The Tucker Carlson Show - Dave Smith on how neocons wrecked the country
Episode Date: May 17, 2024(00:00) Dave Smith on being a Libertarian (22:45) DC is the most powerful organization in history (45:38) Trump is hated by all the right people (01:16:00) Why did America go into Iraq? (02:13:2...5) The War on Terror and post-9/11 years Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Tucker Carlson Show.
It's become pretty clear that the mainstream media are dying.
They can't die quickly enough.
And there's a reason they're dying.
Because they lie.
They lied so much, it killed killed them we're not doing that tuckercarlson.com we promise to bring you the most honest content the most
honest interviews we can without fear or favor here's the latest i mean it's a little weird for
me because you're a libertarian and in fact you could even wind up on a libertarian ticket at some
point if not this
cycle no but i'm just saying it could happen right so you're you're literally a libertarian
and but for some reason we have the same instincts on almost everything i would say um
there are a lot of people in conservative media who i always have felt like i had a lot in common
with and now i don't and it's not because
I've gotten liberal I've gotten way less liberal I see them as way more liberal so what like what
happened to conservative media not all of them I have a million friends in it but like a lot of the
big names seem very liberal to me yeah I mean I think that it's kind of the same thing that
happened to libertarians I think they're inC., and that's not where you're supposed to be.
No, that's right.
And so the best libertarian organization in the world is the Mises Institute, and it's
based in Auburn.
Alabama.
Yeah.
And they specifically put it there because they want want no part of washington dc and then you see all of the uh the you know cato and guys like that who are based out of dc they get very
corrupted and they and you can look at it it's like it's the same thing uh we were just talking
about donahue calling out chris matthews back in the day you're having cocktail parties with the
fed chairman but you're a libertarian you shouldn't be doing they're actually doing that yeah oh yeah yeah actually doing that and i think a lot of that's the same problem with the kind of
conservatism inc or whatever they've been they've been corrupted and power is seductive and i'm sure
you know that from like being in dc for so many years that you i'm not saying like you're kind of
an anomaly you think about all the people in was, D.C. and how much all of them wanted to suck up to power almost, right?
Like what, 90 something percent?
At least, that's why they're there.
Right.
And so it's a difficult thing to-
I didn't get that for some reason for so long.
I was living in the middle of it.
I don't know.
I'm not a super genius.
So I didn't realize how corrupt it was.
Everyone always said it was corrupt.
It felt like a really nice place to me. I raised all my kids there. But when you realize how corrupt it is. Everyone always said it was corrupt. It felt like a really nice place to me.
I raised all my kids there.
But when you realize how corrupt it is, I mean, it's horrifying.
Yeah.
But that's also, I think there's something like the nature of conservatism or the conservative
movement in America has always just been to lose.
It's like built into them.
Like every generation just loses and then moves on to the next thing to lose right there it's like built into them like every generation just loses and then
moves on to the next thing to lose i like the the old right the um you know robert taft right right
they uh they were largely in opposition to the new deal that was they were fighting back against
the fdr's new deal we're in opposition to that and then you know you cut forward uh 20 years and and
it's fdr democrats are the new republicans right ronald reagan it's like it's it's nobody would
dare question the new deal and then of course there was a movement pushing back against the
great society and yes and now of course no entitlements are like no one would ever dare
question medicare and look just recently i saw saw Donald Trump, who's not a traditional conservative, but
he did the most traditional conservative thing when he said he said, when we get in there
again, we are going to fix Obamacare.
And I'm like, OK, right, right, right.
So that's where we're at now.
Right.
It's no more repeal.
And you don't even hear Republicans talk about it anymore.
Right.
So it's always like the next round of big government increases,
the next round of centralized power in D.C.
They will put up a little fight.
They will lose.
They will then a few years later accept this as something that is consensus amongst all of us.
But you see, we're against whatever the next thing is.
You know, transing the kids or, you know, student loan bailouts.
We're against that now, you know, but they'll lose and then eventually accept that.
Why would you, so that, what does that suggest about them?
They don't, it's, this is a performance.
This is not sincere.
Yeah.
I mean, conservatives typically have played the role of being against consolidating power in DC.
Right.
But that's, you know, that's obviously that's going against the wind, not with it.
And so it's almost like, it almost seems like a professional wrestling thing where they're
like, they're the ones who are supposed to lose at the end of the day.
They kind of say the right thing, never really mean it, you know, and then ultimately acquiesce.
I have to say I was disgusted by the lack of fight in a lot of professional conservatives during COVID.
Like disgusted by it.
You know, banning freedom of movement, freedom of speech, bodily autonomy.
Like the whole thing was like so mind-blowing to me
this actually was the totalitarianism we've been worried about or talking pretending we're worried
about for a long time it came and a lot of them didn't say anything about it but i was totally
bewildered by the libertarian response which was also kind of silent i thought cato would be i don't know camped out in front of
the white house or the cdc or like what what was that well it shows you i mean it's um well just
and and because you use the word totalitarian and i think sometimes when you use that word it's it's
perceived as like being somewhat hyperbolic but it's really like what else could describe
lockdowns well that's what i thought. That is totalitarianism.
You had American citizens turning on their TV every morning to find out from their governor
what they were allowed to do today.
Well, exactly.
I mean, the most, you couldn't imagine,
like if the question was like,
can I have a funeral for my dad?
And they're like, sorry, no, we've decided you can't.
You know what I mean?
Like the most intimate details.
Yes.
Liberties that we would all have taken for granted.
And so, okay, to your point, right. most intimate details. Liberties that we would all have taken for granted.
And so, okay, to your point, right, not only did conservatives not fight against it,
I think the majority of them cheered it on
or went along with it.
And as far as the point about libertarians,
there are kind of like, there are these moments,
and I know you experienced this a lot
when you were on your Fox show, there are these moments um and i know you experienced this a lot when you you were on
your fox show there are these moments where there's like a storm where there's something's
like a white hot issue you know and it becomes very easy later after that passes to be on the
right side of that like everyone's on the right side of iraq now you know what i mean john mccain
wrote in his memoir that iraq was a mistake so even john mccain could admit many
years later but the thing is that didn't that doesn't really matter as much as if you were
opposed to it when it was happening because like in 2002 if you were like hey i don't i don't think
he has weapons of mass destruction you were everybody knew that well that just means you're
a queer basically you know and you hate your country and you're weak and you're and so you know there's there's little things you know the example i like to use a lot
because i remember you broadcasting through this so you'll remember it well uh but was when um when
donald trump announced that he was going to pull out of syria and for like two weeks it was like
the kurds remember we're abandoning the kurds but our allies the kurds like by the way if there's
our ancient allies yes way if there's
our ancient allies yes yes if there's one thing that has been consistent in american foreign
policy in my lifetime is that we always screw over the kurds but for whatever they don't have
a state i mean yeah i mean we uh george hw bush encouraged them to rise up and overthrow saddam
hussein and then went nah you know i thought about it again i don't think so this is obviously just
slaughtered all i mean you know but why am i laughing it's such a consistent theme well it's not we're not
laughing at the plight of the kurds we're laughing at the hypocrisy of the media but for like two
weeks if anyone said they wanted to you know they supported trump pulling out of syria it was like
you're a bad person you hate the kurds by the way has anyone checked in on the kurds since then has
the media ever talked about them again like it was totally just used in that moment. And that's just a little example. That's
not the big one. But like- Like our historic enemies, the Houthis.
Right. Yes, of course. Man, I remember growing up in La Jolla in the 70s,
hearing about the Houthis. And my father said, I just want you to grow strong and resolute
so we can fight the Houthi hordes. Your one purpose in life is to get strong enough to
take on these Houthis. When the day comes, and it will, where these Houthi hordes. Your one purpose in life is to get strong enough to take on these Houthis when the day comes,
and it will, where these Houthis challenge our freedom.
You must be prepared.
Right.
It's so ridiculous.
But look, I remember, so you, it was either in, it might have been April or May of 2020,
but I remember you covering on your show, and I also covered this on my podcast at the time,
got to a smaller audience, but you covering the lab leak.
Yeah.
You were like, hey, this is a really like plausible theory of where, and in fact, it seems to make a lot more sense.
Because already there was, it's not that we had like a conclusive case that you could take to court, but there were like big pieces of information that were really narrative shattering
well and they were also the bats weren't close enough to where the wet market well also a wet
market is a seafood market so why were they selling mammals in a seafood market just pangolins and
bats and then there was a group of chinese researchers who in december and january of 2020
wrote this paper they said no we think this was a lab leak. And then they all disappeared. Yeah.
That was on the internet.
And there were like four scientists from the lab that were hospitalized in November with COVID-like
symptoms. And you were like, that's, I don't know, my eyebrow is raising, is yours not raising?
But at the time, this was, and I know you were aware of this, this was a crazy controversial
thing to say. You were what racist somehow it's more racist
to think that the chinese had like a lab than to think they were like biting bat heads off or something
like it's so bizarre but by the way now as i say this to you now this is not controversial at all
oh and this isn't a white hot issue it was then but it but it's not now. And so a lot of just what,
back to your original point about like the libertarians
who failed on the job,
a lot of it is simply comes down to be a matter of courage.
It's just a matter of like,
hey, when the issue that might make everyone hate you
and all of the powerful people call you the worst names,
which naturally human beings have a tendency
to not want that.
We don't wanna be ostracized. You don't to be called these names right some people just kind of have this
personality trait and this isn't like whether you're on the left or right it's something that
you have it's something i have it's something uh um alex berenson has yes he's kind of like i don't
care i'll say it right now when it's going to get me called all of these really i remember about 15
years ago it was in july and i was in maine really is. I remember about 15 years ago, it was in July,
and I was in Maine, and my kids were playing on the dock.
And it was like the happiest day.
You know, it was like perfect bluebird day,
sound of laughter of children.
It was like just, I was like, oh, I was in such a good mood.
And I was looking at my kids and sort of walking along,
and I stepped on a beehive.
And a whole swarm of bees flew up my shorts and just attacked
me in my nether regions.
And I went in about, no exaggeration, 10 seconds from being placid and happy to being in agony
and on fire.
And I jumped in the lake, wrecked my cell phone.
That is the experience of these hysterical moments.
Right.
All of a sudden, it's like being stung by a swarm
everybody's against you everybody's saying exactly the same thing you go from like
placid happy calm clear thinking to totally unable to think clearly and on all these issues the day
Navalny died in custody Russian custody it's like we decide of course Putin killed him or whatever
and to be able to see and think clearly in that moment, like that's the key right there when
you're getting swarmed. You may have come to the obvious conclusion that the real debate is not
between Republican and Democrat or socialist and capitalist, right, left. The real battle is between
people who are lying on purpose and people who are trying to tell you the truth. It's between
good and evil. It's between honesty and falsehood.
And we hope we are on the former side.
That's why we created this network,
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And we invite you to subscribe to it.
You go to tuckercarlson.com slash podcast.
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Who's the guy who is the,
he was the science editor for the New York times at Wade,
Nicholas Wade,
right?
I mean, that guy was like nature and,
and you know,
like all of the biggest scientific publications was the New York times guy.
And it's like that,
like that you're done. And they called him racist yeah yeah and it's not just it's not just like oh
you lose your job or something like that it's like you we're going to smear you in the most
vicious ways to like all of these and we're social creatures we're we naturally respond to that but
but how does that happen well like you've watched this carefully how i mean it's
speaking in bees it is the hive mind at work but it's it's so like perfectly and like with great
discipline executed it's like in a space of four hours the entire machine turns on one guy and
destroys them like how what is you can see why people come up with conspiracies
to explain that, right?
Sure, yeah.
And they are quite possibly right.
I mean, I don't know exactly what the conspiracy is,
but it is quite possibly is one.
But no dissent at all.
Yeah, but then my thing is just that I do think,
and I think this is something I've benefited from.
I know this because I hear this back from my audience a lot that it's like, oh, when you were right on those issues, when it
really mattered, you kind of gain credibility. And I also think that like, you know, let's say
there's like, I don't know, like a right wing or conservative commentator who's telling you how you
have to feel about the new storm right now
it's like well just tell me how did you do on the last three storms you know like like were you were
you telling dopes to get the vaccine were you telling everyone to be socially distanced or were
you like on the right side of that where were you on ukraine you know were you saying that like oh
you know like they can win or whatever the story is.
You know what I mean?
Like it's and and I do watch a lot of people who go like got everything consistently wrong.
It's the same way as the neoconservatives.
Right.
Like even if I mean, I, I hate them so much.
It's hard to speak about them like with any type of sense of fairness.
But how do you listen?
Let's just say you got six wars wrong and you were wrong about every single
one like let's just say you were for the war in iraq and then you were for you know regime change
in afghanistan against the taliban who did not attack us um and then you were for overthrowing
gaddafi and then you were for overthrowing assad and then you were for backing the saudi war in
yemen and like all these things and and it's just nothing but disaster. Every one of them.
Okay.
But then you're going to come out and confidently be like,
and I'm for this next war.
And let me tell you why you have to be too.
And you don't have like enough,
just like,
you don't feel humiliated enough that like you couldn't come out.
Even if you were for this,
you'd be like,
man, I really think we should fight this war,
but I can't come out and say we should fight this war.
Cause the last six times I said it, it was nothing but a disaster.
But the same people who were like, you see, Tucker, when we overthrow Saddam Hussein,
democracy will sweep the region. And you see, we're going to be greeted as liberators. We won't
be fighting off a 20-year insurgency, you see. They'll greet us as liberators because they love
us. And then democracy will sweep the region. And then Iran will lose influence in the region. And
then Hezbollah will start being nice to Israel,
and like all these grand predictions,
and every last one of them,
oh, it'll be paid for in oil.
Do you remember all the things they used to say?
Oh, very well.
I mean, it's a cakewalk,
it's a slam dunk that he has weapons of mass destruction.
So every single one of these things you were wrong about,
you get to now be the person advocating the next one but
you wouldn't ever allow that kind of behavior in your children you can't let a lie stand kids lie
you catch them lying and the whole point of the exercise is to get them to admit to your face yes
i did this no i won't do it again like that's a that's an integral step right you have to go
through that or else you don't improve as a person you become shittier as a person yeah that's right and i would also maybe this is me adding my
libertarian bent to this but i would also say that in the in the private sector and i mean not like
the crony connected to government right sector but like in true business you also don't get away
with that stuff of course you can't just fail over and over again and then this only happens either in the government or in you know companies that are essentially the
government but you know like live off no big government contracts or something like that
um but yeah it's it's uh and it's it's the major problem is that look like at least there are
problems with free markets and they're it's made up of human beings, so there's always problems.
But there's at least like a cleansing mechanism.
There's like profit and loss.
If you lose too much, you go out of business.
With government, the worse you do, the more funding you get.
If the kids can't read, we need a higher education budget.
I completely agree with you.
And for all I piss on libertarians, and of course I was one for most of my life.
I'm going to bring you back.
Give me time.
No, it's just interesting.
I think the reason I'm mad at libertarians is because I don't see a free market in the United States.
Oh, of course not.
Yeah.
Right.
And so, I mean, I look at green energy or the defense space's that that bears no resemblance to a market
at all well and and a lot of finance yes but i would also point out that like look there are
just like with every group just like conservatives there are different camps within libertarians yes
so just to point out like the thing i said about the last five storms if you go listen to what
ron paul was saying throughout the entire COVID regime, he was
perfect.
Tom Woods, Lou Rockwell, Jeff Deist, there's this group of libertarians who were great
the entire time.
Well, I totally agree.
I've never stopped loving Ron Paul.
So the difference between, say, the Ron Paulian libertarians, which I would consider myself
to be one of, and say the Cato or groups like that is that those, the Cato types tend to like
almost have this academic discussion of what it would be like in a free market and then talk as
if that's what we're living in right now. But that, you know, I mean, I was a fellow at Cato,
so I remember this very well. That organization, that foundation, 501c3 is run by an oligarch actually yeah it's run by
charles coke that's right right so he kicked out the old head he brought in the new head
and you sort of wonder if you're a libertarian it you can't you're not for the you're not for
government power but you're also suspicious of oligarchs right aren't you well of course and
particularly like say the same oligarch who's not only funding
the cato institute but is also funding the republican party in general exactly and the
party who consistently is growing the size of government every bit as much as the democrats
are i mean it's almost like you know it's almost it's become a thing where if a republican were
to ever say uh you know say we need smaller government or like nicki haley was talking
about smaller government you just roll your eye because it never means anything they've been
talking about this forever there's never been one time and there's been several times in my life
where the Republicans have controlled the Congress and the the White House oh yes never once been a
cut in spending of course spending always goes up there's been some cuts in top marginal tax rates
right you know not even drastic cuts but they're but yes
we'll have rich people pay less taxes there's never a cut in spending because that's a cut in
the power of the federal government and they're not for that and so if the guys who are funding
that are also funding this libertarian institute to write policy paper for recommendations that are never going to be
implemented anyway. It does raise some eyebrows. I would say, look, to the bigger question of
libertarians in the side, like I've heard you say before, the US federal government is the biggest,
most powerful government in the history of the world by far there's not a close second it's a government
that can snap its fingers and overthrow regimes anywhere in the world and does it regularly um
and so that is look as the country is kind of spinning out of control and everything has just
gotten more and more corrupt that's directly related to the fact that dc has gotten more and
more powerful and this is to me, like,
I've, I've been saying this for a while. It's not my original thought. This is something Hans
Herman Hoppe said back in the nineties, where he, he basically said that libertarians need to learn
a conservative lesson and conservatives need to learn a libertarian lesson. And what he meant by
that was that libertarians basically need to learn that okay just because we might believe
that the government ought to not bash someone over the head and lock them in a cage for doing
something doesn't mean we have to celebrate it you don't have to celebrate degeneracy you don't
have to be on the side of that yes in fact a functioning society needs good family values
and that's just like a fact now that't, we don't believe that should be enforced
at the point of a gun, but that doesn't mean like,
you know, like even if you think, say like whatever,
you think prostitution should be legal,
you could still have a feeling that it's horrible
and represents a tragedy on all sides.
And so that's like kind of the conservative lesson
that libertarians need to learn.
I think a lot of libertarians in the Ron Paul kind of school did learn that.
And the lesson that I would say that conservatives or Trumpian populist types need to learn is
that if Donald Trump's going to say drain the swamp, it's like, okay, but what does
that mean?
Like, what does that look like?
How do you actually drain the swamp?
And it's really actually very simple.
It means cut government spending. As long as Washington DC is the most powerful organization
in the history of the world, and they're spending over $6 trillion a year, that is by definition a
swamp. That's why more millionaires live in the suburbs outside of Washington DC than anywhere
else in the world. They don't make anything except weapons. You know what I mean? That are
purchased by the government. I've heard you talk about this before. They don't make anything except weapons you know what i mean that are purchased by the government it's i've never heard you talk about this before they don't even make them there
right right i mean there's no there's not a single act of creation yeah in the entire dc
the dmv as they call it right well no and it's it's literally not only are they not creating
but they're parasitic by nature they're taking americans money and this is what i mean i
think this is kind of the central source of why the country is spinning out of control and why
we're uh so incredibly corrupt at every level is because there is this parasitic force in washington
dc that's grown bigger and bigger and more i. I absolutely agree with that. And I do think I saw it change. I remember the moment it changed.
And it was the moment when the Democratic Party subverted the so-called business community,
which was always a kind of counterbalance against this. Because the idea was the government makes
it actually harder for people to conduct business. It stifles free
markets and we're against that. So the Chamber of Commerce and Business Roundtable were always sort
of pushing back against the growth of government. Bill Clinton changed that. And he changed that by
declaring a ceasefire between the Democratic Party and the rich. And he did it during the tech boom.
I'll never forget this. Democrats were always
saying, and I thought, you know, I didn't agree with them, but I sort of thought it was important
for the purpose of balance to have this. They would say they were suspicious of people with
too much money and there's too much power. Like what about the value of labor? You got the value
of capital, the value of labor, they're kind of in conflict with one another and we're on the side
of labor. All of a sudden, Bill Clinton'sinton's like no there's nothing wrong with being you know making a billion dollars at 32 for creating an app
you know running web van or e-toys or pets.com and doorknobs.com it was just everything you
could think of totally and it was so smart he did it for the purpose of fundraising and all of a
sudden the democratic party became far richer than the republican party and all the formerly republican leafy suburbs
around the country you know greenwich connecticut and mclean virginia they all went
left actually it was brilliant and evil but its effect was to completely wreck the country because
there was no counterbalance against power at all so once the government
you know the people with the nuclear weapons and business the people with the largest bank
accounts are aligned that leaves everybody else like who's defending them yeah and then you said
something last night when we were having dinner that i thought was so interesting i was thinking
about it after we left but you were talking about about how traditionally the rich people were in suits and ties.
Yes.
Right?
Well, your uniform matters.
I mean, that's why we have uniforms.
Right.
That's why the bus driver wears a uniform and your airline pilots have their stupid
outfits and your stewardesses are dressed up like they are because it says a lot about
their role in your society.
And rich people used to spend a lot of money on clothes.
And the whole point of that was to say,'re rich we're in a separate class and that comes with tons of advantages but it also
comes with obligations noblesse oblige was a thing and all of a sudden in the 90s you notice the
richest people in america start dressing you know in like t-shirts and hoodies and like what's the
message of that and the message of that is we're just like you which is another way of saying we have no obligation to anyone but ourselves actually we don't owe you
anything and it comes out of this mindset that they do have and i know them of course well so
i know that they feel this way that we're the we're the richest because we came up through
this credentialing system that we claim as a meritocracy and we won we won all the prizes
because we're superior it's it's something it's so fascinating this is why i don't like chess and why i prefer backgammon because backgammon has
probably 30 or 40 percent of a luck element to it just like life right right just like life like
why didn't i get leukemia and die at five tons of five-year-olds do i don't know but i should be
grateful for that so like i've been relatively
successful in my stupid little category that's not all my doing like show some be magnanimous
about it well this is why i was thinking about that because i think it's such a good point
because there is something kind of counterintuitive to it where you'd be like oh but if they're
dressing like the people then maybe they'd feel more connected to the people but in fact it's
actually the opposite because it is it it reminds me in a way,
this is what I was thinking about literally last night in my hotel.
I was thinking about you making this comment
and it was reminding me of when the lockdowns
first started and there were all the celebrities
would come on and be like, we're all in this together.
And you're like, Ellen DeGeneres, you're in a mansion.
You're not in the same situation as a guy.
There's a guy out there who's got three kids and makes 60K a year.
And he was just deemed non-essential.
And he is like terrified about the future of how he's going to support his family.
And Ellen's sitting here and her message is, we're all in the same boat, man.
You know, like we're all in the same.
I know one of my servants got COVID and couldn't come in today.
So I only had a team of five, you know?
So in a sense, you're like, while the message is we're all in this together,
and that kind of superficially sounds like a nice message,
it's actually the worst message.
A much better message would be to acknowledge that I'm not in the situation that you're in at all.
That for me, it's actually fine to be locked down.
But if you're in the leadership class, you have, and I mean, I've been in it my whole
life, I know.
You have a moral obligation to admit it.
Yes.
Because once you admit it out loud, then you realize there are massive benefits to it,
but there are also massive obligations to it.
They're shirking their duty.
That's right.
That's what they're actually doing.
And that's actually the opposite of being noble that's it's fraudulent
it's it's disgusting yes and it's it's a lie your your whole thing is based on a lot it's
disgusting sam bankman freed of course right oh i just drive like a shitty little toyota it's like
oh actually you're defrauding michelle obama goes to princeton for free yeah and it's been the
ruling class her whole life yeah and she's still lecturing you about how she's a victim of racism Hillary Clinton exact
same thing goes to Wellesley spends her entire life in the ruling class and she's still whining
about how she's discriminated against why are they doing that yeah and did you ever see um
they'll have like pictures of uh um side by side but it'll be like pictures of like uh
Jimmy Carter's housemy carter's house
and obama's house and it totally represents something about the like corroding of our soul
that you're like we would allow people who call themselves public servants which of course is
ridiculous they're not but but still they don't even have to pretend to keep up a facade of that
like exactly to live in this insane like mansion
off what because you were president and you get to cash in on that now you know white neighborhood
you should be required to live in the hood if you're if you're barack obama and you if you're
using that card you use that card you the only reason you got elected was because of your race
you spent your entire eight years inflaming race hate in our country. And then you go to Martha's Vineyard, the whitest zip code in the world.
Not allowed.
You're not allowed to do that.
Well, it also, I mean, it did so much damage, his inflaming racial hatred.
And I'll say after, you know, Barack Obama's campaign in 2008, first of all, it was just
leaving how you feel about the guy aside it was a
an amazing campaign it was unlike anything that had ever been run before genius yes it was totally
brilliant it was um his now of course it wasn't what they presented it as it wasn't like a
grassroots campaign it was he was approved of by the powers that be he didn't he didn't just happen
to as a junior senator get like a primetime speaking slot in 2004
where he gave that speech.
He wasn't even a senator yet.
Was he a state senator still at the time?
That's when I first met Barack Obama.
Yeah, yeah.
Walking down the street, smoking a cigarette in Boston
on my way to dinner at the Palm.
I'll never forget it.
And I met him and Jesse Jackson Jr.
They pulled over to say hi to me.
Really?
I'd never heard his name.
And I covered politics for a living.
Right.
And he gave the keynote at the end of that week that was sunday night he spoke on thursday and yeah he was not a u.s senator that was that was the campaign it was great it was
absolutely so crazy okay so it was clearly kind of orchestrated by some powerful people by the
pritzker family of course but listen his the speeches that he gave and much of the message
first off i actually there's probably a lot of things that I would have agreed with him that he was running on.
I agreed with a lot of things George W. Bush ran on in the year 2000.
Well, I'll tell you what I agreed with.
He turned around and didn't govern like that at all.
Let's sort of like elect the black guy and get past the race stuff.
I loved that.
Well, especially because that was his message.
That was his message.
Let's get past the race stuff.
I love that.
And there was a broader. That was his message. Let's get past the race. I love that. And even,
and there was a broader,
more unifying thing.
I mean,
I remember the,
cause he was such a powerful,
you know,
like public speaker.
I mean,
he never really said anything,
but it would still be beautiful.
You know,
I remember in his acceptance speech at 2008 at the DNC,
we had this whole line where he was like,
he was like,
I love this country.
And so do you.
And so does John McCain, the men and women who have fought for this country have been republicans
and democrats and independents but they fought together and died together not defending a red
america or a blue america the united states of america and then it's like oh what i mean he
didn't really say anything there but you know the but it was beautifully put i'm 100 for that yeah
the message was great and great and look he also was uh very critical of the george w bush administration's
excesses and i'm gonna end the war in iraq i'm gonna reinstitute habeas corpus we're gonna end
torture we're gonna there were a lot of i didn't do any of that um i mean i guess he ended the war
in iraq eventually and then reinvaded the country because the isis fighters he was arming invaded the country. But then I think
essentially what happened, and it was around Obama's reelection campaign, this is where things
really went off the rails in this country, was that he got in there and continued and expanded
all the worst of the Bush policies. And so they almost had nothing to run on. And so they decided
to pivot to a culture war instead and this is
this was a decision and again i don't know exactly what the conspiracy is but this decision was made
from the top down that i think it was a response to obama's failures it was a response to these
movements like the tea party and occupy wall street which we're getting a little bit too close
that's right a little bit too close to the target and all this you know i'm sure you've looked at this before but where there's these
nexus charts and you can chart out like um how many times all the woke terms are used you know
transgenderism all that and it's all like right around 2012 that it's all of a sudden like you
know uh systemic racism goes from being mentioned like this many times throughout history to like
shooting like the new york times and it's a very famous graph and I've used it many times
in trying to explain this, but that's exactly right.
Like fight amongst yourselves.
Yep, that's right.
And I think it was the hangover from the financial crisis.
Yeah, well, that was a huge part of it for sure.
And also that Obama's, you know, like,
so in the year, like from 2007 to 2010,
the median net worth in America shrunk by like 40%. Yeah.
Like people lost like 40% of American wealth was lost.
And, you know, you can imagine, especially now, like having kids, you know, at the time I didn't have kids and I was young.
I was like, whatever, you know, bad economy.
Oh, that sucks.
But you can appreciate now, like, oh oh what that would be like if you just
lost 40 of your net worth and you got little kids like how destabilizing that is and obama's
solution to this right the obama recovery was uh okay it was record high government spending
and record low interest rates this was right this was the solution was this is how we're
going to save the economy we're going to bring interest rates down to zero and so we're going to bring government spending higher than it's ever
been before at that time and so what so you can say on paper there's a little bit of a recovery
here but what really happens in that environment you know it's like all the politically connected
people in washington dc they make more money and the speculators have a field day because now
everybody in wall street's making more money because you have to invest now right because you're losing money if you just save and so this this ultimately is what built then they
throw the culture war in there to like you said fight amongst yourselves and the result of that
was donald trump the result of all of that was the condition for trump zero interest rates that
had a greater i think negative effect on the country than any war we've ever fought for one thing it just asset prices ballooned yeah i mean this is fake everyone knows what happens
over time uh with free money the money becomes worth less and so there's a rush to assets and
now you can't buy a house right that's right and then and then the boom is always followed by the
bust and so you have all of this malinvestment
because the way it works,
and this is where Austrian economics,
which I've heard you disparage.
No, I have never disparaged.
I'm just mad about the results.
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Conditions apply. But it's not a result of Austrian economics or libertarianism.
It's a result of abandoning all of that.
I agree.
But look, the basic thing is that interest rates are a price.
They're a price just like anything else.
It's the price of money.
Of course.
It's the price of borrowing money.
And so just like every other price, there's information given in these prices.
So if steel becomes very, very cheap, that gives information to a businessman that like,
hey, we're producing a lot of steel very easily now.
If you wanted to do a project that requires a lot of steel,
now's the time to do it because we're producing steel.
Now, that works when you have real prices
because, oh, there's a big production of steel.
But if the government just came in and said,
we have price controls and we insist that
the price of steel is very, very cheap, what's going to happen is people are going to start
building projects with steel and then realize we're out of steel pretty soon because it wasn't
a real signal. Exactly. No, I agree.
So what happens when you make interest rates zero for a decade, it's a signal for people to,
say, borrow money when they wouldn't have otherwise borrowed.
Like, maybe you wouldn't borrow if rates were 8% or 9%.
But at zero, this is a good time to borrow this money.
But again, it's a fake signal.
We're borrowing all this money and building things.
I am a libertarian because I got all kinds of advice from, I'm not sophisticated at all with money, but all kinds of advice.
Borrow money, it's free.
And I never did.
Yes.
Not $1.
Yeah.
Well, it's a really bad
idea um i i feel like the amount of debt that people carry is the untold story in the united
states yeah and i don't know why we're like in favor of the credit card companies or people are
getting rich from the it's just bad having a lot of debt is bad i don't know why that's like if you
say that by the way it's considered super radical but like i don't why is that's like, if you say that, by the way, it's considered super radical, but like, I don't, why is that radical?
Well, yeah.
I think about the idea that we have all of these policies designed to get people to gamble their life savings.
Like why would you be encouraged for not carrying debt?
When I made money in not that long ago,
when I was like finally could pay off my,
the first thing I did was pay off my mortgage.
That's the first thing I did.
And my college roommate who's really much smarter than I am has made a ton of money he's like that's crazy you have to pay i
forgot what it was but like you lose the the tax shield and it was like 18 grand i had to pay 18
thousand dollars a year for the privilege of not being in debt right to a bank yeah what yeah and
and that the system is like artificially designed to be that way you know
what i mean that it's like oh these are the tax laws that will encourage people and also wait
you're you're penalizing me for not being in debt it's like that's cruel who wrote these laws look
i think about just think about what the income tax is they penalize you for working well no that's
right i'm to work the punishment is a fee. The more productive you are, the more punishment you get.
So let me ask you this question as an Austrian economist.
Why the disparity between the tax on labor and the tax on capital?
Well, because that's the rules that the government made.
Well, let me say, right, because I think you're totally right about this, right?
That it's like, look, I've heard you talk about this before. So like if the capital gains tax is 15%, but then someone working pays 30%.
So like, what are you saying?
We would rather.
Exactly.
But so here's the next level to that.
This is all I think that you're missing in that because I think you're completely right
in your like your your critique of that.
But OK, so if we were, let's say, to fix that that disparity, there's basically two ways
we could
do that one would be to raise capital gains taxes up to 30 okay so the result of that would be that
i guess we would disincentivize certain types of investment maybe the government let's say it works
out perfectly and these we we are able you know like the the people on wall street don't have an army of tax lawyers and
accountants who can get them out of this stuff as they always end up
doing.
So then DC gets more money.
So then the corrupt,
most powerful government in the world gets a little bit more money.
They will then leverage that to borrow three times as much and just
it will go,
it will go to politically connected cronies right
it'll be however let's say the other option to that is we could lower exactly individual taxes
to 15 and now give every working uh family in this country a huge raise a huge raise that they
would really appreciate so that's all i'm saying you're right about the discrepancy there and it's
totally corrupt but it's totally corrupt,
but it's like, what's the solution to that?
Well, the solution is, look,
if you tied them to it legislatively
and just said, you know, they're going to be the same.
The tax on capital will always be the same
as the tax on labor.
Then the average person, which includes me,
I don't have any investments.
I just work on my salary, right?
So like most people,
the average person would benefit
from the lobbying power of wall street right right so right so they're always gonna be the
same but like all of a sudden i have an army of bank lobbyists and private equity lobbyists
keeping my income taxes low yes look in theory i would love that idea it's just if the the answer
there is to just like you you know, it's unbelievable
to me that particularly like people like, you know, like Bernie Sanders types will say that
they care so much about working people and they want to do whatever they can to help these working
people. And yet the biggest bill for working people is their federal income taxes. And I mean, the IRS, I mean, I know stories from
good friends of mine. They are ruthless. I mean, they go back 20 years and ruin people.
And this isn't just like, it's like people kind of have this idea that there's like
economic issues over here and social issues over here as if they're different, but they're really
not. I mean, you go back 20 years on somebody and say, you know, a guy who's making 30 grand a year and they go back and maybe it's only just like you know a few thousand dollars a year
that he owes but they go back 20 years on you and you owe three grand a year and so now you owe
60 000 oh yeah you know what i mean this is what leads to divorces suicides pistols in their mouth
yeah you know kids growing up without their dad around i mean it's like these things are
interconnected and you see that just over the last few years with the price inflation, how bad it's been. I mean, this ruins people.
So why isn't that a news story? I don't understand if everybody, I mean, and I will say,
because of my age and income, I'm a little cut off, but I try not to be cut off. And people I
talk to, they all complain about grocery store prices, like a lot. And they're shocking,
but I never hear anybody say that.
Yeah. Well, I mean, I certainly talk about it a lot.
I think that there's, it's not, it's not in anybody's interest, I guess.
Like it's not in any partisan interest to really talk about that because both parties
are totally complicit.
Yeah.
And so it's, you know know no matter who you know people because
we live in this weird like two-party system and everybody becomes partisans especially in an
election year and they're all just trying to kind of get their guy over and no one's really you know
i mean there are trump supporters who like to talk about the inflation under obama but i don't really
want to talk about it too much because it all started with the money that was being printed in 2020 that's donald trump was championing the
whole time actually and and and smearing thomas massey for for daring to say hey we should have
a vote on this before we spend more money than we've ever spent when we're broker than we've
ever been and he's and trump of course bragging that it was the the biggest bill you know because
it's so trump because it's the biggest because, you know, because it's so Trump. He goes, it's the biggest.
He goes, a lot of other people had spending bills.
Mine's the biggest spending bill, you know?
And like, look, I'm not trying to, you know,
there are, Trump is like the most entertaining character
and he's hated by all of the right people.
And a lot of his instincts are correct.
And he was also framed for treason
by his own intelligence agencies.
And so there's a lot of Donald Trump that I can sympathize with and relate to his supporters.
But the truth is that it was such a disaster to lock down the economy and to say, we're
just going to print our way out of this was such a disaster.
I agree.
And he totally got rolled by all the people around him and just did not have the wisdom
or the
courage to stand up to them.
And he kept Fauci on that task force through all of 2020.
I mean, he just kept so many people who hated his guts around him.
And it's really, it was a tragedy.
Nikki Haley, Mike Pompeo.
Mike Pence.
Oh yeah, no, I agree.
I mean, all of them.
You know, Mike Pence is a guy, he was in his 60s.
And if he were to go, this is the guy who
he was going to leave us as president of the United
States. Mike Pence.
There's something wrong with him.
Yeah, there's a lot
wrong with him. You can feel it. I really appreciate
you ruining his political career. No, it wasn't
personal. I mean, I feel sorry for Pence. He's
not comfortable with himself
at all. And that's the vibe, the strong, I've known him I mean, I feel sorry for Pence. He's not comfortable with himself at all.
And that's the vibe, the strong.
I've known him for over 25 years.
I've known him since he got to Washington.
And he's got some talent, and I don't think he's evil or anything, but there's something really damaged. And I always felt that he was put in there.
He wouldn't be the first VP to be in this position, but he was put in there by permanent D.C. to keep an eye on Trump.
Yeah, obviously.
Yeah.
But that's always how it works, right? Like like that's the same thing that happened with reagan
and george hw bush being there you put in the guy of course we're gonna have our cia director
nixon and gerald ford i mean this is like this is the oldest story there is so trump is coming to
libertarian convention yeah so let me just ask at the outset you're you're involved in libertarian
politics like actual party politics um would you ever be on the ticket you know so just for people
who don't know it's kind of like inside baseball but so my there was kind of a civil war it's what
inside baseball is too broad it's more like inside pickleball. Yes, yes. That is actually a really good thing.
But in this very irrelevant corner where I have a lot of sway.
So there was basically like a kind of civil war within the Libertarian Party over the last few years.
And it was about a lot of the stuff that you were talking about at the beginning.
Basically, there was like, as you know, because you covered it, there was what was called the Ron Paul Revolution.
And that's what i was i was one of the young people in that ron paul revolution
that totally changed you know the way i look at the world and i became obsessed with all of this
stuff and so there were a bunch of us and a lot of us had hoped that um ron paul was kind of gonna
yes carry the mantle and continue this this ron paul energy and now i'm not saying anything against
ron paul i think he's one of the best senator probably the best senator he was great during
covid grilling fauci and all that stuff but for whatever reason there's there's several it didn't
work out that way and donald trump came in and stole the republican party and it stole i mean
he won it but anyway so when that happened um there were a lot of us who were like kind of
disappointed about ron paul and then the we had ron paul running in the republican party but then a lot of us started
looking to the libertarian party like oh they were the third party candidate and they ran gary
johnson and bill weld we were very disappointed with that campaign uh particularly with bill
weld who's just horrible um sad defeated guy and and also just he was like a raytheon lobbyist who
is like what are you doing over here?
Total fraud.
What's the point if we're going to have a third party and putting that guy up?
And then during 2020, the people who were running the Libertarian Party completely failed and didn't oppose the lockdowns and then started like virtue signaling during the Black Lives Matter riots about how we must be anti-racist.
For real?
Yeah, it was horrible.
So basically then there was this group
called the Mises Caucus that I joined.
I was led by this guy named Michael Heiss
and Angela McArdle, who ultimately is,
she's currently the chair of the party.
And we basically went and took over the whole party.
Good.
In the name of Ron Paulians,
like if there's gonna be a libertarian party,
it's gonna be represented by libertarians. And so anyway, cutting to, so once that happened, it was kind of my group who
took over and they, they wanted me to run for president on the libertarian ticket. And I was
considering it for a while. Ultimately it just wasn't the right time for me. I got two little
kids. I got a lot going on in my career. It's like, it just wasn't the right time for me i got two little kids i got a lot going on in my career it's like it just wasn't the right time for me but so now to what you said angela mccardle pulled this off to her great credit
that she's got donald trump coming and speaking at the libertarian uh national convention uh it
looks like rfk jr when and where is this this is at the end of the month it's uh may may 24th
through 26th i believe in washington in washingtonC. That was a decision made by the old guard.
We would not have had our convention in Washington, D.C.
Do you know where it is in D.C.?
Yeah, it's at some hotel.
I'd have to look it up.
Yeah, it's at some hotel in D.C.
But anyway, I mean, RFK just challenged Donald Trump
to debate him there,
which I don't think is going to happen,
but would be very interesting if it did happen. And so it is at, at least to me, it kind of represents the libertarian
party who is this third party trying to engage in relevance of, of some sort and trying to at least
look, obviously we're not in a position. We're not going to win the white house or even win any
Senate seats or anything like that. But I do think the
libertarian party could effectively be used to put pressure, uh, particularly on the Republicans
to be better and to not run like awful neocons and run better candidates. Um, I certainly prefer
the kind of America first strain of Republicans to the neoconservative strain and and I think right now there is
well I mean there's kind of been a civil war in the right half of America since Donald Trump
came onto the scene but I don't even know if you'd call it a civil war because Donald Trump
just won so dominantly you know it's not like the Republicans were split between Jeb Bush and
Donald Trump or something right no like it was 95 to 5 but particularly and i know
you've talked about this a lot since the the war in israel or i should say the war in gaza or i
don't even know if i should say the war the the attack of gaza whatever you call it i don't know
if you can call it a war when one side doesn't have a military but whatever you call that um
since that you've seen this kind of divide grow uh where i think largely neoconservatism
had been rejected in by the by the voters yes republican voters but when israel came up it's
a little bit different and i don't know exactly well neoconservatism neoconservatism is like
chicken pox like you think you defeat it and then when your defenses are down it comes back as shingles you're like oh crap they're democrats now jesus no it's true
it just lays dormant it's always there and but when it comes back in its second iteration when
it manifests again it is disabling and that's what we're watching like i if there's one thing
i wanted to help do is get rid of that worldview, but it seems stronger
than ever.
Well, I think you have done a lot.
I mean, I really do.
Not really.
I mean, if you can, it's like everybody in the Republican Party is completely on board
with the idea that wars, non-essential wars make America better or something.
That's so nuts.
It's what's so wild to me about it is just after the 20 years of terror
wars that have just been such a complete disaster that America would still be entering these
conflicts that are very clearly wars of choice. I know they can make an argument like they were
making the argument that Putin, if he takes Ukraine, is going to take Poland and then is
going to take, which is nothing he's ever said he there's not one thing putin's ever said that you could point to in fact
when you interviewed him he explicitly said if poland attacks us that's the only scenario he's
got the largest country in the world it's the biggest land mass on planet earth it's incredibly
complex to run it's 20 muslim they have all these sort of semi-autonomous zones throughout the
country he wants more land i don't think he wants more land no look he's always like insane it's been
very and it's not just that he's said it but like almost everyone who was being honest has said it
at the top levels of the american government as well as at nato as well his issue was ukrainian
entry into nato that was always his issue and Of course. And we kept pushing that and kept pushing that.
And that's what got him to react.
And even the head of NATO himself, Strassenberg, whatever, said that Vladimir Putin said that
if you just signed a deal, put it in writing, that Ukraine won't join NATO, I won't invade.
And NATO refused.
And so he invaded.
But is there a single news story even now that doesn't describe reflexively describe almost like it's like a block text in, you know, in the, in the computer program, the
unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, right?
They always have to say that there's never been a more provoked invasion.
Well, I mean, they did it on purpose.
They pushed Russia to invade Ukraine.
Well, let's just say, I mean, like, let's say we had like a fairly pro-American government in Mexico that and Russia wanted to get them to do an economic deal with them.
And then we were trying to convince them not to do that economic deal, but to do an economic deal with us.
And ultimately, we convinced them that they're going to be in an economic partnership with us.
And so then Russia came in and overthrew the democratically elected government and installed a pro-Russian government.
And then that led to a civil war where 15,000 people died.
And like the pro-American side was getting, you know what I mean?
Like, would you go, it was so unprovoked.
Yeah.
And then Russia said, we're going to get Mexico to join our defense alliance and we're going to put missiles in Tijuana.
Right.
Oh, and no, by the way, that had been floated out for years. And in fact, in 2008,
we had formally announced that Russia had formally announced that Mexico would be joining
their military alliance. Then we went, I'm sorry for people out there, you're right. It was a
totally organic uprising made on revolution. Victoria Nuland happened to be in the middle
of handing out sandwiches. Don't let that, know like john mccain and they were going there a lot and like yeah sure it was soros-backed ngos that were funded
but whatever that's a it was totally organic movement you know um and so yeah no it was a
series of provocations very unnecessary ones and not just like not just ones that like libertarian
doves like me or something like that were against, but
George Kennan, the Cold Warrior, the founder of the containment strategy.
What he said, which is a great piece with him and Thomas Friedman in the New York Times,
and I think it was in 1999.
He laid it out right there when we first started the first round of NATO expansion.
And he said, the people advocating this expansion are going to keep advocating it until there's
a Russian response.
And then when there's that response, they'll say, see, this is why we were right to expand NATO.
Obama even made noises that suggested he understood what you just said.
Yes.
Well, he refused to send weapons in to Ukraine.
I mean, he was there when the government, when Yanukovych was overthrown, but he wouldn't send the weapons in.
And then Trump ultimately did.
And I think, you know, I think my, you know, like that was the big scandal about Ukraine
gate, right?
Was that Donald Trump kind of did this, you know, kind of like a very Trumpian kind of
gray area thing where he's like, you know, I'd really like you to investigate the Bidens.
Maybe you don't get these weapons if you don't investigate the bidens now you the reason why that was so ridiculous
to impeach him over was because it was totally legitimate to want to investigate what the bidens
were doing in there by the way but it was very corrupt involvement in ukraine but that being
said what no one ever talked about in the story was that trump caved of course didn't get the
investigation and gave them the weapons and like that never that was the other reason why the impeachment was so ridiculous because there's no
quid pro quo when you don't get anything for anything you know what i mean like you could
argue it was an attempted quid pro quo you know what i mean but he never got anything but he sent
the weapons in and i do think part of this and this was the really you know effective the way
that the intelligence agencies really won was that because a lot of people would look at it like, okay, so the, the Russiagate was an attempted deep state coup.
And essentially it was, I mean, Andrew McCabe admitted on 60 Minutes that they debated at the Justice Department invoking the 25th Amendment.
And then they ultimately settled on a special prosecutor. I mean, they were trying to overthrow the guy.
But so on the surface, you could say, oh, it failed. It failed. But in another sense,
Donald Trump explicitly ran in 2016 on detente with Russia. Let's work with Russia. Let's work
together to kill the terrorists. We all don't like terrorists. Who cares about overthrowing Assad? That's not in our national interest. Who cares? So let's be friends with Russia. Let's work together to kill the terrorists. We all don't like terrorists. Who cares about overthrowing Assad? That's not in our national interest. Who cares? So let's be
friends with Russia. Let's get along with them. And then when you're being called a Russian spy
every day on the news, and then when he went to Helsinki and said, I believe Putin. I don't think
he interfered in the 2016 elections. By the way, there's still
never been a shred of evidence presented that he did. They've got like one company that they claim
had Russian IP addresses because no one can fake an IP address. It's like the most ridiculous
claimant who was once at a party with Putin or something like that. They have nothing.
And so Trump just said, yeah, I agree with him. And they were like, so you don't trust
your intelligence
You know
Everyone was freaking out so much that it got to a point where he couldn't have made a deal with Russia
Because if he had that would have just been proof
Right like imagine in that environment when what Trump Russia collusion was being said all day long if Donald Trump had made some deal
With Russia, you know like see proof. He's a Russian puppet and so Donald Trump
I think went out of his way to prove
what a russian puppet he wasn't it was like here's how much i'm not a russian puppet i'll send weapons
into ukraine well and that happened on a bunch of different issues unfortunately but the problem i
would say at this point is like the desire to go to war with russia has been pretty much the
animating thought in our foreign policy establishment for over 20 years.
So now we actually have a hot war with Russia.
We are conducting a war against Russia using our proxy Ukraine, totally destroyed Ukraine
in the process.
We're losing that war.
So Ukraine's not going to win.
I don't see how Ukraine...
It's impossible.
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So what happens when that becomes really obvious that all we've achieved is destroyed this country and killed a million of its young men. And like, how does the state department and the Atlantic council and the Aspen Institute and
Joe Scarborough and the whole sort of blob, like, how do they respond to that?
I mean, I'm sure. I mean, I think basically it's, it's over and I don't think anyone even,
I mean, this latest round of funding is just, it's an election year and Biden's trying to kick the can to not let this fall right now. You know what I mean? Be,
be totally obvious. Also, it's easier to steal the money when it's out of the country.
Well, that's for sure. That's, that's for sure. I mean, we have no idea where all this money has
been going, but we know Ukraine is a totally trustworthy government. Um, you know, no
corruption there. Um, but I, I think, look look i'm sure they will attempt to spin it in some
way where if zelinski still controls like the western portion of ukraine they'll be like he
didn't lose the whole country and putin would have been in poland if we hadn't fought this
of course it would all be completely ridiculous we could have avoided this war by just saying we're not going to admit Ukraine into NATO
and putting that in writing.
We could have avoided this war.
This is not according to me.
According to the head of NATO, we could have avoided this war by doing that.
And whatever the number is, and who knows, you never know in the fog of war.
I mean, it's not until they really test the excess mortality rate.
No, that's right.
But it's clearly in hundreds of thousands.
I mean, they've got 50-year-olds fighting for him at this point so that tells you something they're
force conscripting men with down syndrome yes it's that means a lot that means all your boys
are dead essentially for sure and uh the ones who couldn't you know manage to flee um and so yeah
it's it's a total disaster it's the like incredibly dark irony of it is that all the people cheering on Ukraine have just,
as John Mearsheimer said in 2014, which aged very well, unfortunately, said, we're leading
Ukraine down the primrose path.
And that's what we did.
You act like you're cheering them on, but you're leaving them to their demise.
And it didn't need to happen.
It's terrible and i'm not absolving putin of responsibility i i he was certainly put backed into a corner but
there had to be another answer other than this you know it's just horrible um but i know at the
end of it it'll be another disaster and the hawks in dc will try to spin it as best they can and
then they'll all get
promoted and have better jobs that seems to be the track record it does feel though that we're
coming to the end of something it's like this was the last effort to exert a certain form of
american power abroad it failed does that make them desperate and crazy i feel like a loss in ukraine increases the chances
we use tactical nukes against russia for example well i mean i hope i'm wrong well the thing is it
decreases the chances that russia uses them so there's that i mean you know there's joe biden
always pretended that the war in ukraine a must win, you know, like that
we couldn't allow Vladimir Putin to win the war.
But that's all just an act.
It doesn't, it's not, I'm just saying, however you feel about it, it's not actually vital
to US survival, whether we, whether Russia controls Ukraine or not.
That's just, that's absurd.
But Vladimir Putin really believed it was a must win.
And that actually is a much more reasonable case that you can't lose a war on your border.
That's a proxy war to, you know, even in the Cold War, we never had, you know, we fought
in Vietnam, but that's not on Russia's border.
You know what I mean?
Like, this is a whole different game.
And so the to me, the real fear from the very beginning was not that Vladimir Putin might win. The real fear was that, well, what if the West wins? Like what if Vladimir Putin is humiliated right on his border and feels that his death is imminent? Because that's the time when nukes might fly. you know it's quite possibly the better outcome i mean no nuclear war is always the better outcome
um i do think and i i gotta say i think you're a huge part of this i i think that if you look
at like say 2002 when the war drums were beating for iraq there was just nothing like what we have
today i mean like the the biggest shows in cable news the big they were all for it they were all I was
for it yes well I was for it until I went to Iraq in 20 in 2003 I immediately apologized I would say
in my defense yeah what what is it that what about the trip made you change your mind oh I was so
shocked by the whole thing so the invasion was in March of 03 and i mean i was hosting a chat show a debate show
crossfire and actually it's a true story i was at lunch with my father i had lunch with my dad
every week at the same table in this place and when this men's club in washington and we were
sitting at the table i'll never this, in the fall of 2003.
And he goes, when are you going to Iraq?
And I was like, I don't know.
I don't think, I mean, I don't plan to go to Iraq.
I've got a daily show I have to host.
He goes, oh, so you're a journalist and there's a war, but you're not going to cover the war?
And I was like, no, I've got, got you know like four kids and a daily job he's like
oh so but you just kind of kind of sit this one out and he like shamed me into it it's true story
he was like so unimpressed that i wasn't going to see it and um i was like okay you're right
i should go so i went i took leave of my show and went for a couple of weeks with some friends who were contractors, defense contractors of all military guysgency shot down a DHL plane coming into Biop or, you know, the Baghdad airport.
And so we couldn't fly in.
I was like, so we've occupied the country now.
I went in December, early December.
So that was, I don't know, nine months.
And we had at least unequivocal victory over Saddam, right?
He was hiding.
In fact, he was captured in Tikrit the day I got there.
So we had just won and we can't control the airport.
Right.
So then we drive in from Kuwait, immediately got like, it was out of control.
People were shooting.
It was chaos.
It was full chaos.
And then we stayed outside the green zone for, in just this house house that they had rented and one night i'm
sitting on the roof on a sat phone trying to talk to my wife back in washington taking our dog to
the vet and someone starts shooting at me and then all these people start shooting at our house
there's a gun battle at the house like what um do you have a gun when you're over there oh absolutely
i almost got fired for it actually amazingly um you were you were told to have a gun when you're over there? Oh, absolutely. I almost got fired for it. Actually, amazingly, you were told to carry a gun.
It was so out of control when I was there that journalists and NGO workers, or I don't know, certainly me, you had to go get a certification from the State Department.
I still have my badge.
It's hanging in my office right there.
You qualified with this.
It was an AK-47. Well, I actually had an AK-47 already,
not fully automatic, but just on my range,
so I knew how to operate it.
But yeah, you're required to carry it.
That's how out of control it was.
And then a buddy of mine got killed there,
a journalist was killed there,
a guy called Mike Kelly was a really great guy.
And the bottom line was, we're not good at colonialism
because we don't have the self-confidence.
We're not sort of bringing Christianity and civilization.
There's no like clearly defined goal for this.
And we're bad at it.
And the armed forces is not designed to do that.
And the effect was super obvious.
It was chaos.
And the one thing I cannot deal with and I hate,
and I think all people hate instinctively is chaos. People can handle repression. They live under repression
regimes. All through history they have, they can't handle chaos. And we brought chaos to Iraq.
And I just thought this is the opposite of what a great power should be doing. This is disgusting.
And I saw really, really clearly that it would never get better. And I'll just add one more
thing to this, which I've never forgotten.
We went into the green zone one night and had dinner with some generals.
I did.
And I'd always sort of liked that my dad was in the military.
I sort of respected the military.
I didn't realize how corrupt and disgusting and feminized the officer class was and politicized.
Just repulsive people actually
at the flag officer level so we're sitting at dinner and this general is telling me about i
saw something really touching today i saw we had this female officer um and she was killed her legs
were blown off by an ied and her husband was there and uh he you know they've got three kids back in
virginia but he held her hand
as she died of this ultimate sacrifice for america and i was like what you're like celebrating this
a girl got killed a mother i thought we fought wars to protect mothers and children first of all
if you're sending girls to fight your wars you. Yeah. Because you're violating the most basic agreement there is,
which is the man protects.
And in exchange for that,
the willingness to sacrifice his life,
he gets to be revered as a man.
It's at the head of the table
and all the benefits of being a man.
And there are many.
But if you're sending-
And your woman will bear your children for you.
A hundred percent.
Yeah.
If you're sending women to protect you,
if there's a home invasion at your house
at three in the morning, you're like, honey honey i dealt with the last one go go defend us i hope
that she leaves you and she will by the way yes so if you're sending women to defend you it's not
a civilization worth defending that's how i feel you imagine i mean going with the mother of your
children and going to war with a mother gets her legs blown off and you think that's a good thing
and i lost control of the table with this guy and legs blown off and you think that's a good thing and i lost
control of the table with this guy and said almost exactly what i think it's disgusting
and it's not because i i don't think women should be defending our country not because i don't love
women it's because i do love women they're above that we should we should be defending our women
yeah i don't know how supporting women getting their legs exactly become the pro-woman position
exactly and this guy accused me of being like a
woman hater so here i've got a wife and three daughters who i revere who i would die for
without thinking and i'm like i i hated him i don't think i've ever hated a man more than i
hated this general i wish i remember his name um and the pio the fairly well-known sort of spokesman
for the provisional authority, Dan
Senor, was sitting at the table.
He was very offended by my behavior.
But I was outraged.
And that rage has sort of never, it's just exploded on you.
Sorry.
But it's never left me.
And I came-
No, I really enjoyed it.
It's an amazing story.
And I was like, and I did an interview with the New York Times.
I said, I cannot believe I supported something like this.
It's totally evil what we're doing.
And I've never moved from that position position i lost all these friends for saying
that whatever i'm not i don't want to talk about myself continue to talk about myself but yeah
you asked in that well i because i've just i've heard you say several times that your trip over
there you know like turned you against the war but i would never like heard you really like say
what specifically it was celebrating the death of a mother yeah and then getting mad at me because
i don't i'm not going to celebrate the death of a mother? Yeah. And then getting mad at me because I'm not going to celebrate the death of a mother.
What about her children and her husband?
This is disgusting.
And it's so dark and horrible that we dress it up with ideology to make it palatable.
Right.
Well, the thing that's almost more dark and horrible than just that is when you add on the fact that this was
a small group of people who wanted this war going back into the 90s and that they used 9-11
as the excuse to you know what i mean be like oh yeah now we can go get our bonus war oh look at
this right now we've got a blank check from the american people which they did
that you tell us you say the word terrorist and point and we will support you bombing the crap
and i knew it was bullshit even at the time and i i went over to the white house for something to
see bush or cheney um or somebody i think i was seeing cheney, whatever. I was on the White House grounds. He's a really warm guy. Great guy.
And so I was there and it was like maybe the fall of 2002.
And they'd been talking about Sin Veda Rock stuff, but I didn't take it seriously because I thought it was so crazy.
It was like a non sequitur.
It was like, it was just not connected in any sense to 9-11 obviously and guys like a lot you
know paid liars like steve hayes or someone write these books like al-qaeda did it and i work with
steve hayes and i was so embarrassed by that it's like he's dumb so he didn't know but i just felt
i was like this whole thing was like so nuts so i never thought we were going to invade iraq i
never thought that and i show up and i whatever, like having a cigarette on the lawn outside
where all the sticks are,
all the standup guys,
the TV cameras are.
And I run into Mike Allen.
He's an old friend of mine,
former Washington Post reporter,
now runs Axios and really nice person
and has this like clarity of vision
that I don't have
because he doesn't cut in the weeds on shit.
And I said,
we're not really going to invade Iraq.
He goes, of course we are.
And I said, how do you know that? He goes he goes well because it's all the machinery's moving in that
direction like if it's gonna happen i was like that can't really happen he goes oh no that's
gonna happen he wasn't endorsing it yeah he could just see that like if everyone starts talking
about something like they will convince themselves that it's true and it will happen like we should
remember that yeah don't overthink things if something really obvious is happening it's true and it will happen like we should remember that yeah don't overthink things if
something really obvious is happening it's happening yeah sometimes sometimes yeah sometimes
it's almost too hard to accept intellectuals people like you and to some extent me have a
lot of trouble seeing that because we're like well actually no no the obvious is real yeah and it's
almost like if you just if you like you know remove
yourself like if you transcend the moment it's like yeah it's so obvious exactly like of course
this is happening and there's you know what's unbelievable to me that really like what what
what's woken me up about the warfare state is you know like how much it's all based on lies and that you see
that like there's only like a few and i you call me an intellectual i'm really not an intellectual
you know like i'm a i'm a comedian who likes to read no no but you think about why things happen
sure sure but i just mean that i'm not an expert in any of this stuff but you know i just know
enough to know that the supposed experts are completely full of shit like all all i have to
know is these four like narrative shattering things and so like like just a few of them are
like look you could read and anyone can go read this you'll find it's called a clean break a new
strategy for securing the realm it was a letter written by uh richard pearl and david worms are
and a few other oh i remember this became. Oh, I remember this. Became very powerful in the George W. Bush administration.
I knew all those guys, yeah.
So this was written in 1996,
and it was not written to Bill Clinton.
It was not written to Bob Dole,
who was running for president that year.
It was written to Benjamin Netanyahu,
who had just become the prime minister of Israel.
And the clean break, the strategy was a break
from this whole peace process nonsense
that Yitzhak Rabin and them had agreed to.
And basically it was like, well, look, it was the beginning laying down of what the Netanyahu doctrine was ultimately to be, which has culminated in a wild success, as you know.
And so basically the idea was like, well, look, forget all of this, like this peace process where you focus on land exchanges and whose land belongs
to who that's all kind of lame and so what really you should do is reach out to the broader arab
world kind of make arrangements with them so you don't have to go through this this peace process
and that starts with overthrowing saddam hussein and like that's our first step here and then
there's several other steps but it's outlined why we want saddam hussein overthrown and so then this was for israel's interests we wanted this this war in 1996
now by the way there's other things i'm not like saying like israel is 100 pulling the strings of
the american government i think a big part of the reason why the war ended up happening was also
because george w bush had a personal beef against saddam hussein who tried to have his father uh killed but these neo-conservatives then who get into as soon as
9-11 and in the project for a new american century when they talked about how they wanted to fight
wars on multiple fronts they explicitly said they probably wouldn't be able to do that unless there
was like a new another pearl harbor type event where there'd be enough popular support to now the 9-11
truthers the alex jones guys for a while they would hang on that as evidence that you know
whatever cheney did 9-11 or something like that or something elements within our government i think
they're overplaying their hand there i don't actually think that but it certainly is evidence
that they recognize what it was once it happened what do you think that now i should say what you already know which is we don't really know
that much about 9-11 because so many documents remain classified yeah 23 years later and why
would that be there's no excuse for that they should every one of them should be released
this afternoon they won't be so we can only speculate to some extent but like what
should we be suspicious of the official
explanation for 9-11 i think you should always be suspicious of of any government explanation
for anything i mean like that that should always be your starting point like i'm not saying you
should jump to a conclusion about what happened but and i think this is by the way this is my
worldview that has served me very well uh over last, like I, I kind of like,
I basically, my podcast kind of took off and a big part of, well, a big part of that is like
Joe Rogan and stuff like that. But I've just kind of been consistently right on the biggest issues.
I have a good track record now. Like I was in real time, like calling out how obviously Trump
was not a Russian agent. And in real time, I was saying the Hunter Biden laptop was real. And in
real time, I was against lockdowns from the very real. In real time, I was against lockdowns
from the very beginning.
And it's all because I just,
I operate from a worldview of recognizing the government
as essentially a criminal gang.
That they're basically the mafia who won,
and now they just rule.
You know what I mean?
Having taken out the real
and much less benign actual mafia.
And that's part of the reason why they don't like the mafia, because you're a competing gang.
You're not allowed to be the gang here.
We're the gang.
And so when you look at things through that frame, yes, they're all a bunch of liars, and they're power brokers.
And so, yeah, I don't trust anything they say.
I try to just go off what I know.
So we don't know exactly what happened on 9-11. We do know at this point that there was
pretty high level Saudi involvement and that the Saudis have, that the government knew that
and had no interest in punishing those people. And in fact, still wanted to continue doing
business with them. We do know that we were comfortable enough fighting on the same side
as Al-Qaeda in Libya, in Syria and in Yemen. So it didn't seem like
fighting Al Qaeda wasn't really the motivating force. And like I said, we know that this group
of neocons who hijacked the federal government wanted these wars and after 9-11 used that
opportunity to get them, used that opportunity. But anyway, so the point I was making about not
being an expert, but being able to shatter this narrative, it's like-
Wait, so do you, just to be clear though, do you think it's possible
that people within the US government were aware this was going to happen before?
Sure, absolutely. That's possible. Yeah. I mean, I wouldn't put that past them. It's kind of,
listen, these are people who are, and I think this is one of the things that people have been
waking up to a lot more recently, and this has led to some wild conspiracies, some of which are not true,
some of which might be true. But people have been waking up more and more to recognizing like,
who are these people? You know what I mean? Like these people who have like real power in our
government, like who are these people? I mean know you take someone like hillary clinton um so it's like okay so your husband is a rapist i mean he's been
accused of rape by multiple women clearly a sexual predator you know i mean a man who even just the
stuff we know confirmed this was a man who when he was a married president, was like fucking a 20-year-old intern in the White House.
Like a sexual predator.
You know what I mean?
And okay, your best friend, her husband also is a sexual predator who's sending naked pictures to underage girls.
Like, hey, that's weird.
It is weird.
How many people do you know who are married to a sexual predator whose best friend's also married to a sexual predator?
Like, you know, like, I'm not even going.
Like, what is that?
No.
I'm not drawing any bigger conclusion.
No, it's totally fair.
Who are these people?
And these are people who are, like, you know, Bohemian Grove is real.
They're doing really weird stuff there.
Jeffrey Epstein was real. There was a like pedophile ring that a lot of the most powerful
people were connected to at least knew about and didn't feel like blowing the whistle on it.
These are people who are comfortable making decisions where babies will die, you know,
like mass slaughter will happen and they can sleep at night. And like, I'm not saying like
a situation where either our babies are going to die or their babies are going to night. And like, I'm not saying like a situation where either our babies
are going to die or their babies are going to die. And there's a horrible decision, but I have
to make this a decision where like, no, we're choosing this to happen. And they're kind of
okay with that. And you kind of wake up to like, so when you say like, is it possible that they'd
kill Americans or be complicit in that? Like, yeah, of course, of course that's possible.
I don't have enough evidence to like prove that that's the case, but I can prove that they wanted these wars. And then when the
opportunity to get them came, they lied through their fucking teeth in order to sell the wars.
Look, General Wesley Clark, he said, as I'm sure you've seen his Democracy Now interview,
where he said that he saw the plans in late 2001, that it wasn't just that we were going into Iraq, but that we were also going to have regime change in Syria and several other countries.
But then when they go to start the regime change in Syria, 2013 or whatever, where they started in
2012, but then they go, oh, we have to overthrow Assad because he's killing all of his own people.
It's like, no, no, no, no, no. You wanted to overthrow Assad over a decade ago.
Don't give me this bullshit that this is some new plan now.
So I do know that they will lie through their teeth to the American people.
Like this I know for certain, that they will lie through their teeth to the American people
to get enough public support for mass slaughter campaigns because they want those campaigns
for completely different reasons.
And again, like I said before, this
isn't speculation. They wrote this in their own words. One of the reasons they wanted to remake
the Middle East in this way is because they thought it was in Israel's interest. And that to
me is like just totally unacceptable as an American that you're, first off, you're lying
to the people of this country and you're doing something with a
foreign country's interest in mind
that's just like so appalling
that I think people should be like
publicly hung for it. After a trial.
After a fair trial.
I mean, it's not America first,
I would say that. It's kind of hard
to reconcile.
To square that circle, yes.
It's one of the saddest things about this country.
The country's getting sicker.
Despite all of our wealth and technology,
Americans aren't doing well overall.
Obesity, heart disease, autoimmune conditions,
all kinds of horrible chronic illnesses,
weird cancers are all on the rise.
Probably a lot of reasons for this,
but one of them definitely is
Americans don't eat very well anymore. They don't eat real food. Instead, they eat industrial substitutes,
and it's not good. It's time for something new, and that's where masa chips come in.
Masas decide to revive real food by creating snacks how they used to be made, how they're
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Masa chips are delicious.
They taste how a tortilla chip is supposed to taste. But the thing is, you can hit them really, really hard, and I have, and not feel bloated or sluggish after. You feel like you've done something decent for your body. You don't feel like you got a head injury or you
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What's interesting is that so many people who talk about America first or whatever,
they're fully on board with this. They attack anyone who's not. I had a thoroughly bizarre
experience the other day, and maybe you can shed light of what it means because I don't fully understand it.
But I was doing Rogan's podcast at your urging.
So thank you for that.
I had a great time.
I loved the podcast.
Yeah, it was super, super fun.
But it was very long.
It was like three hours long.
And I can't stop talking.
So I'm like, another thing.
And I'm going out of it.
Whatever.
And at one point, I just blurted out for like 15 seconds
something I've thought about recently,
which is the use of the nuclear bombs,
the only time they have been used,
in August of 1945 against Hiroshima and then Nagasaki.
Complex topic.
A lot of it's not publicly well-known, okay?
But just the bottom line fact that we dropped,
particularly the bomb on
nagasaki which was the christian capital of japan by the way that bomb was dropped on a church and
killed you know three quarters of the christians in the city um which bothers me as a christian
but leaving even that aside it killed civilians it wasn't dropped on a military base it was killed
killed civilians and like i get why people did it or maybe I don't get it, but I think 80 years later,
we can say not something to brag about
incinerating civilians.
I don't care what the context is.
That's evil.
That's all, basically all I said.
Holy shit, did I get attacked from the right?
And I thought,
and I don't even follow the attacks of me ever,
but I kept getting texts from people.
I can't believe you said that
or people are mad at you for saying that.
And I thought of all the dumb, cruel, untrue things
I have said over 30 years of just talking in public,
a lot of which I regret,
and I hope I've apologized for every bad thing I've said,
but I've said a lot of really things
that are impossible to defend.
That's what they attack me on?
Yeah.
What is that?
Well, and just the fact, fact like even as you're saying
like again if you want to attack you on something like hey you supported the war in iraq oh shit
like there's a thing like i really got this wrong and it was how is what a like twisted society i
defended mit romney when he ran yeah i mean but guys all of the people who got all of these wars
wrong don't receive as much outrage as you for saying after the war was won and by the way like
if you know anything about i'm aware five star general dwight eisenhower was against the nuclear
he said it was unnecessary they were ready to negotiate a surrender we didn't need to do this
inside but also there's just no but i didn't even get into the details of the of that specific thing
on its face then exactly i was just the principle of using nuclear
weapons against a civilian population you could construct in your mind a scenario where you could
justify it i guess but it's still sort of in the cold light of day hard to defend incinerating
civilians by the way with incendiary bombs too or conventional bombs as in dresden or it's just bad
why would that make people on the right so mad?
What is that?
So this is my kind of theory on it,
is that if you'll kind of notice,
World War II,
which is a long time ago at this point,
generates this enormous,
you know, you said the thing,
I love when you said that,
about how you could tell there's an infection
because you touch it and people recoil.
Yes. You could tell something's infected there right yes and i could sit here
all day long and talk about how we shouldn't have fought world war one and which we shouldn't have
fought yeah that's for sure that's for sure this will generate no controversy i could say this all
day long and go through how woodrow wilson was completely wrong to get us involved in yes and
this was bullshit yes yeah nobody cares this will, I will not hear anything on Twitter tomorrow about saying this.
I could talk about how Vietnam was a complete disaster or also lied into
that war and how many people died in it.
Korea,
Iraq,
all the world war two is the one that is.
But what's so weird about that is clearly the most important.
And we talked about this last night.
The most important thing in your life is your marriage and your children.
Yes.
So if I said to you, Dave smith i think you have a shitty marriage
you would be like no i don't actually i have a nice marriage that wouldn't like you wouldn't
be mad about that you'd be like i don't think you really know i because you're not hiding anything
right so like well so here's the right well here's what it is right and like i want to be very clear just when i say
this i'm if you're like trying to read between the lines here i'm not saying that the holocaust
didn't happen or something like that it did happen and well yeah yes those people are dead
my family was involved in it was one of the worst things that's ever happened i agree but look world
war ii is the origin story of the American empire.
That's when we really became the world empire.
And it's the justification for the entire empire.
It's why every single neocon, every single hawk goes back to World War II anytime there's
a war, because that's what's used to justify every other war.
We stopped Hitler, okay?
We'd all be speaking German if it wasn't for the american military so
how dare you question the next thing that's why uh stamm hussein was hitler milosevic was hitler
putin's hitler they're all hitler i can't tell you how many people i've heard uh and i've debated
some of these people who are defending israel's uh attack on gaza by going well uh we killed a
lot of civilians in world war II. So just like that,
as if Hamas are the Nazis. It's anything comparable. But the thing is that, so when you
talk about World War II, you're only allowed to have the official narrative on it. And here it is,
we all know what it is, right? Who are you, Neville Chamberlain? You mean you don't want
to go to war? You want to appease? That's the only lesson of history that you're allowed to learn is that appeasement doesn't work. Presumably we should
have started the war earlier, I guess, is the story. But by the way, you can never learn the
lesson of history that sometimes like preemptive wars don't work. Sometimes, you know, like
ruthless power doesn't work. Maybe sometimes appeasement would be better than that. You know,
it's like there's only one, you know, and so that's the lesson, by the way it's same thing with putin everybody who if you didn't support the war i know
you got called this i watched you get called this um you were never chamberlain for not wanting to
back ukraine immediately in the war right it's the only lesson in history now you can't look at world
war ii and say hey maybe danzig was the lesson maybe maybe war guarantees were the lesson i'm
not even saying they are maybe not but objectively, if we want to be honest about World War II, World War II is
the worst thing that ever happened in the history of the world.
Yes, by definition.
It's the worst thing that ever happened.
More people killed.
The Holocaust happened in the middle of it.
Tens of millions of people died in European conflict.
Brutal conflict on all sides.
Destroyed the greatest continent.
Yes.
Now, right, exactly. conflict brutal conflict on all sides destroyed the greatest continent yes now the right exactly
now um okay if you want you know they say winners of wars right the history and man did the nazis
and imperial japan make it really easy because they were so evil they were like they were like
caricatures of exactly you know and they really Now, it's a little more complicated than that because Stalin's army wasn't like high-fiving
everybody on the way in to Germany.
They raped every woman in Germany.
Right.
I mean, it's like there's a lot of, but any sane person, if you look back at World War II
and you recognize the worst thing that ever happened, you would try to say,
how could we have avoided this?
Exactly.
Like, what could we have done to not make this happen?
The lesson should be like, oh my God, we imposed Versailles on the Germans and insisted on
humiliating them internationally and look at the backlash of this.
And then, you know, whatever, there's all this stuff.
A lot of it comes down to entering World War I and World War II was really an extension
of that.
That's right.
But it's like the only lesson you're allowed to take away is this.
But, you know, I really liked the way you put it on Rogan. And it was just kind of a quick aside.
But look, it's just so evil on its face that I know human beings are amazing at doing mental
gymnastics to justify anything.
I've been doing a lot of debates on the topic of Israel.
And I've been watching this firsthand.
You know, it's like you could watch videos every day on Twitter of babies, you know,
like suffocating to death under rubble.
And someone will justify that.
Someone will say, well, actually we need to do this because whatever, all of Hamas must
be destroyed.
Why exactly?
Why is it absolutely necessary?
You're telling me Israel, the fortress of the world, can't just not drop the ball again?
You know what I mean?
There's not some other answer other than this.
And of course, America must fund it for reasons.
But it's like, no, actually, that is just evil.
And the onus is on you to exhaust
every single other option before doing that.
But it's just interesting.
It's like, I've done a lot of evil things in my life
and I really regret it.
I think all of us are capable of evil.
I've never committed genocide or anything,
but I mean, I've been pointlessly cruel or deceptive and you know
and i'm ashamed of it so i'm not judging even harry truman for this but it's like why can't
why is that so offensive and the other question i have and maybe you've got insight into this
i don't know that much i've read a lot about World War II. I'm not an expert.
But like this worship of Churchill, I think is very odd.
There's a lot about Churchill I think that was impressive.
Erudite guy, fluid writer, had a kind of style that I like, used tobacco, which I love.
I mean, there's a lot about Churchill, right?
That's in the pro comment.
That is cool for sure.
But here are the facts like he sold his country on a war using the idea that we must defend the territorial integrity of poland there are other reasons that
was the main reason right poland okay maybe that's a reason then four years later, he hands Poland to the Soviets.
After a bloodbath.
Yes.
This country that we went to war on behalf of, I'm handing it to a worse master, a more totalitarian master, or at least as bad.
Yeah.
I mean, the only other one who, or one of the only other two who rival.
Right.
Exactly.
That's right.
Exactly.
I guess you could say if Hitler had won the war, could he have then killed more people than i guess we'll never know but yeah still up there okay so that's a huge problem
that's a huge problem and kobe exactly debate who but clearly you don't care about poland if you
just handed it to stalin or clearly it didn't work you know or something there's like there's
a massive disconnect so that's the first fact the second fact is he was rejected by his own voters right after the war.
So they actually weren't so impressed by his leadership.
And the third fact is that war destroyed Britain.
And that country is a depressing husk right now.
I go there a lot.
Unfortunately, I don't want to go there.
It's the most depressing place I can imagine.
It's totally defeated in some deep spiritual sense and um it's embarrassing to
go there so you destroy your country on behalf of poland and then you hand it to stalin like
i don't those are the bottom line facts about churchill there are a lot of other things to
say about him but those are the salient points how could anybody think that's good well you know
in uh in papu seriously like what is that? Yeah, no, 100%.
You know, Pat Buchanan's book,
Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
The Unnecessary War is in quotes
because that's not Pat Buchanan saying it.
It's a Churchill quote.
That Churchill, after the war,
said it was the most avoidable, unnecessary war afterward.
He took Britain from being the most powerful nation
in the world to being totally defeated.
They lost that war as much as anybody else did. But it now yeah it's disgusting by the way there's so
many there's so many like ripple effects of this too because they also you know the whole situation
with israel palestine this is also a result of the british empire of course right and being driven
out and so there's so much uh to this but why defend it that's the way look i'm not even judging
churchill i may have made similar decisions i right i've made so many bad decisions in my life so much to this. But why defend it? That's the way, look, I'm not even judging Churchill. I may
have made similar decisions. I've made so many bad decisions in my life. I'm not even judging.
I'm just saying 80 years later, when we can see clearly the aftermath, how could you possibly
defend that? And why would you want to? And also, I just, you know, like there's a reason,
I mean, there's lots of reasons why America was so successful as a country, but part of the reason
really was the brilliance of our founding fathers and the system that they created.
I mean, that's a huge part of it.
And there's like a...
It's like when they...
George Washington's farewell address where he warns about entangling alliances.
Yes.
And there was something really profound that they saw there.
And this idea, and this is a real problem with like...
It's like, why would we even want Ukraine and NATO?
Why do we want to make war guarantees for countries that we have neither the resources nor the political will to actually defend in the case of a war?
Nicely put.
Look, I mean, like, first off, we're broke.
We're $34 trillion in debt.
We can't afford our own wars, let alone everybody else's.
We're literally, it's so so cartoonish we're borrowing money to think you know it's like if you were like
if i was given my sister money and my my cousin's money and all of them but i'm putting it on a
credit card you know what i mean like i'm just i don't have the money but i'm i'm such a great guy
i'm helping my whole family it's like no you're not in a position they're not even our family
right they're not even right they're not even a family i'm just helping some random guy literally some junkie you met at
safeway yes that's a better analogy that is a better analogy for ukraine than my sister to be
honest yes um and so like it's just totally absurd but then also at the same time like look war's
horrible there's always some type of conflict going on in the world and it's awful but like
are the question is like would you be willing or would you be willing to send your kids to go fight and die over between you
know to determine whether you know the donbass region is ruled by kiev or moscow like was is that
important enough to you because to me it's a very easy answer which is no i would not be but would
it be worth killing a million ukrainians yeah right right yes but i'll
put a flag in my bio and support my politicians printing money to to send over them or i should
say printing money to then buy from weapons companies weapons to then send over to them a
mix of weapons and cash or whatever but yeah i mean like so to me would you mind though not
referring to them as weapons companies but but defense manufacturers? I'm sorry.
Yes, that's right.
The Defense Department, the Defense Manufacturing, the Intelligence Community.
That's my favorite one.
The community.
They're all just like gardening with each other and stuff, you know?
So you described yourself as a comic who likes to read.
Yeah.
Which I love.
Let me ask you about comedy.
So I went and had dinner with rogan last
month and was not my world i had no idea that austin texas had become like the world capital
of comedy yeah what he made it the world capital so he used you described him as the johnny the
money modern johnny carson 100 so how like how does it work, the system now?
It's like, well, I mean, Rogan,
so he was doing the podcast in LA for many years. That's when I first met him.
He was living out in LA and he left,
I think during the lockdown slash riots,
you know, when California, as you know very well,
has fallen apart.
It's one of the great tragedies in America.
It really is.
Yeah, it's awful.
And so he decided to take it down to Austin
where they had kind of like opened up
and it was flourishing.
And Austin is, it's like,
it's one of the last like great liberal cities
in this country, you know, which is,
and like I know a lot of people on the right
who kind of have this attitude of like,
well, screw them.
They voted in these policies and all that.
But I just think that is wrong.
That is the wrong attitude to have. You need liberal cities and to have a healthy country. You kind of need
that dynamic. As much as you need beautiful country, you know what I mean? Well, liberal
cities are all that we have. Well, of course, right. But functioning liberal cities. That's
what I mean. Yes. Yeah. You need them to not be hell holes, which many of them have turned into.
But so Rogan, it just started because there was something about,
you know, just like the stars aligning,
you know, in a very similar way to,
I heard you talk about,
I think you were talking to me about how,
look, there's something to the fact that say,
you get fired from Fox News
and it happens to be at this point
where Elon Musk bought Twitter
and turned it into X.
Yeah, it was pretty amazing.
And everyone's there and you're protected there.
They're not gonna ban you. And you. And when Bill O'Reilly
got fired from Fox News, there was nothing like that there. It was like, no, you go to a relevant
set. Rogan happened to kind of like come up as this internet world was exploding. And he's just
such an interesting guy, such a genuine guy that his podcast just took off. And he became kind of
like in this situation where anybody who kind of comes on, or if you come on and you do well,
it's just like the biggest opportunity. And he's such a genuinely generous person
that I think he loves that. I think that's his favorite thing of all of it. Out of owning the comedy club, the podcast,
like everything he does, I see it in him.
What he really loves, what really makes him happy
is that he gets to kind of bring all of his guys with him.
And I know a lot of friends who Joe has changed their lives.
It's the Johnny Carson thing.
I remember Jerry Se seinfeld hearing him
i don't know him but hearing him describe doing carson oh yeah and he said it was uh he said it
was an experience like having kids where you go in one person and come out another person you know
what i mean which is really is the experience particularly that first kid because you literally
like it's like you and your wife go to a hospital as a couple and then
you leave that hospital as like wild we're mommy and daddy now it's a really weird feeling like
you go in and focused on your wife and you come out obsessed with her the baby yeah yeah and then
your wife's like hobbling in the background and you're like yeah i'm just kidding kind of but
anyway but uh it's but it's this amazing you know it's like um you know
it's like you're on drugs basically like you're high when you first come out with a new baby you
kind of can't believe it and you also you don't know what you're doing with the first one you
know and you but you figure it out but anyway he said carson was like that like you go into nobody
and then you come out and you're a somebody and it's kind of like that with rogan like it's just
and and it's there's all these
similar dynamics like he'll kind of go you know like he'll go like two hours and 15 minutes with
some people and then he'll go like three and a half hours sometimes if he really likes the
conversation and you never know as you know when you're in there you have no idea how long you
actually know or whatever but it's um and that like my experience with him was he heard me
on uh a mutual friend of ours ari shafir's
podcast who i love also hilarious that guy's telling it he's so funny he's like and also
just a great person and an insane person but one of the best people i've ever known um and so i was
on his podcast and rogan heard it and he goes i think this guy's awesome i want to have him on
and it was just like that like he loved what i was saying so he's like oh i want to make this guy like successful and it's just like amazing and what happened to your life well i
started making money so that was that was pretty so it was that it was kind of that simple it was
i mean it was like it wasn't exactly just that but immediately the like i was already doing my
podcast and then immediately as soon as the first one with Rogan was out, my numbers shot up.
All of a sudden, I had a big audience.
I went from having a tiny little audience to having a big audience.
And then I've done it a lot of times.
Every time you do it, your numbers shoot up, your numbers shoot up.
And so that's just unbelievable.
And one of the things about Rogan is, and I got to say, I don't really mean this. I think you have this quality too. And I kind of knew this about rogan is um and i i gotta say i don't really mean this i think you have this
quality too and i kind of knew this about you like i've i've watched you for many years at this point
i've watched you i mean a little bit when you were on crossfire but i watched your show your show on
msnbc a lot and then i always watched you're the only you're the only one the msnbc one that might
be true that's not true for fox that's not true at all for fox but you might be right about msnbc
it was me i was i had msnbNBC on all day long for whatever reason.
Kind of just to like piss me off for most of the time.
But also, getting off on a tangent, MSNBC was a very different thing back then.
It was so different.
That is so night and day today.
I mean, you just can't even, it was so much smarter and more thoughtful.
There was still a lot of propaganda to it.
There was still a lot of bullshit.
I think you've gotten better over the years since then.
Yeah, for sure.
But as a network, they got so much worse.
I mean, like, Morning Joe used to be like,
like you and Pat Buchanan.
Oh, yeah.
And Rachel Maddow.
Oh, yeah.
And Dylan Radigan even.
Totally.
Who was kind of thoughtful and interesting.
I kind of liked Dylan Radigan, yeah.
Well, had something to say
sometimes that you'd be like okay that's kind of and i mean it's become like every single host
has the same opinions as the last hour precisely there's not one area now occasionally there'll be
the guy like um what's his name i'm blanking on his name who just got canned because he was pro
palestinian oh exactly right so occasionally you'll have one guy who has a different opinion and then oh he's out pretty
quickly my favorite part of msnbc is all the black people on the air have exactly the same opinions
too it's like what's the point of diversity if everyone went to princeton and is a neoliberal
well there's nothing there's nothing more they gotta get some rappers on msnbc well they would
never be allowed right right because but there's something about um like being ideologically possessed that's very unpleasant
you know what i mean like and there's something one of the things that was great about your show
on fox news is that like you would on many key issues have a completely different opinion than
everybody else at fox news oh yeah and it'd be kind of crazy to watch the whole news day not
that i watched the whole news day but i knew what their guys take were and everybody is like yeah we got to go
attack uh you know asad because he just gassed his own people and then like you would like come
on at 8 p.m and by the way i remember because i was doing uh this show with se cup at the time
i worked for cnn very briefly as like a contributor um and i remember having it was the first week after the the gas
attack now this was poison gas against his own people but now this was before the opcw whistle
blowers had like come out and so i didn't like have any like evidence i could feel it didn't
have well i mean you just look at it and you go okay, so you're telling me that this is, we're in 2018 now, 2017, 2018.
Assad has been fighting a civil war since 2012, fighting for his survival, fighting to not go out like Gaddafi, like to not get sodomized to death.
100%.
Donald Trump announces that we're pulling out.
He announces that you won.
You're going to live.
You're not going to be sodomized to death by a
mob right okay and then asad decides a week and a half later i'm gonna do the one thing that would
turn international opinion around to keep me at risk of being sodomized he's just like right away
on the face of it like no i don't think so and like the onus is on you but anyway but everyone
else at fox news
the whole day would be saying that and then you'd have something different to say yeah there's
something incredibly boring about someone you just tell me don't even tell me the name but it's an
msnbc host someone who hosts the show you could pick the name in your head and i'll tell you their
opinion on everything climate change it's an existential crisis and we have to you know
racism well we have to confront know racism well we have to
confront systemic racism we have to we need a conversation about race like a real conversation
i was like really i'd love to yeah yeah exactly right i don't think you want that well that's
right and it's and no and it's just so boring so boring to care anyway where i was but also can i
just also say soul destroying yes like what you what you were saying earlier, I thought was so right on about repeating lies is such
an offense against you.
Like, where's your self-respect?
Have you no dignity?
Yeah.
Like, are you just like an animal who can be, you know, hit with a shock collar and
forced to perform tricks?
Like, don't.
Well, and there's something, dude, there's something, it's like a universal law where
you kind of, like the way I think Jordan Peterson said it was like, you get to choose your suffering.
You don't get to choose no suffering.
That's exactly right.
You get to choose your suffering.
That's right.
And this is true across everything.
Like you could sit down and have a fat piece of cheesecake or you could jump on the treadmill.
The cheesecake feels awesome.
Yes.
The treadmill fucking sucks.
Yes, it does.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
But you're paying a price.
You're just kind of choosing.
And by the way, I'm not saying you should never sit back and have cheesecake.
Like sometimes you got to do that.
But it's like you're choosing your suffering.
Yes.
And there's this choice where I'm going to choose to suffer up front now so that I have
some benefit later.
And it's always kind of that dynamic.
And when you lie to yourself, it's like, okay, you're choosing this kind of short term.
Yes. You know, this lie will have whatever positive effects it'll have. That's exactly right. of that dynamic. And when you lie to yourself, it's like, okay, you're choosing this kind of short-term,
you know, this lie will have whatever positive effects it'll have.
That's exactly right.
This person might believe
I'm a little bit cooler
than I really am or whatever,
but there's a long term,
there's never not a cost.
You can never get away from that
without paying some type of price.
It's just so degrading.
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And it's interesting, and all the people with self-respect are gone.
They've been purged.
Yeah.
But then there's also, okay, so part of that price too, and this is what I was getting
at, which the thing that you and Rogan have in common is that so many of those hosts and i don't
know all of them you know i've done a lot of shows at fox news met a lot of people over there and i
did a lot of shows at cnn when i was working uh there and so i met a lot of those guys i've never
i was one time in the msnbc studios and just met a few of the people there but they're like
so many of them are totally phony.
Like they're just not.
I mean, I've had things where,
like I've gone and grabbed beers with people
after like a show at Fox News,
like after doing Kennedy or doing Gutfeld
or something like that.
And at one time there was a Green Beret,
I won't name him, but he was a Green Beret
who served a couple tours in Afghanistan.
And he was on, when we were on the show,
he was talking about, you know, how supporting the the surge i think i can't remember this years ago
i think it was trump's first surge and he was that and then we go out for beers afterward and
he just he was like listen there is no army over there that we've been building up there's nothing
they'll fold in a day and he goes let me tell you and he would tell me about like the you know he
goes dude we would we would give them uh you know like some machine guns we'd go out on a mission come back
they used them to rob everybody in the village there's no afghan army that we're building up the
taliban will run right through them it's like oh why didn't you just tell everybody that you know
what i mean like why did you totally lie when we were on tv and it's just there's a lot of people
who do that and you can smell that you can smell that on them though like even if you don't know that over time people kind
of know people kind of know like oh these guys are and there is something having watched you for a
long time and now having met you um and this is joe rogan too you are exactly the same person
off camera that you are i hope so and there's no now with both there might be something you'd say off camera that you wouldn't I hope so. And there's no, now with both,
there might be something you'd say off camera that you wouldn't say on
camera,
but there's nothing you're saying,
but there's nothing you're saying on camera that you don't believe.
I would,
I would never do that.
And so that's like,
I think that is,
you don't have to say everything you think you cannot lie.
Right,
right.
Exactly.
And you never say everything you think.
I don't think you should actually,
because I have a lot of dumb opinions too,
or that are just rooted in meanness or irritation or mocking people's appearances which i have a
weakness for don't don't do that i know well you're a comic i'm gonna keep doing it i get
i get your point but i'm not i have no intention of stopping that but there is something that i
think is part of um what i love so much about joe and i think part of what why he has blown up and
been so successful is that,
you know,
because people ask me all the time,
they'd be like,
what's Joe Rogan like,
you know?
And I'll be like,
you already know,
you already know,
you already know what he's like.
And you know this cause you went and hung out with him.
He's exactly that guy.
Totally.
Exactly the same guy.
You know what I mean?
I love that that works.
I love,
I'm thrilled by his success.
And yes,
the money too, not that interested in money,
but I understand that like,
unless something is a real business, it won't continue.
Right.
And so I love how successful he's been
because it means it's just inspiration to everyone else.
Yes.
Right.
If you're an honest person,
you can actually make a good living being an honest person.
How great is that?
Yeah.
Well, that's awesome.
No, that's right.
And that is the part. And I don don't like i'm not the biggest fan but that is the stuff where iron round was really correct about the idea that like no like kind of there
is this connection between like which she would call selfishness which i don't think is the right
word for it but like but there is something between like like success and and humans are weird psychological creatures.
Sometimes you can have the desire to not succeed, to not outshine somebody else.
But actually, you're doing a much better thing if you succeed, if you're great at something,
and then you're an inspiration to others to be great also.
Well, sure.
If Rogan gets rich because he's brave and honest how is that bad yeah no i mean you see all these
other people getting rich because they're craven and dishonest and that's very demoralizing
actually well and also i mean there's so much there's so many things to be down about in our
our country particularly right now like our country is not in a very good place and like i you know
i'm uh like i got a wife and two little kids and I put on a very strong
face for them.
Like in front of them, I'm never like worried about anything.
That's right.
No matter what it is.
And that's just the way it's like, don't buy gold in front of your wife.
Do that secretly.
She sees the bars.
But the point is that, but I'm very, but you know, the truth is like between me and you
and the millions of people on the internet, like I'm terrified about the future of our country.
For sure.
I'm very, very concerned about it.
And there's a lot of like, look, I mean, obviously, we're in $34 trillion of debt.
We can never stop fighting these wars.
We've turned world opinion completely against us.
We have the worst political and social and racial divides of my lifetime.
Yes.
The culture is more insane than any time in my lifetime. I mean, the fact that we're debating over whether five-year-old boys can
transition to be girls, the fact that that's even a real thing and it's not a joke that wouldn't
work because everyone goes, that's too absurd to even be funny. You know what I mean? I mean,
that's just like a sign in itself, but there is also
something else going on and it's much bigger than me. And I don't understand it. I don't pretend to
understand it, but we are living through some type of major paradigm shift and where lies are being
exposed quicker and people are being exposed more than ever and honesty and integrity are being
rewarded in certain ways and
that's like i kind of have to cling on to that because there's so much to be you know to feel
despair over but there's something really positive about this i couldn't agree propaganda is not
working the same way it was do you find i just i've had this conversation i this i'll ask everyone
i have dinner with this question which is do you find in the midst of all of this sadness
and chaos and decline, rapid decline,
that your personal relationships are deeper
and more fulfilling?
Oh yeah, totally.
I mean, for me-
You do feel that.
Oh yeah.
I mean, there's no question about it for me.
I have little kids.
My oldest is five.
So I've just, in the last few years, started having kids.
So yes, and I have great friends.
And through this weird internet world where we are, I've kind of cultivated a really great
audience of a lot of really cool people.
Yes.
And yeah, I think that there's...
So you think you're relating to people in a deeper way than you did, say, five or six,
10 years ago?
I think 100%.
Yes.
It's been a big period for me kind of growing up.
You know, I had a very like prolonged adolescence kind of.
I was a stand-up comedian.
Yes.
Kind of living a degenerate life for many years.
And then I settled down and got married and had kids.
So that's just, aside from the craziness of the world.
I think whenever you go through that,
you're just living in a better way.
How blessed are you though?
Very, very, very, very.
Cause that's like your, I mean, that's your fortress against,
and that protects you from everything else.
Exactly.
Cause it, well, it's, and it's just, you know, it's, it's whatever your,
you know, this is the thing that was kind of,
I know you sent me uh when i tweeted
something about this but we're like when you don't have god whatever's next highest in line becomes
yes back to your god and there is something about um i did not have god or family and my own family
you know i had family members who i love but i didn't have my own family and my whole life i
kind of like i was like a 90s kid i grew up in I was born in 1983. I grew up in the nineties.
None of us, nobody I knew was religious. Nobody, and we, we did not have, you know,
like all of the traditions that many previous generations grew up with, whether like God,
country, chivalry, these things, you wear this uncomfortable outfit here because that's what's
expected of you around other people when you go to church you know you strap on these boots it was
like no we just grew up in blue jeans and sneakers and the point of life was kind of like to get
through school to go play you know what i mean when you were when i was a teenager it was like
to like smoke pot or you know like try to get laid or something you know
what i mean like it was all just kind of like revolved around what's fun and it wasn't until
i uh got married and when we had my first kid and i found god um also at that same time that i'd
been living a totally different life where my life is kind of centered around this purpose
that there's meaning to it and it's not really about me and whether i'm having fun like i still like to have fun sometimes but it's like what that's really
not that important like what's really important is that like i'm being a great husband to my wife
i'm being a great father to my kids and ironically some degree you just find much deeper uh much
deeper happiness it's when you're not living how did you know we were talking about this off camera
i really wish this had been on camera because it was so interesting what you were saying but
you didn't grow up in a conventional two-parent household no right no my parents were got
divorced when i was three that's young yeah um so you grew up in a single-parent household but
you seem to have kind of figured out the formula so well.
And I said, well, how did you know that?
How did you?
Well, I mean, it's a mix of a few things.
My mother was a really great mother.
So I only had one parent,
but I did have a really good parent
and she did instill a lot of good values in me.
And I don't mean if that kind of contradicts
what I just said before.
Like she did instill good values in me, even though we didn't have kind of like, you know,
God or anything like that.
And it was something that was just instinctually in me when I first had kids that I just wanted
to give them that.
And the other major fact there is that my wife is just like the best person I've ever
met and she was, I got very lucky again and just met a really great girl.
And that is uh
there is nothing better than being in a great marriage and I would imagine I've never experienced
it but nothing worse than being I think that's exactly I think it's like burning to death
yeah the people I know who I've known people like that who are like with a really crazy chick and
they can't even think straight because they're in agony all the time yeah it's horrible but it's
just it's just interesting I think maybe I'm very distressed by the number of kids growing up in single parent
households i grew up in a single parent household when i was a kid so i'm not judging anybody yeah
but it's in retrospect i think well maybe if you grew up that way as you did and i did
you don't take things for granted and you're more you're more intentional in
the way you structure your own family because you said to me off air you're like I wanted this
yeah and I also just have the attitude that like um well I think that and I blame the baby boomers
for almost all of our problems I do too and I don't I'm I don't obviously when you speak in
about a group that big I'm painting with a broad brush. Of course. There are exceptions to this rule. And I love my mother very much.
And she's a good person.
But as a generation, they just ruined everything.
And they're totally selfish.
Yes.
Completely.
Jeff Deist, who I love this guy, he's so brilliant.
But he gave a speech about it.
And he was going through the things of all of the slogans of the baby boomers and how
self-serving they all were like it was like don't trust anyone over 30 until they got into their
30s you know and then it was like and then like you watch it all the way through uh like covid
it's like we got to do everything we can to protect the baby boomer generation yes yes it
went from don't trust anyone over 30 to being like screw your childhood i don't want
to get this keep your hands off my medicare by the way you know like all everything is and um
but one of the major things that they changed about the culture was like normalizing casual
divorce yeah as if that should just kind of be an option like i'm just not feeling it anymore
so like we can get divorced and like there's no sense of like no no no no like look
i'm there are accepted there are cases where there's an abusive spouse or something like that
but generally speaking the idea like you took an oath before god and everyone you love and then
brought children into this world i know that is that is your obligation i know and that's that's
like my attitude toward marriage is that it's like, listen, me and my wife, we've faced some hurdles in our marriage, like things in the outside world that have happened.
Of course.
And I think we've done a very good job of them.
We've had serious issues.
We had major health concerns with one of our kids and got through that.
We've been through lockdowns and been through all this stuff.
And there's more ahead.
There's a lot more ahead.
But one thing that is for certain is that that's it yeah it's us for the rest of this like this is we're
living this life together now and to me that's what being married is well if you're if you're
not that you're not really if you're trapped you'll make do by the way that sounds grim but
it's not grim i've never i mean i have the same kind of marriage i've had a happy marriage for
33 years one of the reasons is that this is what we're doing.
Yeah, that's right.
And I grew up with divorce.
I remember as a child, my brother,
my only brother feels that we would talk about this
when our kids like, fuck adults, like fuck them.
Having kids and then getting divorced,
you can go find yourself in France, fuck you.
I knew, and I knew people in my,
listen, in my parents' generation,
there were so many people like that.
So many people I know.
Oh yeah.
And totally fucked up the kids
and did it because like, right,
like I gotta be happy
as if somehow that's a noble thing
of like, I gotta be happy.
But they never turned out happy.
No, because you have,
because the key to real happiness,
I mean, there's different ways
to measure happiness or like whatever.
Again, like, you know,
there's someone training for a marathon
and there's someone sitting having a bag of potato chips and in the moment the guy having the bag
of potato chips might be happier than the guy training for the marathon but like ultimately
who's going to feel better about themselves is going to be you know what i mean so like
there's um but we you have obligations you have obligations and responsibilities and if you don't
fulfill those you're not going to find long, but also take the long view.
Like the neighborhood I grew up in had all kinds of rich divorced moms.
And every one of them was crazy and unhappy.
Every single one of them.
And you wonder where that I thought in the year since like,
where are they now?
You know what I mean?
Living in some condo in Scottsdale with Parkinson's unvisited by their kids.
Like it, you'd get old and die in the end. And when you do, I'm going to, what i mean living in some condo in scottsdale with parkinson's unvisited by their kids like it
you'd get old and die in the end and when you do i'm gonna i really hope i'm surrounded by all my
girls and my son and like yeah oh he was such a good guy like yeah that's all that matters that's
how i feel about it you know what i mean and they like talk about you at dinner when you're gone
oh i miss him you don't want people i've seen people die who mistreated their children. I've lived it actually.
It's like, fuck that person.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I don't want that.
And also look, I mean, that kind of the absence of having that feeling or the baby boomers
kind of not feeling that way.
It's kind of like, I mean, look what it's led to.
I mean, you know, it's very easy for um you know uh say popular conservative you know pundits to kind of dunk on college kids and stuff like that
which is like fun and i've enjoyed videos of where you know like ben shapiro is like destroying
19 year old and some college campus and you know it's like uh you know he's she's like you know some some trans kid or
something like that and is like well i'm you know i i was born a boy but why can't i live as a woman
and he's like why can't you live as a cat and it was like ah and it's like ah the intellectual
prowess of destroying this and like yes okay that is stupid that kid was an idiot but you also kind
of like peel a little bit deeper and you're like so what was this kid's
situation really because you're talking to a 19 year old you know what i mean and let me guess
uh came from a broken home i'm trying not to pound the table here because i agree with you
so strongly was medicated i bet you know like as a young kid staring down the barrel of a grim life
yes has no conceivable path toward like independence and toward what you have and what
you grew up with which is that's all
that really and you're in charge of the society by the way you're in charge of the study of
influence in the society you're in the privileged class and there's no shame in that by the way yes
but it does carry with it the obligation to see that the next generation has a decent shot
and you haven't done that you've wasted it all on foreign adventurism and your stupid economic ideas
and this is the result and you will take no
responsibility for it it's like oh stupid kids no your job is to create another generation of
smart kids and then they wise kids and they mock them they're like oh well maybe maybe if you don't
have your avocado toast and your lattes then you'd be able to buy a house or something and you're
like look okay it is true you're making me mad i totally agree it okay, it is true. You're making me mad. I totally agree.
Look, it's true that this generation is in many ways softer and more privileged. And part of that's because they grew up with technological wealth that previous generations
never had.
It's also partly because their parents never instilled values in them to care about more
than just avocado toast.
But the fact is that baby boomers could go to college
and get a summer job and pay for their college okay and then if they didn't go to college they
could go to high school and then go wait online and get a job where you could support a wife and
kids off of that job this might my you know like and that was the way of the world previously that
my grandfather worked in factories his whole life and his wife didn't work and that was that he and and he owned a house he sent kids to college he had two cars like they had a nice
life and these kids today come out with six figures of debt and are getting a job at you know
starbucks and houses are going for like 600 grand for you know what i mean for that same humble house
that my my grandfather had and and
the baby boomers all got rich by the value of their house just going on and never and it seems
like not a one of them ever went hey but aren't we kind of like pulling up the ladder on the
helicopter here like if my house is like skyrocketing in value that's nice for me i got a
heloc and i got like some money coming in now that i can invest in the market that's going up and make this income coming in but what about the next generation how
are they ever going to buy a house they don't care like no one seemed to care about they don't care
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I'm trying not to interrupt your wonderful description with amens and hosannas, but I just,
I so strongly agree with what you're saying. And I have a bunch of kids. They're all actually
thriving, I would say, inside.
They're all good people, clear thinking.
They love each other, most important.
But I'm around a lot of college-age kids, like a lot, like way more than most people my age.
I'm 54, and I don't think they're soft at all.
I'm not talking my kids.
I mean, they're friends or, you know, I'm around it a lot.
They're hard-edged, actually.
Right.
They know how, I mean, they may be wrong,
they may be confused,
but they're actually pretty tough in a way,
and they're pretty angry,
and they sort of get what's going on,
and I have deep sympathy for them.
Deep, deep.
They've been completely screwed over by the people.
They don't have any power.
Even if you're a 19-year-old Columbia kid,
like, I may not agree with your slogans or down with white people whatever i
will of course i hate that i am a white person but i do sort of like think whose fault is that
it's the people who run everything it's your your stupid boomer parents yeah it's the administrators
at the school it's our politicians i mean i'm sorry to blame society
for the crimes of young people but actually society does deserve the blame and the leaders
of the society deserve the blame yeah 100 that's not a liberal perspective that's a conservative
perspective i care about the next generation that's how if you don't care about how your
grandchildren are going to live here how are you conservative what are you conserving you're not at
all you're just a freaking grifter
shut up right and like what has and this is why you know when uh um we when you were on my podcast
we set the uh the internet on fire by uh because i trashed bill buckley oh yeah like i completely
agree you're not allowed to have that i said he was one of the great villains of the 20th century
that he was a gatekeeper for sure right i mean people started they were like what about stolid and mao se tong and i'm like okay fine
he was third but the point is the point is okay there were like five ahead of him okay fine but
he was but i think part of this is that you know a lot of the kind of um conservatism inc people
who who criticized uh us for saying that and they're kind of like well how would you you know
this was the guy who was the most prominent member of the conservative movement and it's like okay and so like what
exactly was conserved in his movement what like just expect was it the constitution was it what
classical liberal values more was it religion was it tradition was it the definition of a woman
like what exactly was the big conservative win here i mean like like i'll give you something we still we still have some gun rights okay you know like
i don't know but like you lost everything you lost the united states of america and part of
the reason a major reason why is because the whole national review um like takeover of the
conservative movement was to drive out all of the all of the non-interventionists
all of the all of the isolationists i watched it demonize them as racist every single time
happened and the weird yeah i don't even i'm holding back um no because that's like i would
you know i was adjacent to that world my entire life and i and i watched it um happen and you know I knew Bill Buckley and he was perfectly nice to me.
I didn't hate him or anything, but-
It was very charming and very smart guy for sure.
I guess, you know, I was playing the wasp.
You know, it was all a pose.
It was completely fake.
And the only people who sort of bought it
are people who didn't know any better
and thought that was like upper class or something,
fake accent, weird homoerotic stuff. And it was like all just kind of sad actually. I thought that was like upper class or something fake accent weird homoerotic
stuff and it was like all just kind of sad actually i thought that was always my view of it
because it was he was posing um but you know i think he had good qualities i love sailing so i
kind of you know i'm with him on that um but in the end you judge the tree by its fruits and the
fruits are just absolutely rotten and so i think it's important to be honest about that well i think the fruits were a transformation of the right wing in america from being the old right um which was
really i mean they were fairly isolationist um but certainly non-interventionist i mean like
you know robert taft was the one who didn't want us to be in nato i mean this was like the old
and they they were big on like immigration controls, sound money,
and not getting involved in wars.
These were the people who opposed World War I and World War II.
They didn't want American involvement in these wars, right?
And the effect of Bill Buckley was to transform what became the conservative movement into
being cold warriors.
That what we do is we go everywhere around the world looking for a war to fight.
So in other words, the people who really loved America,
not the idea, but the physical reality of America
and her people, the people who actually live here
and their homes and their little towns
and their dumb little jobs
and all the stuff that makes up a civilization at scale,
the people who cared about that
somehow became anti-American?
Right.
And the people who would lecture you about how america is an idea it doesn't really matter who lives here what those
people are for america i mean it's like a complete inversion of reality actually yeah and so again
it's nothing personal against bill buckley who i you know played that played a mean harpsichord but um sorry not to be catty but uh you know but like
that's a lie yeah the people who care about actual america are the people whose side i'm on
and i care about actual america not because i'm a good person i'm really not an especially good
person because i got a lot of children who live here yeah that's what i care about yeah and like
because it's look at this this was a really great country
and i mean there are still a lot of great things about it but it's deteriorating and why you know
why should we be for that and you know one of the crazy things about america is that there is kind
of this uh this idea that we are the united states of America and have been this whole time,
whereas there's really been like several revolutions
in the country.
And, you know, look, I mean,
I think the George W. Bush years
and the war on terrorism
was a revolution of sorts in the country.
I grew up a kid in the 90s.
We are not the same country as we were in the 1990s.
In the pre-war on terror, before the Patriot Act
and the Department of Homeland Security and the TSA.
I mean, the experience at an airport is a different thing.
We are a different country than we were before that.
I think COVID has changed everything.
But even before that, I mean,
as you've talked about a lot,
like in the wake of World War II, the creation of the CIA,
this was a revolution in the country where it changed who's running the government. And we think of the wake of World War II, the creation of the CIA. This was a revolution in the country where it changed who's running the government.
And we think of the position of president
of the United States of America being the same position
that like, you know, that Woodrow Wilson occupied
or something like that.
And it's not, it's a totally different position.
Donald Trump did not have the same job FDR had.
They were very, very different.
Not even close.
And so there is, when people say, oh, you love America,
it's like, yes, I love this country.
I don't like the direction the government's going in.
I don't care for these new powers.
And the Bush thing, I have to say,
I could feel it at the very beginning.
I knew him before he became president.
I did not want to vote for him and didn't.
I just didn't vote.
I did vote for him the second time because i just didn't vote i did vote from the second time because you
always get caught up in the other guy and i knew carrie and i just thought carrie was not impressive
at all so i voted for for bush but you know i see bush still i had a meal with him not that long ago
and talk about a defeated sad guy actually bitter insecure you know given to lecturing everyone around him about what
a great president he was and I thought you know that really is no but that's
the fruit of the tree right of like if you've had a successful successful life
if you've done the things that you you know if you've fulfilled your obligation
and done the right thing you're not lecturing people about what a great
person you are right Right. At all.
Are you?
No, I don't think so.
No, that's failure, actually.
And like, I mean, just.
He knows.
I mean, yeah, come on.
He knows.
To try to spin the George W. Bush years
as anything other than like an absolute failure.
I mean, you know, dude, you celebrated mission accomplished
and then we stayed in the war for 20 years.
I know. You know, just a disaster and left the
country and i mean look the not only was it all completely unnecessary i mean like we had like
the special ops response to al-qaeda cells in afghanistan in late 2001 totally justify that
we had an opportunity to trap osama bin laden and tora bora in late 2001 and they i believe
intentionally let them go so they could continue these wars.
But fighting the decision-
Do you think that's what happened?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And there's-
I highly recommend to anybody-
Scott Horton wrote a book called Enough Already,
which is like a masterpiece history of all the terror wars.
And it seems overwhelmingly likely that they already
had their eye on iraq and that they knew that if they captured osama bin laden it'd be very
difficult to sell another war because we got the guy if that's really true i mean that's that's
unspeakably evil yeah well look it was a it was uh you know you can read like through the details
of it but there were a bunch of they knew he was in Tora Bora and they were requesting backup and they didn't give
it to him.
You know, like it's, it certainly seems to be what it looks like.
And then it was a decision that we're going to Kabul.
Then it was a decision that we're going to overthrow the Taliban and fight a regime change
war there and then go fight the regime change war in Iraq.
And I mean, look, like you said, judge them by their fruit. I mean, the results of George W. Bush's wars were, there
were trillions of dollars wasted, hundreds of thousands of people in these countries died,
and our bravest young men blowing their brains out by the tens of thousands.
I know.
Those are the tangible results of what happened.
And it's not even like we sacrificed that
so that these countries are much better places to live.
They're actually worse than they were.
Much worse.
Yeah.
So there you go.
You know, so great administration.
Okay.
So let me end on this question
because that's so depressing what you just said
because it's true.
Yeah.
It is true. And no one was ever punished for it. And in fact-
Rewarded.
They were all rewarded for it. Name the three things that give you hope outside of your own
family in America right now.
Okay. So, well, the first one was kind of what I was touching on before, that there is this, there is like a seismic shift
in the way people are being exposed.
The part of the reason,
and I know you've talked about this a lot,
and I think explained it very well,
but what you're seeing out of the establishment,
what you see out of MSNBC when they talk about Donald Trump,
or when they talk about you for that matter,
is not a ruling class that is confident
that they have power.
They are like a cockroach that's trapped.
You know what I mean?
That's spazzing out.
Yes, and there's a reason for that.
And there's a reason why they're so hysterical.
And it's because for the first time, certainly in my lifetime and well beyond that the um the monopoly
over the control of information has truly been broken and that you watch this during covid
where i mean like you and joe rogan had a huge impact on the nation during covid because you
were like the two biggest people with the biggest audiences completely exposing how insane the whole narrative
was and how insane all of the the covid restrictions were and eventually it got to a
point where people just weren't taking it anymore they weren't listening to fauci like yeah we never
had anything like that before we never had like someone like joe rogan or someone like you doing
this show where you know like in the run-up to say in 2002 the run-up to the war in iraq
there was just no one like that who was like
blowing the whistle with tens of millions of people listening to them and explaining how this
is all lies we have that now and they're freaking out about that and this is really why all the
attempts at tech censorship happened since 2016 because they've recognized that like oh donald
trump can tweet his way to the white house he doesn't even have to go through us so we better
control twitter and you know youtube and facebook and all of these, Google and all
of this.
And even in their attempts to control it, they've never been as good as they were at
controlling when there were just three networks and just a few big newspapers.
And now I think Elon Musk really threw a wrench in their plans by buying Twitter.
And so I'm very encouraged about that. I'm very encouraged about the fact that, you know,
there people are kind of have access to the truth
in a way that they never did before.
I think that, I think ideas are powerful.
And I think that all governments rely on propaganda.
It doesn't work without that.
And there's something in that
that's really encouraging in a way.
It's like, oh, they have to, they have to convince us before they can just do it.
Like every...
Okay, there's two things that are seemingly contradictory, but they're not.
Number one, democracy is an illusion.
It doesn't really exist.
Yes.
You don't really ever have democracy.
Of course not.
Oh, we get to vote in presidential elections.
Even assuming all the votes are counted in the right way or something like that, it's
like, yeah, you get to vote when these two parties, these private
entities decide who the candidate is, and then you can pick between the two of them. You know
what I mean? Like that's not really democracy. But in another sense, there's always democracy.
And every nation, no matter how, whether they have free and fair elections or not,
there's always like that
there has to at least be tacit acceptance by the people of course and if there's not you know if
there's 500 000 people out in the streets screaming at a dictator about how they want policy x that
dictator is like you know i've been considering it and we will be implementing policy x you know
what i mean like it's because at the end of day, there's way more of you than there are of him. It's totally right. And so when you can spread ideas,
we have a fighting shot, I think.
So that's very encouraging to me.
I think there's also been a huge move
away from US hegemony internationally,
which is both very scary,
but is also, I think, necessary.
I think that the American,
America spiraling as a country, I think started with us getting off of the gold standard once government could print as much money
as they want to they make people rich for just trading in paper or being politically connected
and you're not earning anything to become rich and it's it's devastating yes and then i think
the unipolar moment was the worst thing that ever happened to america right you need counterbalance winning is often losing right and so you need there i don't i want to see it happen
in the best way possible um i think it it's very bad in some ways for our country if we're not the
world reserve currency anymore but it's ultimately the solution like it's no good of us being the
the fact that we can just export paper and then maintain our standard of living isn't the right way i i hope it's a smooth transition but like i do think there's something positive in the fact that we can just export paper and then maintain our standard of living isn't the right
way i hope it's a smooth transition but like i do think there's something positive in the fact
that that's all changing um so i think all of those things make me happy i don't know did i
hit three yeah you did and let me just just ask you follow up on one losing our privilege our
unique privilege as the holder of the world's reserve currency, I mean, that's going to happen.
Of course, it's in progress.
The Ukraine war accelerated it.
Yes.
But I haven't looked at the upside of that at all.
And I think it's inevitable.
So it would be nice to know what the upside is.
Well, I mean, if you think about, look, all the stuff that, so we got this privilege after
World War II, right?
The Bretton Woods Agreement.
And a lot of the stuff where you talk about our soul as a country being destroyed, it
happened in large part as a result of that, you know?
Because we didn't have to earn our place in the world anymore.
We could just export paper.
And of course, we immediately started cheating.
And this is why Nixon took us off the gold standard.
It's not that, you know, Nixon went off the gold standard it's not that you know nixon went off the gold standard it's that the french called his bluff
we were saying we'll exchange uh dollars for 35 an ounce and they went okay we'll take our gold
and we're like oh wait i'm sorry what was that and they're like no no i just saw you did this
whole like you had this whole space program and you fought a war in vietnam and you just started
all these entitlement programs you know it does seem like you've been printing a lot of money i think we'll take our goals and then
nixon was like this was an attack against the u.s dollar it's like what do you mean we had a
contract and they were like live up to your end of the contract but once we were once there was
no more pretense then we could just print money like crazy then you have everybody in wall street
getting rich in the 80s you have the tech boom in the 90s this is all and so i'm just saying i think that
i don't know that it's been great for our country to be the world reserve currency i think it's been
great for the military industrial complex i think it's been great for wall street i don't think it's
been good for our soul and so if i handed you a billion dollars unearned do you think it would
improve your life no i think it would probably destroy my life you know because because what
do you you know if you actually start thinking that through,
so then I go like, okay, so all right, fine.
So initially, okay, I could buy a bunch of cool stuff.
That's great.
We all know that's not really what matters anyway, but it'll for a moment, you know,
feel really nice.
It'll distract you for sure.
Yeah, for sure.
Right.
And then it's like, okay, so what am I going to do for my family now?
Like my, obviously my kids, my wife are my responsibility but then like okay what i
got a brother i got a sister i guess i gotta hand them a bunch of money too you know my brother's
like just coming out of grad school um it's like am i gonna hand him a huge and just take away all
of his drive to like go make it on his own now am i gonna give him nothing and be a brother who has
a billion dollars and gives him nothing i mean that's not an option either i don't know this
things get like way more complicated very quickly where you're like no actually That's not an option either. I don't know. Things get like way more complicated very quickly
where you're like, no, actually that's not the right answer.
And also it's not as if I have like the respect
from my family now, like, oh my God,
you're taking care of all this.
It's like you were handed a billion dollars.
You didn't earn anything.
You didn't create anything.
It's like, no, that's not.
You're no longer the man in your house.
Yeah, you don't actually want that.
I want to have a nice house
because I worked to get my family a nice house, you know? So yeah, no, I man in your house. Yeah, you don't actually want that. I want to have a nice house because I work to get my family a nice house.
So yeah.
No, I wouldn't want that.
I don't know how...
I don't know.
You're one of the rare people I just share all the same instincts.
So I don't quite know how that happened.
But thank you.
That was...
I love that.
Dude, thank you so much.
I've really, really enjoyed being out here.
Me too.
Dave Smith.
Thanks.
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