greedy, that kind of stuff.
So Trump term one, when everyone just got hysterical about Trump.
Yes.
Yeah, I get it.
That was the era that I'm not proud of.
And I was basically building my own prison and
I didn't realize it. And what I mean by that is, once you have a niche audience, you're
not allowed to deviate from a very specific and narrow ideology. And I don't want that.
I'm not an ideologue. I'm willing to admit when I'm wrong. I'm willing to recalibrate on policy if I see it implemented
and it's not working correctly. I ultimately just want truth. I want justice and I want
a country that represents its people. That's what I want. That's my core.
Do you feel like it is bridgeable? Like there's so much anger. Like, and by the way, I do think the immigration
thing and the crime thing sort of obscure it. Like the real fight is between educated whites.
Like they're the ones who really hate each other.
Really?
I think that.
Tell me more about that.
Well, I think it's, I mean, I just know from my own experience, I often say this, but
you know, they called me a racist for many, many years.
And I would always say, if I was racist, I would just admit it because like, there are
worse things, but I'm not.
And I would get so hassled, always by the same demographic.
And I would always say to my wife, you know, every, no black person's ever yelled at me.
In fact, I've been hugged by a lot of people. I'm sorry, it's just true. And they don't seem to think I'm a racist,
but it's it's always middle aged white women who were yelling at me at Logan Airport. And
like, what is that? No, I'm not whining. I mean, I don't really care. But it's just it's
just interesting. And so I think it's it's almost like fratricidal. It's like professional class
whites who read the New Yorker, read the New York Times. Like they're truly angry at each
other.
Yeah. Yeah.
I don't know. I've just noticed this.
Yeah. I mean, it's, I think it's just, it's propaganda and this thought that certain things are way worse
than they really are or that like their perceived threats, I think, aren't real to the extent
that they think it's real.
And by speaking out and by confronting you and by, you know, doing what you're referring
to, I think they get a sense of, I'm doing something about it.
Right. No, I get it. I'm not even attacking them. It's just interesting to me. I mean,
because it's totally real in their minds. It is, of course.
It's not just performative. It's like, I felt rage before. So, and as you so eloquently described,
like that rage obscures, and I think maybe it's designed
to obscure the reality of like physical degradation all around us.
All around us.
Yes.
Yeah.
And I think that is kind of the point.
I think it is to some extent intentional.
But since you do live in that world and have for so long, as rationally as you can, clinically
as you can, can you explain what they're worried
about?
Well, I mean, I think that their heart is in the right place.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm giving them the presumption of good faith for sure.
I just want to know like when some rich lady yells at me in the ski lift line, she thinks
I'm racist.
I know they always say that, but then
there's also like, there's a fascist takeover imminent. Is that part of it or what is the
worry?
Yeah. Well, I mean, okay, let's talk about the fascist takeover because there is a part
of me that's a little bit worried about that.
I am too.
Okay.
Okay. So
Not just part of me.
A lot of me.
And look, I don't know what's in those women's heads. So I, I just don't, I don't understand them. So I feel weird talking about what they're
thinking and what motivates them.
Every person should be worried about the centralization of power and the use of technology to strip
basic rights from citizens. Everybody.
The Palantir stuff concerns me a little bit.
Anytime. Yeah. I mean, the technology, not just Palantir, but all the emerging technology,
supercomputing AI, all of this stuff, facial recognition, like it could be used to enslave
the population.
Totally.
Really easily.
Totally. Yeah.
So I don't know why. I mean, everyone should be freaked out about that.
Be worried about that. Definitely. I'm also a little bit worried about, and I don't know
how large this group of people in America happens to be, but you're hearing from them more and more. This idea that, no,
we need to move toward a post-liberal democracy, you know what I'm saying? A rejection of the
democratic process overall. post liberal democracy, you know what I'm saying? Like a rejection of the democratic
process overall. Like Curtis Yarvin is one of the figures who's been kind of preaching
about this. He sounds really dumb, so I don't know how seriously people really take him.
But he purports to want a monarchy in this country, which sounds insane.
Look, I'm opposed to monarchy. And the truth, however, is that the trends you're describing have totally discredited
liberal democracy.
That's my fear.
And I think maybe it's intentional.
Oh, for sure it's intentional.
Make things so chaotic that we beg for a dictator.
I kind of feel like that's happening.
I hope people aren't begging for a dictator because you don't like the fact that the government
isn't really representing your interests right now.
Get a load of what it's gonna be like
to live under a dictator where you have no say at all.
Right, no, no, I'm talking more about
quality of life questions.
If there are home invasions going on
and the homeowner doesn't have any expectation
the cops are gonna save him, that kind of stuff,
that's not theoretical, that induces panic.
True, yeah.
It makes me uncomfortable even thinking about it.
So if you have a lot more of that, people will be like, It's true. Yeah. It makes me uncomfortable even thinking about it. You know?
So if you have a lot more of that, people will be like, I don't really give a shit about
voting.
What I care about is my kids not being killed.
Yeah.
Actually, you make a really good point, which is why it's so important for Americans who
value liberal democracy to really start thinking seriously about saving it.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's what I want.
But don't you feel like when people are under, like if you were on a plane flying across
the Pacific that dropped 20,000 feet in a minute, and you're saying your prayers, maybe
you're an atheist, you're saying prayers anyway, couldn't control yourself.
And what would you be willing to do or give up in exchange
for not dying? In other words, if you're totally panicked, you're in free fall in a commercial
airliner, God, I will do anything. Like that's kind of what is happening with crime, I think.
Yeah. Yeah. Not just crime.
Not just crime.
Yeah. I mean, so many issues. It is a problem when most Americans agree on something,
and our politicians know it, but they do the opposite anyway.
And I've been increasingly angry with the fact
that I feel that the interests of Americans
and how they feel about going to war with Iran,
for instance, right?
Most Americans do not wanna go to war with Iran, and it didn't matter, okay?
The United States bombed Iran's nuclear sites on behalf of Israel anyway, which could have
led to a full blown hot war.
It didn't because of Iran having restraint, but we're not done yet.
And so- Don't you feel ashamed that it didn't lead to nuclear war?
This is the new line.
I know.
You are wrong. You're an idiot.
By the way, that line is stupid.
How dare you worry about that?
Yeah. By the way, it's not over yet. And don't get too cocky. For the people making that point,
don't get too cocky.
But why is it shameful to worry about a nuclear war or worry about a World War III?
Why is that?
It's being held up by the normal tiny brain people as like, you know, evidence that you're
just a ridiculous person.
Your prediction was wrong.
Right, right.
Well, I mean-
We didn't have a nuclear war.
Shut up.
Well, maybe those folks have a point.
Maybe we're the baddies, okay? Maybe we should be more concerned about profits for
bomb makers and weapons manufacturers and private contractors and the mercenaries that are currently
working over in Gaza to shoot and kill people as they're waiting for humanitarian aid.
So how does that, it does feel like I've spent 35 years not talking about that topic because
one, I don't really have
on a native level, like super strong views about it. It's not my country. I wish everyone well in every country. And I mean that, however, it just got so in my face that I had to like say
four things about it for which I've been, you know, spent the rest of my life trying to deal
with that, the effects of being called those names. But I feel like all of
a sudden, like people you would not expect to weigh in on us like, actually, this is
too much.
Yeah. And I love it. I'm glad that that's happening. And I hope-
Do you feel that there's been a change?
I do feel it. I mean, definitely. If it were the Bush years and this whole scenario we're
playing out during those years, the kinds of things I've been
hearing people say publicly I would not have heard. But I think what's happening this time
around is you really can't deny what you're seeing on the ground in Gaza. You can't deny
what's happening in the West Bank, not just in regard to Palestinians, Palestinian Muslims,
but also Palestinian Christians.
You can't deny the fact that that one and only Catholic church in Gaza was bombed, was attacked.
You can't deny the fact that churches have been targeted in the West Bank as well.
People can lie to us as much as they want, but the videos are out there.
How do you blow up a church if you've got munitions, laser guided munitions that are
so sophisticated that they can take out a guy in an SUV from 30,000 feet? How do you
blow up a church with a giant cross on top of it?
It was just an accident, Tucker. It was an accident.
It's not the first church that's been blown up.
No, it's not. And it wasn't an accident.
It wasn't an accident.
But what is the answer? Can anyone get an answer?
I know the answer.
Israel wants a Jewish state and they want to expand.
They have something known as the Greater Israel Project.
They intend to annex the whole of the West Bank.
In fact, Miriam Adelson legally bribed Donald Trump to ensure that that happens.
And Israel announced that that's what they're gonna do and they're doing it.
When it comes to Gaza, I mean, Hamas is so dumb because the atrocities they committed on October 7th
gave Netanyahu and the Israeli government the perfect excuse to essentially do what they've
always wanted to do, which is take that land. They're gonna take that land, that's what they
want. They're gonna ethnically cleanse whatever remains of the Palestinian people, they're gonna
force neighboring countries probably to absorb
2 million people.
And then at the same time,
they're going to have settlers move on in,
rebuild Gaza.
Jared Kushner, by the way, soon after
October 7th happened, was salivating on camera
about how that's prime real estate.
It's disgusting.
But anyway-
How can you move 2 million people right now?
Well, there was a story published this week, I believe it was in the New York Times,
where Netanyahu and the Israeli government was in talks with our government in regard to getting
aid from the United States in moving Palestinians out of Gaza. So when they bombed the church, it's because
they don't want the church. That land is supposed to be part of the Jewish state.
You're not allowed to use my tax dollars to bomb churches.
Well, that's what they're doing.
I'll put up with a lot of stuff, but I think that's, and I don't, I've said this a hundred
times, let me say it again. I don't understand how any Christian leader in the United States
can sit by and not say something about that. And Mike Huckabee, who has been a pretty slavish
devotee of the state of Israel, and I don't mean that as a compliment, he's a very nice
man, but I disagree with him strongly. Even Mike Huckabee came out and said, whoa, whoa,
whoa, whoa, whoa.
Yeah.
You can't kill Christians.
And American citizens.
And American citizens. But I don't understand why that's not, I mean, if that's not a red line, then there's no
red line.
I mean, I think it should definitely be a red line.
But let me just say Mike Huckabee made a statement and that's nice.
It's more than Biden was willing to do.
Talk is cheap.
Are you going to cut funding?
Are you going to stop sending over the 2,000 pound bombs that are
destroying people's homes,
universities, churches,
refugee camps, hospitals?
I mean, Gaza's leveled.
Dyr El-Bala is like the last
remaining portion of Gaza that
still has some structures that
people can live in.
And they're currently doing
a ground invasion there.
They gotta destroy it, of course. I mean, it's so obvious what's happening, and it's so unjust.
And this is the area where, what democracy? I have no power, the government's gonna take part
of my earnings that I worked really hard for, not to help my fellow American citizens who might need
healthcare, who might have fallen
on hard times and can't feed their families and need help with food assistance. It's not gonna go
to them. It's gonna go toward the bombs that are terrorizing people in Gaza, the West Bank.
By the way, it's gonna expand further than that. I mean, they've already annexed part of Syria.
The Syria war, that proxy war, it was a proxy war for a reason. Turkey wanted to have influence
and control over the area where the Kurds are at. Obviously, Israel wanted to annex
portions of it and they've been doing it ever since Assad fell.
And you have a former al-Qaeda leader as the current leader of Syria, who's trying to capitulate
to Israel, but
obviously it's not good enough
because Israel's still bombing
the crap out of Syria.
It's unbelievable.
I have no ability to change it.
It seems like the electorate in
this country have no ability to
change it, because it doesn't
matter which party you vote for,
whether it's a Democratic
presidential candidate or
Republican presidential candidate.
They're going to get elected and
they're going to get dog walked by
whoever the Prime Minister of
Israel is at the time.
How do we wind up supporting
an al-Qaeda leader?
I thought we were anti al-Qaeda.
I thought so too.
I don't know.
It makes no sense to me.
But I mean, this is seen throughout
American history in regard to our
foreign policy.
I mean, we will fund the Taliban, we'll give them weapons to fight the communists.
We want to avoid communism.
And then we turn on them for obvious reasons after what happened on 9-11.
But I mean, I think it's not-
Well, we were told 9-11 was done by Al-Qaeda.
So we've got to be pretty, I mean, that wasn't that long ago.
We've got to be pretty anti-Al-Qaeda because like if they actually killed 3000 Americans
on 9-11, which everyone says they did, and I'm willing to believe that, then how in the
world can we let any Al-Qaeda even exist?
Wouldn't you venture to say it's required to ask these questions if you want to be a
journalist? I would say, and I would also say, you know,
the Syria situation, I was always opposed to what we were doing in Syria. I understood
exactly why we were doing it. We ended up killing or abetting in the murder of an awful
lot of religious minorities, Alawites, a lot of Christians, and destroying
the country. And I was attacked for, you're an Assad apologist or whatever, but I don't
know anything about Assad.
So are they Al-Qaeda apologists?
Well, that's the thing. And we've gotten to a place now where it's really clear that the
3000 American lives they say were lost on September 11th due to al-Qaeda are
less important than whatever political or geopolitical consideration is driving our Syria policy.
Yeah, and it makes me sick.
So that's like about that's treason, of course, but it's more than that. That's like a profound
moral crime. And it's also a middle finger in the face of every American.
Definitely. Yeah.
There's one thing we could expect our foreign policy would stay consistent on is we're anti-Al-Qaeda
because they killed 3,000 Americans.
Yeah, but I just, I don't, I don't, well, I do understand our foreign policy and what
drives our foreign policy and it's a black pill for sure.
So I'm not just asking this because you have an Armenian last name, which you do.
I do.
And I think you're Armenian, that's why you have an Armenian last name.
But because you did a segment on this, what is going on between Armenia, big picture,
and Azerbaijan?
Well, there was about four years ago, there was a pretty brutal war. Azerbaijan attacked the Armenians
who were living in this area known as Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenians call it Artsakh.
And historically, Armenians have had roots there. There are ancient churches, Armenian churches there.
And that land, if you look at a map of where Nagorno-Karabakh is, it's in the middle
of Azerbaijan. Not exactly in the middle, but it's basically, let's say here's Azerbaijan,
circle, and it's kind of off to one side, Nagorno-Karabakh is. And the reason
that land was, well, the whole of Azerbaijan was
controlled by the Soviets, right?
But during that time,
Stalin essentially gave the land
that makes up Nagorno-Karabakh to
Azerbaijan, promised that land to
them, even though that area was
populated by ethnic Armenians.
And he did that, I mean, Stalin was evil in a lot of ways, but he was also very smart,
which is the most dangerous combination.
Very smart.
Yeah, and so he wanted both the Azeris and the Armenians to be dependent on the Soviet
Union.
And the way to do that is to put the ethnic Armenians smack dab in the middle of Azerbaijan.
And so it became an issue because
throughout history Armenians went
to war with the Azeris in regard to
controlling that land because most
of the people there were Armenian,
they wanted to control that land.
And so what happened four years
ago in 2020 is Azerbaijan's like
we want the Armenians out we want to
take over the land and they went to
war Armenia is a tiny country.
Russia has provided security
guarantees to Armenia in the past,
but unfortunately in this case,
Russia didn't come to the defense
of ethnic Armenians.
They said that the security
guarantees had to do with Armenia
and not Nagorno-Karabakh. So
a lot of Armenians died, a lot of churches, ancient churches were absolutely destroyed
and bombed. And the Azeris engaged in the ethnic cleansing of ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh.
They were forced out if they weren't killed. And some of them ended up in Armenia, and Armenia, of course,
is gonna take them in.
But it's been really difficult
because Armenia is a tiny country.
It's a developing country,
it's landlocked and
it's surrounded by enemies.
And historically has been
victimized by Turkey through
the Armenian genocide.
I mean, it's been pretty
devastating and it's,
you know, I've been very vocal about what's been happening in Gaza and Armenians have been very
proud of me for that. But a few have been like, why didn't you speak up about Nagorno-Karabakh?
I did. I did actually at the time, but it happened four years ago.
Why aren't the preachers talking about it? I don't, so churches were blown up?
Yeah. And by the way, I mean, religious leaders have been, but American media doesn't care
about it. America doesn't care about Armenia at all.
Oh, I get it. It's a small country, but the Armenians were persecuted precisely because
they were Christians. That's my read. I mean, there's no, you know.
Yeah, they were the minority That's my read. I mean, there's no, you know. Yeah, they were the minority, the religious.
Of course, the religious minority at the very end of the Ottoman Empire, end of the First
World War, and they were murdered in enormous numbers by the Ottomans using the Kurds, I
think, for a lot of it. And the Kurds, we love the Kurds. But I don't understand why,
I just see this theme. You
may disagree with this, but I see a global theme where the most peaceful religion in
the world is taking the most abuse and there's the most murder of Christians. I don't quite
know what that is. And I just am amazed that nobody says anything in the United States.
Yeah, I mean, Armenians don't have a powerful lobby that can bribe our politicians to care
about them. So what's really depressing though is, you know, we provide a lot of the weapons
that Israel has. And Israel sold weapons to Azerbaijan to carry out the ethnic cleansing
of ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh. What? Yep. Yep. Is that confirmed?
Yes, it's confirmed.
It's absolutely confirmed.
Israel sold weapons to Azerbaijan to kill the Christians.
Yeah, that's exactly what happened.
You're sure?
Yeah, anyone can look it up.
And look, if I'm ever wrong, I will admit it, but this is something I've researched
deeply.
Where did Azerbaijan get its weapons from? There have been rumors that they also were sold weapons from Russia,
but there was less confirmation on that. But in regard to Israel, it's very clear and it's
documented. Yeah.
I sense a theme. And I have a right to sense that theme because I'm a Christian and I'm not going to see that
right.
Sorry.
So the Armenians were murdered by the millions at the end of the First World War.
But they weren't all killed.
Where did they go?
So thank you for asking me these questions.
I really appreciate it because there's a lot that I want to say about it. So the Armenian genocide was perpetrated by an offshoot of an organization of
it's a group that basically rebelled against the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire had already
been persecuting Armenians. There was the Adana massacres. I mean, massacres had been happening
at the hands of the Ottoman Turks. Now, a group rose up to rebel
against the Ottoman Empire and
those individuals were known as
the Young Turks.
We are not named after those
people, Young Turks in American
context means something entirely
different.
It means someone who rebels
against societal expectations or
the establishment.
And that's what we do at our show.
So that's why Cenk named it that. I kind of wish he didn't because it gets confused all the time. And that's what we do at our show. So that's why Cenk named it that.
I kind of wish he didn't because it gets confused all the time.
But nonetheless-
It's kind of funny that there's a Turk and
an Armenian hosting the show.
And by the way, we talk about the Armenian genocide on the show all the time.
He's Turkish and he grew up in a certain context where you only get one side of
the story.
Yeah, we all have grown up in this.
Exactly. But to his credit, I mean, through our very difficult conversations at times,
through our debates, he eventually realized, oh my God, like I was totally brainwashed.
The Armenian genocide is totally real. And we talk about it all the time on the show.
And that's like probably one of my proudest accomplishments. Because I could have turned my back on him,
made him out to just be a terrible person who's unworthy of me even talking to him.
But instead, I made a decision to try to convince him, to persuade him. And it took a while,
but it worked. And to me, seeing the humanity in someone who has like a fundamental disagreement that enrages me.
I think that probably out of all the qualities that make me human, I think that's my best
quality. My willingness to try to persuade before I write someone off is unworthy.
That's a very good quote.
Yeah, but anyway, sorry. So the Young Turks rose up to,
unworthy. That's a very good quote.
Yeah, but anyway, sorry.
So the Young Turks rose up to, and the whole thing about the Young Turks was they didn't
like the way Armenians were being persecuted.
They wanted to provide rights to Armenians.
And you can look this up, it's in the history, right?
But there was an offshoot of the Young Turks called the Committee of Unity and Progress.
And they're the ones who perpetrated the Armenian genocide, okay? So that's how it happened.
1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered.
There were a lot more Armenians who were forced to march through the desert to Syria.
My father was actually born in Damascus.
Your father?
My father, yeah.
He was born in Damascus when he was two years old though, the family wanted to move back
to the homeland. My grandfather really cared about that. So they moved to
Armenia, but it was difficult because at that point when the diaspora was moving back, the
Armenians who never left, there were cultural differences.
Because think about it, I mean, if you're going to an Arab country, you take on some
of their cultural practices and stuff. And then when you go back to Armenia, there's a little bit of a disconnect, you know?
Always.
So-
The prodigal son effect.
Yeah.
Yeah. So like there was a lot of Armenians who went to Syria, Lebanon. There's a huge
Armenian community in Lebanon. Iran. In fact, there's a huge Armenian community in Iran
till this day, Christian Armenians who are openly practicing their Christianity and going
to church.
In Iran?
In Iran, yeah.
Yep.
Yes, I have family members.
And the way that Iran-
Why aren't they all genocided by Iran, I thought?
Yeah, you would think that would happen, right?
But no, there are Armenians in, they might not like the Ayatollah, they might not like
the regime, but what they respect is the fact that they're still able to practice their religion. They're still able to go to church.
For the most part, they're left alone. And-
There's a huge Armenian population in Iran, I think.
Huge. Yeah, that's the Armenian diaspora.
They were originally refugees from the genocide?
Yes. Yeah. I love Iranian Armenians. They're like among my favorite. They're just, I don't know, I just
think that they're actually a lot more open minded, believe it or not. The diaspora that I come from
is far more conservative and a little closed minded. So, but anyway, I just,
Armenians have been through a lot. They really have and they're all over the world
because of the fact that they were forced
out of their own country.
They've done so well.
Yeah, they're hardworking people.
They're good people, very family oriented.
I'm very proud of my heritage,
but I'm also very proud to be an American.
And that's the other thing about Armenians.
They really love this country.
They really do.
And they feel privileged to be here. If they immigrated here, they feel privileged. My
parents came here as refugees. My dad in the late 1970s, my mom in the early 1980s.
From where?
So from Armenia, both of them from Armenia.
Soviet controlled at the time.
Yes. So at the time, there was an effort,
obviously, to continue containing communism, but to help refugees who wanted to flee communism.
When it comes to immigration, I think it's tricky, right? Because I do think that a lot of
people come to this country and they contribute to it. Without question. Yeah, definitely. And I think about the Armenian community and like Glendale is like the nicest
part of LA at this point, if you ask me. And it's because it's part of LA County, but it's
not part of LA city. It's mostly populated by Armenians and Cubans, by the way. And it's
beautiful. Glendale, California is gorgeous. They care. They care about their community.
They care about their families, they care about their
families, they wanna work hard. You're always gonna have bad apples. And recently there
was like a crime ring, an Armenian crime ring that was caught and taken down. And I'm glad
they got deported. Fantastic. But most of them, they really, really care.
An Armenian crime ring?
Yeah.
Was there a Mormon crime ring too? I don't know, maybe. I've never heard of An Armenian crime ring? Yeah. Was there a Mormon crime ring too?
I don't know.
Maybe.
I've never heard of an Armenian crime ring.
In LA, I mean, look, I don't want it to paint a picture of Armenians overall because there's
a huge Armenian population and they're very successful and hardworking and they're good
people.
Oh, I know they are.
Yeah.
But you know, you're always going to have bad apples.
It happens.
And I have no problem with them being brought to justice.
And that's what went down. I think the feds actually investigated it. And it was a multi-year
investigation and they were defrauding Medicare. Like all sorts of financial crimes were taking
place.
Thank you for that. That's really, and the fact that Iran has a huge Christian population.
I just think it's amazing.
Yeah.
No one ever talks about that because it goes against the grain.
It goes against the narrative of Iran.
And again, that's not to say that the Iranian regime is fantastic and I support it.
I don't.
And by the way, it's not my place to determine who governs or who rules Iran. It's up to
the Iranian people to make that decision.
You don't think it's up to you?
Hell no. I live in America. I'm an American. Who am I to tell any country who their leaders
should be? Who is our government? We should not be meddling in those matters in any sovereign
country. It's up to the people of that country to either rise up and demand
something different or to reform the system, whatever they want to do. I'm not interested
in regime change. It's not my place at all.
Here, I am the choir and you are preaching. So what happens to the media where you spent
your entire life? Like what does it look like in five years?
What happens to the media where you spent your entire life? Like what does it look like in five years?
I mean, I think cable news isn't a lot of trouble.
Yeah.
Because whether people want to believe it or not, I think most Americans are actually
pretty smart and privy to the fact that they're not really getting the whole story when they
watch traditional media, when they read legacy media.
And so there's a lot more
competition now online and
you have long form like this.
We're having a long form
conversation where there's space to
actually explore the complexities
of various issues.
And people love that.
People want to be mentally
stimulated.
I'm never stimulated when I'm watching cable news. Maybe there are some examples,
sometimes there's a debate segment where I'm like, okay, that was a good segment. I like that.
I hate the uniformity of ideology that you get on cable news oftentimes, that bothers me.
I really, I will say this, I like Abby Phillips's show on CNN.
Because that whole show is about
bringing all sorts of people
together from different
perspectives to hash it out.
And it remains for
the most part pretty civil, but
we're disagreeing and
we're explaining why we disagree.
And I like that and she's had me
on even though I think most people
in cable news probably see me as
a controversial figure to some
extent.
But they have all sorts of people on and I love that.
I just noticed I was saddened to see that the one conservative guy, the professional
conservative on CNN, who I think seems clever.
I'm not against him personally.
I don't know him, but the second we learned that, oh, we're going to be bombing Iran now,
he's all in.
Yeah.
He's all in. So. He's all in.
So I feel like he, I forget his name.
What was his name?
He's on like often.
I know who you're talking about.
But the thing that kind of offends me at this point is when partisan hackery takes place.
You know what I'm saying?
Do I know what you're saying?
Yeah.
Yeah, well, I've heard about it.
It really annoys the crap out of me. I'll give you an example.
I've participated in it. Yeah. And that's the thing. I give you
credit because you have on multiple occasions admitted that the neoconservative ideology that
you had taken on was wrong. I don't think most people-
I think it's evil, is what I think. Yeah. I don't think most people- I think it's evil. Yeah. I don't think most people who are against you on the left know how often you condemn
yourself on your own podcast about that.
So I just wanted to kind of draw attention to it.
Well, I just think it's important not to pretend you're something that you're not.
And just be honest.
And you know, I didn't kill anybody.
I did cheer on the deaths of others though, I will say.
But whatever, we all make mistakes. But I think it's just important to be honest at all times. And I think that,
to the extent you can.
Exactly, yeah. But just going back to the partisan hackery, I was recently on Abby Phillips's
show and we were talking about the Epstein files and whether or not they should be released.
I'm in favor of releasing them.
I think the American people deserve to know.
Obviously.
But there was a conservative guy on the panel
who immediately jumped to,
well, why didn't the Democrats do it?
And it's like, okay, sure.
Why didn't the Democrats?
I don't care.
I don't care about the partisan stuff, okay?
Democrats didn't run on it.
I'm not defending them.
I would have liked for them to be the ones who ran on it and actually did it, but Democrats didn't run on it. I'm not defending them. I would have liked for them to
be the ones who ran on it and actually did it, but they didn't. The one who ran on it, well,
Trump didn't necessarily run on it, but he did. His voters want it.
His voters want it. Members of his administration kept using the Epstein files as bait to entice
the base. And then also at the same time, while Trump might not have
ran on it, he did use the Epstein files to attack Democrats like Bill Clinton, right?
So you're drawing attention to that and you're making the release of the Epstein files a lot
more desirable to your base. To then turn around and engage in this weird, what I believe to be
a cover up, not a good look, not a good look at all.
So when we're having this discussion about what's happening at this very moment, and
the Republican guy immediately goes to Democrats bad, it's like, okay, I know the Democrats
are bad.
Can we just, let's talk about this moment right now, where promises were made, but promises
are not kept when it comes to this specific issue.
Or the story itself. right now, where promises were made, but promises are not kept when it comes to this specific issue.
Or the story itself.
I mean, one of the problems with partisanship is it obscures the actual issue that I'd like
to know more about.
And so the Epstein thing, from my perspective, has been long known.
Almost 20 years, the guy was a pervert and was involved in a, like, apparently a really
significant sex ring, okay, with some underage girls in it. So the whole a really significant sex ring. Yeah.
Okay.
With some underage girls in it.
So the whole thing is gross.
We knew that.
But what is it?
Like big picture.
Like what is that?
Where did the money come from?
No one can answer that question.
Yeah.
How did he make his money?
How was he so wealthy?
Nobody knows.
Yeah.
Why did Les Wexner give him so much money?
And Leon Black.
Like what is that?
What's going on? Yeah, I know.
So what do you think the answer is?
I think he was an intelligence asset.
That's my suspicion.
Period.
Doing what?
Blackmailing people?
Yeah, I think it was a blackmail operation.
Why were there cameras in the rooms where girls were being raped?
What did he do with that footage?
What was the point of that footage?
I have no cameras in any bedroom in my house.
Neither do I.
Normal people don't.
Right.
You know, he had relationships with people that were in intelligence.
I mean, obviously Robert Maxwell, Ghislaine Maxwell's father was a hardcore Zionist and
worked for Mossad.
I mean, this is well documented.
Yeah, I don't think anyone's used that.
And he introduced Ghislaine to Jeffrey Epstein.
The fact that Jeffrey Epstein was a college dropout,
but Bill Barr's father, who worked for the OSS,
hired him to be a math teacher at the Dalton School, which is a prestigious school
that would only hire prestigious teachers. Jeffrey Epstein wasn't that, he wasn't a prestigious
teacher, he dropped out of college. I don't know, there's just a lot of smoke and it's led to
distrust in our institutions, it's led to a lot of suspicions.
And I would like to know, and
I think this is very important,
whether we live in a sovereign
country where our politicians are
actually representing us or
if we're living in a situation
where a foreign country might have
blackmail on our politicians or
people in positions of power.
And as a result, that blackmail is
being used
to force these politicians to pursue policies
that are not beneficial to the American people,
but beneficial to a foreign country.
Do you really wanna know or will you admit
that it's immoral of you to wanna know
and that maybe you just can't handle the truth
and maybe you're a hater for wanting to know?
I want more than just me knowing.
I want every single American to know. That's
what I want. Yeah.
Last question. Do you sincerely think that anybody on either side of the aisle, which
doesn't exist, but whatever, left, right, wherever, could watch what you've said for
the last almost two hours and come away angry.
I mean, if you're Zionist, probably.
You didn't even say anything against Zionism.
I didn't, but it doesn't matter.
I mean, look, if the Jeffrey Epstein suspicions are ever confirmed, that looks really, really
bad and you'd want to prevent, you would want that
information to never come out. So even talking about it, I feel really offends people for obvious
reasons. And so I don't know, we'll see. But this is the message that I want people who might feel
angry to take away from me. I don't give a fuck. That's it.
I can't improve on that. Hannah, thank you so much.
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