The Tucker Carlson Show - Glenn Greenwald: Dangerous New Escalation in Russia, & Our Blackmailed Politicians

Episode Date: November 20, 2024

Permanent Washington decides nuclear war is preferable to Donald Trump. Glenn Greenwald on the nihilism of our ruling class. (00:00) Permanent Washington Dangerously Misunderstands Vladimir Putin (23...:06) We Are on the Verge of Nuclear War (28:11) The Concerted Effort to Control You (46:06) Intel Agencies, Blackmail, and Mike Johnson’s Shocking Flip-Flop (1:15:09) Has Greenwald Been Targeted by the Intel Agencies? (1:20:31) How Will the Russia/Ukraine Conflict War End? Paid partnerships with: ExpressVPN Get 3 months free at https://ExpressVPN.com/Tucker Alp Pouch Shop now at https://AlpPouch.com Public Square https://PublicSquare.com/ Get the Hallow prayer app 3 months free https://Hallow.com/Tucker Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:26 That's D-A-Z-N.com slash FIFA. I think we're watching the most evil thing I've ever seen in my lifetime, which is the lame duck administration leaving the next administration with the world war with the nuclear conflict by allowing Ukraine, a proxy state of the United States, to strike within Russia. And I'll just have one editorial comment, and then I'm going to let you go. But I think that people in Washington misunderstand Vladimir Putin, and they think he's a monarch with absolute power, which is not true. And Russian politics is complex, and it's lively. And Putin is very concerned with his approval rating within Russia. He cannot appear weak. That's a huge threat to him. He feels that, I can confirm. And if he can't hide attacks on him by the United States through Ukraine, either on Moscow or big civilian
Starting point is 00:01:12 casualties, I think he will have no choice in his view, but to launch like a serious response against Ukraine or some or NATO countries or possibly the United States. So this seems like the most reckless thing that's ever happened in my life. I hardly have words for it. Am I overstating it, do you think? No, no, not even remotely. Welcome to Tucker Carlson Show. We bring you stories that have not been showcased anywhere else. And they're not censored, of course, because we're not gatekeepers.
Starting point is 00:01:59 We are honest brokers here to tell you what we think you need to know and do it honestly. Check out all of our content at TuckerCarlson.com. Here's the episode. So let me just say specifically what has been authorized. This is something that some NATO countries, including the United Kingdom, have been pressuring the Biden administration to do for quite a long time, for at least a year. But going all the way back to the beginning of 2022, this was an option that they had, which was that we have these guided missiles called Atakams, which are very powerful for attacking inside Russia. You can guide them specifically and very precisely to where you want them to go. Obviously, you have to get intelligence about where you want to strike. And the reason we never permitted the Ukrainians to use them is because the Ukrainians can't use
Starting point is 00:02:40 those missiles on their own. In other words, if they want to launch these missiles, it's not just the U.S. giving them the missiles and then telling them, no problem, go and use them. It requires the direct involvement of the United States and or a major NATO country like France or the U.K. or Germany because the Ukrainians don't have the guiding capability in order to know how to launch these missiles. So this is not just us giving them missiles and saying, go attack deep
Starting point is 00:03:06 inside. Imagine if some major country, China, Iran, Russia, whoever, gave missiles to Canada, if we were at war with them, or Mexico or Cuba, and said, we're giving you these specifically for you to use them inside the United States. We would consider that a grievous act of war, not just on the part of the country shooting them, but on the part of the country giving them. What Biden did here is so much worse. He didn't just give Ukrainians missiles and say, feel free to use them inside Russia. We are going to participate in the bombing of Russia, NATO and or the United States, because there's no way the Ukrainians can launch these missiles on their own, which means we are now, our military, our intelligence community, are participating in missile attacks inside the country of Russia. This is something that even the Biden administration, for all their hawkishness on
Starting point is 00:03:56 Russia and Ukraine, feeding that war, fueling it, preventing diplomatic resolutions because they wanted this war, even they were unwilling to do it because they understood the dangers of the escalatory risks. For Joe Biden, or whoever's acting in his name, to do this just two weeks after the country resoundingly rejected governance by the Democratic Party in the administration, and on his way out as an 81-year-old man, knowing that he has about six weeks left in office, to just say, yeah, I know that these are massive risks, but I'm going to take them. I'm 81. I don't really care. And then to make it so much more difficult for the following administration to do what they promised to do during the campaign, which the American people voted for
Starting point is 00:04:40 and wanted, which is to resolve this war. Instead, we're risking escalation with the world's largest superpower, nuclear power. Over what? Over what? I mean, placed in context, too, this is without precedent. And I think it's Blinken. I want to ask about that in a second. So, 1956, Soviets invade Hungary and murder a ton of people. 61, they put nuclear weapons in Cuba. 68, they invade Czechoslovakia, murder a bunch of people once again. These are all, you know, incredibly provocative acts, far more provocative than invading eastern Ukraine. And this was the middle of the Cold War, and no American president, it was Democrats and Republicans in charge during those periods. They didn't respond by attacking Russia.
Starting point is 00:05:26 I mean, there's nothing like this has ever happened. No one's ever been this crazy. Well, this is, you know, my big breach with the left, my big permanent split with whatever they thought I was in terms of association with them. Boy, is it permanent too, they hate you. Oh yeah, I know. And that all happened in 2016
Starting point is 00:05:42 when out of nowhere, Russiagate appeared. And I remember like it was yesterday, the very first ad from Hillary Clinton's campaign with this like menacing baritone voice. You know, what does Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump have in common? What does Russia have on Donald Trump? And journalistically, I just couldn't believe it because it was so redolent of McCarthyism, which is a civil libertarianism I found. I was taught was like one of the worst civil liberties of the 20th century. And by the way, I agree. Yeah, I mean, you go around just accusing people of being Russian agents with no evidence, destroying their reputation, their lives, kind of like what they're trying to do to Tulsi Gabbard now, what they tried to do for Donald Trump for the last eight years.
Starting point is 00:06:21 So just on that ground, I was kind of offended by it. Journalistically, I was so skeptical of it because when you have intelligence agencies leaking anonymously unverified claims to The Washington Post and The New York Times, and they put it on the front page and gather Pulitzer's for them, that's usually a sign that a huge disinformation campaign of deceit is underway. That was the exact method used, for example, to sell the war on Iraq to the American people, was that kind of process. That's why these intelligence agencies need to be rooted out. But what alarmed me most was that the climate was deliberately created in Washington, especially once Hillary lost and they blamed Russia for it, that any communications
Starting point is 00:07:02 with Russia, anyone who visits Russia, anyone who talks to a Russian official is automatically deemed sinister or treasonous. And as you said, during the Cold War, which dominated our American life for 50 years, Ronald Reagan called the Soviet Union the evil empire. They were infinitely more powerful, more threatening, more everything than Russia is now. We always communicated with Soviet leaders. There were phones all over Washington that rang to the counterparts. They communicated constantly. After Russiagate, there's basically no communication any longer between the Russian leaders and the American leaders. On either side, and I should just say, I mean—
Starting point is 00:07:44 Not because Russia wanted that. That was something that in Washington got created because they blamed Russia and claimed that Russia was our existential enemy because of the claim that they interfered in the 2016 election. Before that, there was all kind of the Obama administration and the Putin government cooperated in all sorts of ways around the world. Of course. And but it's it's it's of ways around the world. Of course. But it's the leadership of the Republican Party, too. I had a conversation with the Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, and he was about to appropriate tens of billions more for Ukraine. And I said, well, why don't you check with Putin?
Starting point is 00:08:16 You're the Speaker of the House, number three in line for the presidency. Well, what? I said, well, I'll see if I can facilitate that. I'll call the press office, kind of set you up. Why don't you talk to Putin? No, absolutely not. not why imagine if he had though and that leaked but but i'm not excusing him why wouldn't he just say i mean i'm not attacking mike johnson i guess i am attacking my son i don't know what i'm saying i'm just reporting what actually happened i said you know like what i don't you have a moral duty to get as much information about
Starting point is 00:08:44 this war before you fund its continuation and the killing of all these people? Like, shouldn't you know more? No. I think it is important to say that this war has been 100 percent bipartisan, although the Biden administration as the leader of the executive branch is primarily responsible. there's been about, I would say, five or six dozen anti-interventionist Republicans, typically more Trump supporters, both in the House and Senate, who have spoken out from the beginning against funding this war. But the vast majority of Republicans, to the extent they have a criticism or had a criticism of the Biden administration at all with respect to Ukraine, it was that they didn't do enough. They didn't spend enough money on Ukraine. They didn't give
Starting point is 00:09:22 Ukraine enough weapons. They didn't get more involved more heavily and earlier than they should. But, you know, the thing that you said about encouraging Mike Johnson to speak to Putin, which, of course, as the third in line to the presidency, as you said, when they're proposing to escalate a major war, of course, you should want to understand the Russian perspective. This is what Tulsi Gabbard did in 2017 when she was a member of Congress and the Obama administration had unleashed this billion-dollar-a-year CIA dirty war to change the government of Syria, to dislodge Basar al-Assad from the government, and we fought along ISIS and al-Qaeda, who also wanted Assad gone, we were told those were our existential enemies for 15 years, we fought alongside them to do it. And so many of the weapons we sent ended up in the hands of Al-Qaeda and ISIS and other Islamic radical groups in Syria. And Tulsi Gabbard, as a member of the military, but also as a member of Congress with constitutional responsibility to authorize or disauthorize a war, wanted to go to Syria and see what was happening for herself.
Starting point is 00:10:22 And then she spoke with Syrian officials and got an opportunity to speak with the Syrian president. And based solely on that, she's now accused of being a Russian agent, being some sort of treasonous sympathizer of Bashar al-Assad. This is the jingoistic climate that has been created, way worse than what prevailed in the Cold War. When Nixon went to China, Reagan negotiated all kinds of arms deals with the Soviets.
Starting point is 00:10:50 This is now totally prohibited. It's like we live in a Marvel cartoon for children where there's good guys and bad guys. We're the good guys and you don't speak to the bad guys. And the good guys are Al-Qaeda and ISIS. They're the good guys. Yeah, we can fight with them. So her point, I don't want to speak for Tulsi Gabbard,
Starting point is 00:11:04 our new Director of national intelligence nominee, but my view was, I don't have any feelings about Assad or Syria, but it's a fact that that government protected religious minorities, including an ancient Christian community there in the Alawites, of which he's one, in that country for a long time. He and his dad. So why are they my enemy exactly? I don't understand. Why should I be opposed to Assad in Syria? long time he and his dad so why are they my enemy exactly i don't understand like what does why
Starting point is 00:11:25 should i be opposed to assad in syria why should i be opposed to vladimir putin well i was not supposed to be opposed to the soviets who are anti-christian but now you have a pro-christian president supposed to be against him tell me why it wasn't something explained to me why as a 55 year old american taxpayer i should be against it. First of all, I think the principle is that, and this is what Donald Trump ran explicitly in 2016, was that we shouldn't be involved in wars designed to change the governments of other countries, rebuild their governments, transform their societies, in part because it's not our place to do it and in part because we're terrible at doing it because they have very complex, rich, long histories that American intelligence officials and political leaders have no understanding of whatsoever. They don't speak a freaking language. I mean, they don't know anything. They know nothing. And we've proven that over and over in all these failed attempts. But also when it comes to, I mean, Tulsi Gabbard's entire worldview, and I have spoken to her about this, I've interviewed her about this, so I feel comfortable saying this, is that she's not in any way anti-war pacifist.
Starting point is 00:12:29 She believes that we should be very militarily aggressive against, say, terrorist groups that actually want that she fought in of the kind we did in Syria of the kind we did in Libya of the kind that we did in Ukraine in 2014 when we actually engineered a coup on the most sensitive part of the kind that we're trying to pull off in Russia right now the point of this is to knock out Putin yeah to to weaken that regime into the thing is though that what you said about Putin is so important which is Putin's critics he doesn't have very many liberal critics, meaning people to his left. His real critics are hardcore nationalists. Exactly. And their criticism of Putin.
Starting point is 00:13:13 Who see him as a liberal. Who see him as weak or insufficiently militaristic when it comes to confronting the West, but particularly on Ukraine. They wanted destruction of Ukraine. A lot of them are enraged. And as you say, the Russian government has taken the position, warned the United States government privately and publicly that any use of these missiles involving, as they do, direct U.S. or NATO involvement in their launching against Russia will be seen as the entrance of the United States and NATO as belligerence in this war, as a war against Russia, as World War III. And he will have to treat it as such, even though he's been very constrained, even though he clearly doesn't want a broader war. There are a lot of people inside Moscow who do wield a lot of power, who do, and who will demand that he treat it as such. Why wouldn't they? We are attacking Russia. We're shooting missiles inside Russia. So I think, as you've said, I don't think we can say it enough. So much of this has been
Starting point is 00:14:12 conducted in bad faith, but also so much of that bad faith has been informed by ignorance or uninformed by ignorance, not informed at all. And I think that people really think that Putin is an absolute dictator who can do whatever he wants. And that is not the case. It's not the case. Super complex place. A lot of smart people in Russia, complicated political situation. So I agree completely. We're pushing him toward that. The view, I think, I know, from Putin is that Blinken is driving this and that Blinken has a lot of hostility, is reckless, but has a lot of hostility toward Russia that has nothing to do with the United States at all. Do you think that's true? Do you think Blinken is driving this? Yeah. I mean, I think Blinken, Jake Sullivan, that's kind of the brain trust as it is. Obviously,
Starting point is 00:14:56 Joe Biden has no involvement in this whatsoever, which I think has been an issue which we've shockingly ignored. Everyone saw what Joe Biden was long before that debate. Everyone knew it. The only people who didn't say so were the media and Democratic allies. After the debate, it became untenable for them to deny it any longer that this is an old man who has lost his cognitive capabilities, yet he's still the sitting president of the United States, and you had the vice president, understandably, doing nothing for the last four months other than working on her own empowerment through the campaign. She obviously wasn't involved ever in any decision-making, let alone when she became the nominee. So the question has been all these consequential
Starting point is 00:15:39 decisions we made, deploying massive military assets to the Middle East, making declarations about when we would go to war in the Middle East and for whom, escalating the war in Ukraine, now authorizing the use of these long-range missiles. He's obviously not coming from Joe Biden. He barely understands where he is. It's not a character flaw in his part, but it's just a disability, a clear disability. He's obviously not making any of these decisions. I do think that if you look at the national security crowd that emerged from the Obama presidency, especially the people who were associated with the State Department run by Hillary Clinton and then John Kerry, even before and wrote her book, Hard Choices, the only areas in which she was critical of Obama was her view that he wasn't willing to confront Russia sufficiently. Obama had this view, like sort of this realist view from Brent Scowcroft. Those are the kind of people who like Jim Baker, that why would we send lethal arms to Ukraine and provoke Russia? Ukraine is not a vital interest to us, but it is to them.
Starting point is 00:16:46 He wanted to work with Russia and did to facilitate the Iran deal, to bomb terrorist targets in Syria. And there was a faction in the Obama administration led by Hillary Clinton. Blinken was there. All these sort of national security people woven into the, you know, that Victoria Nuland was hired by Hillary Clinton. That's how she made her way into the Obama administration. They viewed Russia as this grave menace. The reason Putin hated Hillary Clinton was because when Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State,
Starting point is 00:17:15 the United States openly spent millions of dollars funding opposition groups and organizing protests in Moscow. I mean, we talk about Putin interfering in our sacred politics and our internal affairs. Hillary Clinton was openly funding protests and anti-Putin agitators inside Russia in the 2010 election, in 2012, 2011 rather, and they were obsessed with Russia well before that. And I do think that Russia is disliked by a lot of people in Washington because of the perception that they are detrimental to our interests in the Middle East and especially to Israel's interest in the Middle East, including their support for Bashar al-Assad in Syria, the fact that they have a good relationship with Iran. It doesn't really always have a lot to do with the United States, but with the interest
Starting point is 00:18:10 of other countries as well. So you think that's the prime mover here? Because it is true that Assad is only there because of Russia. I think that's a fair statement. Yeah, that's their ally in the Middle East. It's been their ally in the Middle East for decades. And just like we support our allies around the world, like Saudi Arabia and Egypt, you know, very savage, brutal dictatorships, but at least to do our bidding, the Russians have theirs as well. They have a long-term relationship with Venezuela, with Cuba, going back to the Cold War, and still do, as well as with Syria. And, yeah, the Russians operate in Syria. They protect Assad in Syria. They protect Assad in Syria. And as a result, they end up being antagonistic to Israel, which ends up being defined
Starting point is 00:18:49 as U.S. interests as well. Like there's no separation between the two countries. But strictly speaking, this has kind of nothing to do with us whatsoever. I mean, I don't, I honestly,
Starting point is 00:18:57 for the past- Unless you see Israel as a part of the United States. You know, I'm not hostile toward Israel, but I think it's a separate country. It seems to me to be a separate country as well.
Starting point is 00:19:05 It's often not treated as that. I'm just saying, but don't pay taxes there. I wasn't born there. So from my, just from an American perspective, without wishing ill on any other country at all, and I really don't, I have been struggling for really since the 2016 election, but particularly since the war began in February of 2022 to identify what exactly would be the U.S. interest in this.
Starting point is 00:19:26 And I just can't. And I've really, I think, tried hard. But I just don't see what's in it for us at all. Tucker, there's nobody, I'm certain of this, in the United States, just an average, ordinary American voter who believes that their life is affected in any way by the question of who rules various provinces in the Donbass in eastern Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:19:48 Nobody thinks about Ukraine, let alone the Donbass, let alone eastern Ukraine. It's an incredibly complex situation there in terms of the people's allegiances, which are far closer to Moscow than they are to Kiev. The question of what that territory should be, should it be semi-autonomous, should it be used as a buffer against the West? The whole framework, as you all know, and as other people have pointed out, when Russia agreed to the reunification of Germany, which was obviously an extraordinary thing for the Russians to agree to, given the Russian history in the 20th century with respect to Germany, when the Berlin Wall fell and they allowed the East and the Western parts of Germany to reunite and to become part of the West and become part of the EU, the only concession they extracted in exchange for that was, okay, with reunification, NATO is now moving eastward closer to our border in a country that has devastated our country twice in two world wars invaded russia twice killed tens of millions of russian citizens the only thing we need as a security guarantee in
Starting point is 00:20:51 exchange for allowing that is that nato will never expand one inch eastward beyond what was east germany and the united states agreed to that and immediately in the 90s under the clinton administration the clinton administration started talking about it and implementing NATO expansion eastward toward Russia, exactly what was promised to Gorbachev the United States would not do in exchange for them agreeing to reunification. And why? Why did we need to expand our just eastward in general. It's going directly up to the Russian border on the part of their border that has been invaded twice in Ukraine to destroy Russia in both of those world wars. We also participated in the change of government. We removed the democratically elected leader of Ukraine before his constitutional term was expired in 2014 because we perceived him as being too friendly to Moscow, which is who the Ukrainians voted for, and replaced him, Victoria Nuland constructed a government and it was replaced by a government that was more pro-U.S. Imagine if the Russians engineered a coup in Mexico to take out the
Starting point is 00:21:55 government because they were too friendly to the U.S. and put in a hardline pro-Russian, anti-American, anti-NATO president. Imagine how threatening we would regard that as. And that's exactly what we did in Ukraine. The question is, though, this has nothing to do with the national security of the American people. No American is threatened by who governs Ukraine. What they're threatened by is what the United States is doing in Ukraine, including this most recent act. Well, they keep telling you AI is going to make the world a better place. That may be true, but you have to ask better for whom? Better for your health insurance company, which could use it to calculate exactly how much to raise your premiums based on your WebMD search history?
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Starting point is 00:25:00 So, I find it so terrifying. I'm not, no'm overstating that. I mean, we're on the brink of a global war. Can I just say one thing about that? Don't you think, aren't you kind of amazed by how impervious and dismissive media and political elites are of the prospect of nuclear war? Well, it's unimaginable. And yes, and I mean, it's a source of ongoing frustration. Yeah, and I will say the one thing that Trump has said repeatedly over the past,
Starting point is 00:25:37 certainly since he left the presidency, four years, that he's received no credit for and should get enormous credit for is that nuclear war is the worst thing. He was, of course, been briefed on it as the person who controlled the launch codes. He knows what it means. And anyone who spends five minutes looking into what a nuclear exchange would actually,
Starting point is 00:25:56 you know, do is terrified of it. But only Trump seems worried about it. I don't understand why. Yeah, I've said this, I've talked about this so many times, and I think it goes back to when Trump was president in the early stages of presidency. Every time Trump talks about the prospect of nuclear war, he knows that he's limited in what everything he can divulge, but he's so clearly trying to signal, and he often says it,
Starting point is 00:26:23 these weapons are of a different universe than even the ones we dropped on that's correct and he's obviously as you said understands and been briefed on but you see these morons at the atlantic council or aei or hud center or these this cluster of the dumbest people in the world all implicated in the iraq disaster say well you know maybe tactical nukes are fine. That's like such next level crazy. Like that's crazier than any schizophrenic sitting next to you on a public subway. Well, yeah. I mean, it's crazy.
Starting point is 00:26:51 We constantly call like RFK Jr. They call him crazy. They call, you know, Tulsi Gabbard or Matt Gaetz crazy, whoever. These people who have been in power, who have been generating American orthodoxy, especially on foreign policy, are the most insane people on the planet. It's because the United States has been the most powerful country in the world. No one could constrain it. No one could stand up to it. And as is true with everything, that level of unconstrained power corrupts people. And these people have been in control of this power for
Starting point is 00:27:21 decades, passed on one to another through this dogma that gets increasingly out of touch and detached from reality. And the, and, and... Megalomaniacal. Absolutely, exactly. I mean, at least during the Cold War, I'm not saying it was a good thing, but the Soviet Union and the United States
Starting point is 00:27:36 were of equal power. They were competing with one another. They were both very constrained in what they were. They both were petrified of a nuclear war. We almost came to nuclear apocalypse at least twice, especially in the Cuban Missile Crisis through misperception and miscommunication when a Russian commander of a submarine thought incorrectly that they were using nuclear weapons against the submarine and against Cuba and almost launched the nuclear weapons at the sub. Came about five minutes away from doing so until someone intervened on that sub and said, I don't think
Starting point is 00:28:02 that this is actually an attack. It's very possible. We've come to the brink of it before. It probably is the single greatest threat to the survival of the species. Not probably. Definitely is the use of nuclear weapons. Every time Trump talks about it, you can see the fear that he has he's trying to convey to others. Every time.
Starting point is 00:28:24 And I mean, Tuckerucker i'm amazed this is like impeachment level stuff for joe biden on his way out of the door to involve the u.s directly in a war for the first time we've been very involved in other ways they should impeach him why doesn't the speaker of the house there's a constitutional limitation on the president's ability to involve the u.s in a war without congressional authorization which is exactly what has happened through the use of these missiles which as i said we need to help direct and the question is yeah why the answer though is is that the vast majority of the republican caucus in the house and in the senate supports what joe biden is, thinks he should have done this a year ago. And there's probably not a lot of anger in the House and Senate over this, except the question that it's called lame duck for a reason. A lame duck is supposed to be a duck that really doesn't do
Starting point is 00:29:16 much, can't do much, doesn't move much. It's by design pretty limited. It's like this transition period. Yeah, he's floating in the water because he's been shot. Yeah, exactly. His legs are broken. And so he's lame. This is not a lame duck decision. And it's not like there was any emergency to it. It wasn't, there was no emergency to it. They just wanted to escalate it because they thought Trump wouldn't. And so they did. It puts us in this remarkable moment where the only adult is vladimir putin this person we've been told is hitler and deranged crazy dying of nine different kinds of cancer can't be trusted like the only reason we're not i mean we're all relying on his restraint that's just a fact right now how weird is that well i mean first of all this is this is right now. How weird is that? Well, I mean, first of all,
Starting point is 00:30:05 this is what amazes me, is that sometimes propaganda, and propaganda is, you have to respect it. It's a very potent field of human knowledge that has been refined over many decades using every field of discipline, social sciences and psychology and psychiatry.
Starting point is 00:30:21 I mean, propaganda is not just some, you know, intuitive thing that people do. It's not just an argument that you make. Yeah, and it's very powerful. And we love to talk about how propagandized the Russians are and the Chinese are and how there's no dissent allowed. You know, George Orwell in the preface to Animal Farm, wrote—actually, it's 1984—wrote an essay where he was essentially saying that overt totalitarianism of the kind that was taking place in the Soviet Union is repressive, but in reality, the flow of information is heavily controlled. Because at least when, you know, the guys dressed in black with weapons come and take you and put you in a gulag for criticizing the government, everybody understands the level of oppression.
Starting point is 00:31:14 It often generates a backlash. But when you combine repression with the illusion of freedom, that's what's incredibly effective. And that's what we have. And you dull people with an abundant consumer economy. Like, you know, here are your edibles, here's your Netflix, calm down. Yeah. And you can basically get them to do anything. Yeah, and at the same time, there has been a concerted effort to control what was supposed to be the one innovation that was going to break the centralized control of information, which is the internet.
Starting point is 00:31:41 That's why there's so much attention and energy. It's why it's the number one priority of Western power centers to control the internet, because it's the one threat to their ability to maintain this propagandistic control. You know, I still can't believe this, that it's not talked about as much, but right after Russia invaded Ukraine and Western governments decided they wanted full-on support for Ukraine and this very simple-minded narrative that they fed their public. After they started the war, when the Biden administration started, that's my view of it.
Starting point is 00:32:10 They knew that Russia would invade if they publicly pushed Zelensky to join NATO. So they did that. Kamala Harris did it and Russia did it. My view is they started this war. And threat talking openly about expanding NATO to Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:32:21 You can find memos from the highest levels of the U.S. government saying, if you do that, it's not just Putin. It's every political faction in Russia that will see it as a war and they'll annex Crimea and invade eastern Ukraine. Of course the American government knew that. You can show documents where it says that. The minute that war started, in earnest, with the Russian army invading, one of the very first steps they took legislatively was to ban the platforming, to criminalize the platforming of Russian media. Like, RT and Sputnik, they made it a crime, and YouTube immediately pulled it off because they didn't want their citizens hearing any information from the Russian perspective perspective i mean you can hate russia you can think russia is evil you can think whatever
Starting point is 00:33:08 you want about russia but why wouldn't you want to hear from the other side you know the new york times used to publish all the time like the speeches of brezhnev of course and uh yuri andropov and and khrushchev and you could read what what the Russians would say. They would come to the United States. They would speak openly. Now it's, it's practically criminalized. Putin's speech in February, 2022 to, to his country nationally televised there right before the invasion was
Starting point is 00:33:39 absolutely just a remarkable speech, which I, by the way, never got around to even looking at before I got to Moscow. And I was like, I can interview Putin. I think you should watch that speech. I'd read about it, never watched it. And I think, which I, by the way, never got around to even looking at before I got to Moscow. And I was like, I'll interview Putin. I think I should watch that speech. I'd read about it. Never watched it. And I think, I mean, you can agree or disagree. You can hate Putin. I mean, it's totally fine. I don't care how people feel about Putin, but most Americans had no idea his
Starting point is 00:33:58 thinking in invading Ukraine. Like no idea. Why wouldn't people want to know? It was just the cartoon. He's an evil Hitlerian figure who wants to reconquest all of Europe the way Hitler did. Putin has been in office for 25 years. He has gone through six different American presidents, every single one of them, until you were not allowed to say it anymore, always said, you meet with Putin, he's incredibly shrewd, he's incredibly smart, you can trust Putin. If you do a deal with Putin, you can count on the fact that he will adhere to it. Other heads of state still feel that way and say that. Yeah. Well, American presidents said it all the time, starting with Bill Clinton, that he's rational, that he acts in his self-interest, that he's calculating in terms of, and careful. And then suddenly, this is what amazes me propagandistically
Starting point is 00:34:45 is that overnight, everybody was forced to say that Putin invaded Ukraine simply because suddenly he became this psychotic, evil Hitler type figure who just wanted out of the blue. They all believed it though. A lot of them, the people who screamed at me at airports for being pro-Putin, which of course I'm not, I've never been pro-Putin. I don't have strong feelings either way, but they really had been convinced not just by MSNBC and CNN, but by the entire oligarch-controlled internet, that, like, anyone who talked about Putin or raised questions about the war was, like, for Putin. Like, that worked. Propaganda worked. No, talk of propaganda worked, especially nationalistic propaganda, because human beings evolved over thousands of years to be tribal.
Starting point is 00:35:26 Like, we want to feel part of our group. We take pride in our group. Like, it's why if you're born in America, you say, I'm an American. This is my country. This is what I'm loyal to. It comes from these tribalistic instincts, right? It makes sense because we evolved for thousands of years where if you got expelled from your tribe, you would die. You needed a tribe in order to survive.
Starting point is 00:35:44 So we're tribalistic animals. So if you appeal to people's tribalism and say, we're the good guys, we're the innocent victims, our enemy are the bad guys, they're evil, that appeals to people's most visceral instincts. And the problem, of course, is the countervailing punishment, which is the minute you question it. You know, I had from the beginning I had on my show, you know, people like John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt and Jeffrey Sachs. And they were all saying from the beginning, there's no possibility that Ukraine can win this war as NATO has defined it, which means the expulsion of every Russian troop from every Ukrainian soil, just simply on size grounds alone, just saying just basic understanding of history. Every one of them, I'm sure I think it happened to you too. I know what happened to me. We're put on these official lists issued by the Ukrainian government of being pro Russian
Starting point is 00:36:37 propagandist everywhere you went, you get accused of being a Russian propagandist or some sort of agent of the Kremlin simply by questioning our own government's propagandistic views or simply trying to understand things from the Russian perspective. by this extraordinary assault on our soil, designed obviously to impose as much suffering and killing as possible was, obviously they asked like, why do they want to do that to us? Why would people hate us so much that they would devise a scheme as complex and deadly as hijacking planes, passenger planes with box cutters
Starting point is 00:37:21 and flying them into major American buildings filled with people. Why would they hate us that much? And the government had to give an answer to that question because people obviously wanted to know the answer. And that was when David Frum and Cheney and all the people said, they hate us for our freedoms. They just can't stand the fact that women are allowed to wear bikinis on the beach and
Starting point is 00:37:41 that we have a Congress. And it's like, no one ever thought, well, there's like dozens of countries around the world where women get to wear bikinis and have Congresses like in Japan and Korea and all throughout Latin America and like Scandinavia. Why aren't they attacking those places? And then Bin Laden wrote a letter in 2002 to the American people saying,
Starting point is 00:38:00 here's why there's so much animosity toward the United States. And there was, of course, some appeal to religion in it. I made the mistake of reading part of that letter on the air at cnn at the time not to make a kind of point but just because super interesting you know and 9-11 changed everyone's life very much including mine lost a friend that day like just like every american who was an adult on 9-11 it was like you felt like it was an event that you participated in or it affected you so i feel like i had every right to read that letter like hey this is he he's now saying why he did it i almost got pulled off the air for doing that oh i know well i just want i just have to forget
Starting point is 00:38:35 i i not only doesn't that surprise me a lot of people have forgotten that this happens but it's actually quite extraordinary after 9-11 obviously osama bin laden was one of the most important people in the world he just perpetrated the worst attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor. And a lot of people wanted to interview him or play clips of interviews. and said to them, you should not and cannot show, interview Osama bin Laden or show any interviews with him. And they invented this excuse as to why, which is that he might put some sort of code in his interviews that signal to sleeper cells. Sleeper cells! Like he might wiggle his ear like Carol Burnett did,
Starting point is 00:39:20 or raise his eyebrows three times, or blank in some worse code in a certain way, and the networks all obeyed. And the most amazing thing was this letter, which you can go read, where he says exactly why all the different ways the United States has brought violence to that region, has interfered in that region. Even like our foreign policy is the bottom line. Yeah, well, we've been bombing that region and interfering in them, opposing dictatorships on those people for decades, specifically to suppress the things they believe in. We don't want popular opinion prevailing democratically in the Middle East because we don't perceive it in our interest. So we've been imposing dictators on them,
Starting point is 00:39:56 secular dictators. We've been bombing them. We've been sanctioning them. We've been invading them. Of course, we support Israel, which in that region, people view as this grave assault on the rights of Palestinians. But we put bases in Saudi Arabia, which is the most sacred soil to that religion. We imposed a blockade and sanction regime on Iraq, which Madeleine Albright admitted killed 500,000 children, but nonetheless said it was worth it. So we've been so active in that region, and that's the reason they wanted to attack back. That's the reason al-Qaeda had so much support. But they banned Osama bin Laden from being heard, just like the EU banned Russian state media from being heard, because of course you don't want Americans being exposed to this. And then the
Starting point is 00:40:38 amazing thing is, that letter, which really didn't get much attention at the time, the only place it existed on the internet was on the Guardian's website. And somehow, you know, 22-year-olds on TikTok found that letter, and they started talking about it. And they were like, oh my God, I was never told this before. He didn't attack us because he hates us for our freedom. He says specifically here why they're attacking us. And in other words, they were reading a historical document and discussing it, things that you would want a free citizenry to do. But the fear that they were allowed to not only read, but talk about the document with one another was so intense that
Starting point is 00:41:16 in 48 hours, they forced TikTok to ban every discussion of that letter, to remove the hashtags to find it, to take down any posts or accounts that were talking about it. And then The Guardian, a news outlet, removed that letter, which had been there for 20 years, which was of obvious historical and journalistic importance. They removed it from their website because they were too frightened that people were going to be able to read it. Why? Because it prevents the propagandistic narrative from being unchallenged.
Starting point is 00:41:44 And that's the same with Russia and Ukraine. That shows you how we think we're so free. We hear so much dissent because you have a Republican and Democrat bickering on a cable show about trivial things. You're like, oh, look, we have free debates, open debates. They don't get to have that in Russia and China. But the minute there's information that actually threatens the government that they fear people understanding, they clamp down on it and suppress it. And that's what they did there. You wonder why we put up with that.
Starting point is 00:42:08 You wonder why we put up with a government that continues to keep secret files about 9-11. It's been 23 years. What could possibly be the justification for not telling me information that I own and have a right to see, which is what the hell was that? And they constantly lecturing-
Starting point is 00:42:24 Even the JFK files. Well, especially the JFK file, but much more immediate. It was 23 years ago, but I mean, we're both adults. We remember it very well. Yeah, I lived in Manhattan. I mean, it was like,
Starting point is 00:42:33 I was traumatized by that. It was a horrible event. Exactly. And then a lot happened. Our country changed radically because of it. To this day, the Patriot Act exists. Well, it's never been the same country. And in some ways, you know, it was much more successful in its aims than I even want to admit to myself because it's so sad to see what it did to this country.
Starting point is 00:42:51 But here's the point. They're constantly, they, meaning the media and the intel agencies which work together, as you know, are constantly attacking other people for being conspiracy theorists and crazy and discrediting the memory of the 9-11 victims, et cetera, by coming up with explanations that are not authorized. Okay. Then why don't you just tell us what actually happened? Why not just declassify it? What,
Starting point is 00:43:12 I don't know, what's the answer? It's going to jeopardize sources and methods. That's, that's not true. And we all know that. And you know that this, the importance of protecting those secrets,
Starting point is 00:43:21 keeping those documents that might show the truth, not just about 9-11, but JFK. That's the most important thing. In fact, the whole point of the second impeachment trial, which never made any sense, why would you bring an impeachment trial against the president on his way out the office, was because they were petrified
Starting point is 00:43:38 that Trump was going to do certain things in that transition, like pardon Edward Snowden and Julian Assange, which he came very close to doing, but especially fulfill his promise to declassify things like the JFK files and other national security files that had been kept hidden with no justification from the American public, even though it happened decades ago, 9-11, JFK. And they told him, if you do that, all the Senate Republicans are going to vote to impeach you. You're going to be convicted and ineligible to run ever again. That was the sword of democles they held over his head
Starting point is 00:44:08 precisely to prevent him from bringing transparency to the government and allowing the american people to see what they ought to have a right to know if your greatest fear is transparency then you're a criminal i mean that's basically proof i can't think of a better indicator of behavior than the crazed desire to keep that behavior secret, right? I want to just say something about that, which is if you think about what a democracy is supposed to be, like what an ideal free society is, whatever you call that, it's supposed to be that everything that public officials do in the name of the public power is supposed to be known to the public, with very few exceptions, right? Like if there's a war and they're planning troop movements, they can keep that secret. Yeah, Normandy a week before. Right.
Starting point is 00:44:53 They don't have to tell everyone that they're going to do that. But outside of those very rare exceptions, we're supposed to know everything about what they do. Of course. Because they're doing it in our name. They're our employees. Yeah, and they're supposed to be accountable to us, but they can't be if we don't know what they're doing. Conversely, they're not supposed to know anything about what private citizens
Starting point is 00:45:10 do. They're not supposed to track us or eavesdrop on us or keep dossiers on us or know where we are or where we're going. Unless, again, very rare circumstances. We're a criminal. There's probable cause to spy on us because they've convinced the court, as the Constitution requires, that there's probable cause to believe.
Starting point is 00:45:27 But except in those rare circumstances, that's why they're called public officials and we're called private citizens. We're supposed to have privacy. They're not. They're supposed to have transparency. Our society is completely reversed. If you're a private citizen, the government knows everything about you. They keep all kinds of data on you. That was the Snowden reporting, obviously.
Starting point is 00:45:43 That's what Edward Snowden revealed was the extent to which we were being surveilled by our own government. Conversely, we know almost nothing about what the government... You know, when I got the Edward Snowden archive, which was hundreds of thousands, if not more, of top secret documents from the NSA, obviously, what was surprising is what was in them and what they revealed. But what even more surprising to me was that the documents documents so many of these documents most of these documents that were marked top secret had no interesting information in them at all like they just reflexively put like how to get a parking
Starting point is 00:46:15 credential how to ask your supervisor for a vacation these were top secret because everything the government does reflexively is kept secret from the public you have no right so that's the default you have no right right exactly so everything is inversed we the government does reflexively is kept secret from the public. Of course, you have no right to know. That's the default. You have no right to know. Right, exactly. So everything is inversed. The government knows everything about what we do, and we know nothing about what they do. I'm Tucker Carlson for ALP. Now, as you know, the FDA requires us to warn you.
Starting point is 00:46:36 Well, I'll just read you the warning. Quote, warning, this product contains nicotine. Nicotine is an addictive chemical. End quote. We're required to tell you that by the federal government. But we don't shy away from that. It's addictive. And there's an upside to it.
Starting point is 00:46:49 Yes, nicotine is an addictive chemical. That is true. There are a lot of things in life you forget. Your car keys, your wallet. One thing you're never going to forget is Alp. Because nicotine is an addictive chemical. You may forget to put your shoes on in the morning. You may forget to put your shoes on in the morning. You may forget to kiss your wife on the way out.
Starting point is 00:47:07 You may come home and not remember your own dog's name. But one thing you're not going to forget is your ALP. Why? Because you're addicted to it. Because your body will tell you, hey, better bring your ALP with you. And you will. I do. I'm never anywhere without my ALP.
Starting point is 00:47:23 It's by the side of my bed when I go to sleep. It's there when I wake up in the morning. It's in the front pocket of my pants as I head out into the world. Alp is always with me. It's on the desk as I do interviews. Everywhere I am, Alp is because it's an addictive chemical. That's exactly right. And we're not afraid of that. We're not ashamed of it. It's addictive in the same way that air, water, and sex are addictive. They're so great and you want to do them every day. Thankfully, it's easy to have the Alp with you at all times. Just go to our website, alppouch.com. It'd never be without it.
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Starting point is 00:49:11 to 30% off. It's built on core values, integrity, results, no BS, beam. We strongly recommend it. Remember in 2020 when CNN told you the George Floyd riots were mostly peaceful, even as flames rose in the background? It was ridiculous, but it was also a metaphor for the way our leaders run this country. They're constantly telling you, everything is fine. Everything is fine. Don't worry. Everything's under control. Nothing to see here.
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Starting point is 00:51:01 Save access to the data on those sites. And the reason that they do, and I think the dating sites too, and the reason that they do and i think the dating sites too and the reason that they do of course is blackmail and once you realize that once you realize that like the most embarrassing features of your personal life are known um by people who want to control you then you're you're controlled and you look at the behavior of some of these people who i know personally and particularly in the congress you're like why are you doing that? You don't agree with that. And you're out there doing it anyway.
Starting point is 00:51:28 We always imagine that it's just donors. They're getting paid to do that. I think it's more than donors. I've seen politicians turn down donors before. I've watched it. You know, I don't believe I'm not doing that. A lot of people have very safe seats. Not everybody is desperate for donors.
Starting point is 00:51:41 Exactly. Can I just give you an example? So it's not just the carrot. There's a stick in there. I'm not saying this happened here. I'm not saying that at all. I have no basis for saying it, but I had Mike Johnson on my show
Starting point is 00:51:53 about two months before, unexpectedly, he became the speaker when he just became like the ninth compromised. You had Mike Johnson on your show? Yeah, I interviewed Mike Johnson. And the reason I interviewed Mike Johnson
Starting point is 00:52:04 was because... He would not go on your show? Yeah, I interviewed Mike Johnson. And the reason I interviewed Mike Johnson was because— He would not go on your show now. Oh, no. This is why. This is so interesting. I didn't know that. This is why. So, yeah, just by chance, I interviewed Mike Johnson.
Starting point is 00:52:14 The reason was was because Christopher Wray went before a committee on which he sat in the house and mike johnson grilled him about fbi spying about the involvement of the intelligence communities in our politics about the attempt to censor the internet coming from the intel agencies and he did it with this great kind of intellect but also this very effective demeanor and i could just tell that he passionately, felt passionately about these issues. And then I started following more and more of what he was doing. And he was almost single-mindedly focused on spying abuses, curbing spying power,
Starting point is 00:52:52 curbing censorship. You're blowing my mind. And so we asked him, I said, you know, can you call my show? And he's like, yeah, I'm a big fan of Glenn's. I think the work that he's doing great. Mike Johnson from Louisiana? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:01 And he came on my show. No, go, you can go watch the interview. I'm hard to shock. You are shocking me. I he came on my show. Are you making this up? No, go. You can go watch the interview. I'm hard to shock you or shocking me. I had him on my show. And after this interview, I was like, I love him. One of the reasons, one of the things we spent the most amount of time on was Pfizer reform and the need for Pfizer reform. Shut up. Come on.
Starting point is 00:53:18 Come on, Glenn. And, Tucker, I'm telling you, FISA reform was coming up in about three months where they had to extend the FISA law that allows the FBI, the CIA to spy on American citizens, the NSA, without really any reforms. And he was determined. It was like his big issue. That's why he was on my show. That's why he liked what my work was.
Starting point is 00:53:37 He was like, we cannot allow this FISA law to be renewed. It is a grave threat to American democracy. At the very least, we need massive fundamental reforms. I'm totally blown away. And I was like, oh my God. He's very smart. He's like a smart lawyer. He's very informed about these issues. I walked away super impressed. That is what we spent
Starting point is 00:53:55 most of our time on. But also just the... Will you put these clips on the internet? The whole show is on the internet. No, I know, but will you just post these on social media? Because you're shocking me. I did, but I'll do it again because Mike Johnson become a speaker about two months later. I don't mean four years later or two years later, about two months after that, three months at the most, right when the FISA law is coming up. And I was like, oh, it's so great. He was made speaker. There's no way this FISA law is getting passed. Not only did Mike Johnson say, I'm going to allow the FISA renewal to come to the floor
Starting point is 00:54:26 with no reforms, not allowing any reforms. He himself said, it is urgent that we renew FISA without any reforms. This is a crucial, critical tool for our intelligence agencies. And I put that clip everywhere when that happened, showing where just two months earlier- Did you butt them together? Yeah, of course. I was attacking the shit out of Mike Johnson. And then somebody finally asked him, like, but you've been saying all along for years, for the last two years,
Starting point is 00:54:52 that you vehemently oppose this. And suddenly now you're for it? What changed your mind? And he was like, yeah, well, when you're a speaker, you get access to a lot of things. And I was taken to this secret room in the CIA and they showed me these very important things
Starting point is 00:55:04 and these sensitive documents about how important these powers are and how devastating it would be if we put any reforms on them. And so I realized that it was wrong when I had believed. And now I believe this law has to be passed with no reforms. You don't have smart people like that. He was already in Congress. He had access to classified information, getting briefings, secret briefings. You don't have people that invested in position who with one meeting, I can see someone really dumb being affected by that. Like, oh, these guys with big medals on their chest take you to like a super secret room inside the CIA, like with all these locks and codes and things on the wall. And you're all impressed. You're like, oh my God, I can't challenge this. He's a very smart guy. I don't believe he changes his mind.
Starting point is 00:55:44 So the question is, why did he? I don't know. I really don't believe he changes mind so the question is why did he i don't know i really don't but i know that the person that was on my show two months earlier no longer exists wow i i can honestly say that's one of the most shocking things i've heard in a long time because i i didn't um i i should also echo what everyone else who's ever met him will say which is nice guy you know know, not a mean man or anything like that. No, great guy. Like, you know, he adopted kids. Totally.
Starting point is 00:56:09 Everything he says about decency, respect for everybody. I totally, I was even saying today that he was, you know, with the whole thing about the question of whether this new trans lawmaker was going to use the bathrooms. He was asked about it. He was just like emphasizing the need for respect and decency and civility, if you know things yes and i and i believe he believes that like i believe he is in connection with the like best parts of christianity and takes them seriously and conducts himself that way and always has nothing against mike johnson personally quite the contrary but to watch that happen was i mean as as cynical as i am i don't even know how to respond because I didn't. I have interviewed Mike Johnson over the years, but he was like some guy from Louisiana or whatever.
Starting point is 00:56:49 I wasn't paying close attention. And it was only after he became speaker on the FISA question and on the question of funding Ukraine. That was the other thing. Go on. I talked about that, too. He wasn't at all like, you know, say like Matt Gaetz type or, you know, Tom Massey, like we can't fund that war. He wasn't saying that. He was like we can't let Russia win, but he was still pretty skeptical. But it was really on these questions of FISA and the CIA and the FBI and spying powers and internet censorship powers where he was
Starting point is 00:57:26 passionate and vehement. That's why I had him on. You're making me hurt my arms go up because I agree. Look, I'm not alleging anything because I don't know anything. I didn't even know that he was that invested on precisely the opposite side, but he's made all these things possible. And, you know, I had a conversation with him off camera so i probably shouldn't be too detailed about it but he said something that i thought was like not only nonsensical but like insane and crazy and just to make any it was internally incoherent and he's not stupid as you said and i and i got upset and i was like that doesn't make any sense at all and um and he just kind of said no it does does make sense. It was like there was no answer.
Starting point is 00:58:06 It was just like, wow, this is a guy. I saw this with Obama, too. You have to, like, especially for people who are kind of new to power, right, like not Nancy Pelosi or Joe Biden or Mitch McConnell. People have been in these positions for decades. Mike Johnson went from a very backbench member of Congress to the third in line who controls the House of Representatives. You can only imagine the intense, just unlimited amount of pressure that comes from multiple directions to force him to align himself with whatever the agenda is of the people who rule Washington. Same thing happened with Obama.
Starting point is 00:58:47 I believed Obama when he talked for two years when running for president about how he's a constitutional law professor, how he believes so much in the core rights of the constitution, like habeas corpus, the right to contest your imprisonment, to have evidence presented against you, but places like Guantanamo and elsewhere, how he wanted to uproot the worst abuses
Starting point is 00:59:02 of the Bush-Shaney war on terror. Then he gets into office and not only doesn't uproot them, but he starts extending them because again, these generals come, including the ones he likes who went to Princeton, like David Petraeus, you know, the ones who dazzle Obama and give him secret briefings about all the blood that's going to be on his hands. If he does any of the changes he spent two years promising, and then suddenly on a dime, he switches. And there's a lot of other pressure you can imagine as well, like the stick, as you said. And anyone who thinks that this is, that our intelligence agencies are above these kinds of things, the naivete required to believe that is- Well, they're not above.
Starting point is 00:59:36 Of course, they've done it. This is their currency. It's just amazing having spent, you know, all this time in Washington with all these people I have just – who I know. And by the way, in some cases, like Mike Johnson, I like. You can't really reach another conclusion other than there's something very heavy-duty going on behind the scenes, like really profound going on. And I just don't know why no one has ever emerged from the system to say what it is. Is there not one – there are very few courageous people. You're one of them, but there just aren't many in this world. Well, I mean.
Starting point is 01:00:09 Why doesn't someone just call these people out? One of the things that made Trump so threatening and that continues to make him so threatening is that in a lot of ways, he was pulling the curtain open. He is that guy. It's the fourth walls coming down. Yeah. I mean, you know, I remember he just said openly, yeah, like as a billionaire, as a businessman, I just gave a candidate, you know, $50,000 and then they would automatically accept my call and do whatever I told them to do.
Starting point is 01:00:37 Who says that in the top level of politics? Like, hey, I'm running for president. I want you to know, here's how the system works. You give a lot of money to some place that these lawmakers tell you to donate money to, and then they do whatever you want. They do your bidding. When in that 2016 debate, when he started rallying against the evil and the stupidity of the Iraq war, because his principal opponent at the time was Jeb Bush, who was backed by the establishment, and the audience started booing, as though America was rising up in defense of the Bush family. He was like, oh, these seats here,
Starting point is 01:01:11 these are all the big Republican donors. That's the only people who are booing me because they're supporting Jeb Bush. If you've ever been to a debate, as I know you have, that's exactly how it is. Both parties, they put their big donors, the partisans right behind where their audience hears only their reaction. So Trump constantly was sort of doing that.
Starting point is 01:01:32 Here's how things really work. And then once he started getting targeted by these agencies, by the CIA, the FBI, starting with Russiagate, but the Steele dossier, what Jim Comey did, linking that to the media, and then all those investigations. That's why he started saying these intelligence agencies are corrupted to their core. They're filled with people who have their own politicized agenda. They were supposed to have an elected leader, democratically elected leader, who supervises these branches and these agencies and the executive branch, and their duty is to carry out his policies. But they don't. They subverted his policies. They sabotaged them because they didn't agree with them. They were like their own branch of government, completely powerful. And he's the first one,
Starting point is 01:02:12 I guess, since Dwight Eisenhower, who tried to warn of this on his way out after spending eight years. And obviously, the intelligence community and military industrial complex was way smaller when Dwight Eisenhower tried to warn of how much of a threat it was to democracy in his farewell address. It was before Vietnam, before the real buildup of the Cold War, obviously before 9-11. They're sprawling now. They're almost impossible to even analyze or quantify. And Trump is the only one who's trying to say these institutions are radically corrupted.
Starting point is 01:02:42 At their root, they're rotted. And that's why he's trying to choose people. You know, he picks some like comfortable institutionalists and status quo perpetuators like Marco Rubio, Elise Stefanik, John Ratcliffe, people like that just to give Washington a sense of, okay, there's some people here we're good with. But then the people that he picked who share his view that these institutions require radical overhaul. They're just undemocratic, unaccountable, corrupt. Those are the ones they're trying to destroy. Well, there's Tulsi, there's Matt Gaetz, there's RFK Jr., and a little bit to some extent Pete Hegseth.
Starting point is 01:03:17 I mean, he's not really ideologically unaligned, but the problem is that he doesn't come from the Pentagon bureaucracy. That's what they care about most. That's a trillion dollar agency. You know how many wheels that greases in Raytheon and Boeing and General Dynamics? That's what they care about most, is making sure that money goes where it's supposed to go. That's why they're concerned about him. But the people who
Starting point is 01:03:38 aren't the ones that Kamal could have picked easily are the ones who they're most out to destroy because that's what these permanent power factions are, is they are their own government and they wield the most power. And they have, sure, considered Mike Johnson, no threat at all. Let's take him and do what we have to do. But you wonder, like, just, I don't know. I mean, look, these guys are under pressure that, you know, we probably can't imagine.
Starting point is 01:04:06 You know, if somebody knew the thing you were most embarrassed about that would destroy your life and make your kids not like you or whatever. I'm not speaking of Johnson specifically, but I know a couple of people who I know are compromised in the U.S. government. And I sort of feel sad for them because how'd you like to be in that position? But it does. All it would take is one brave man to give a press conference. You know, there was actually a guy, um, Cokie Roberts's father, Hale Boggs, who stood up in Congress. He was this majority leader in about 1970. He was on the Warren commission and he didn't buy the, did not buy the conclusions at all. And he told other people that he was from Louisiana and he stood up and made some noises about on the, on the floor of the house about how the CIA was, you know,
Starting point is 01:04:49 doing things they were not supposed to do in domestic politics and had unchecked power, et cetera. And he was immediately denounced as mentally ill, probably an alcoholic. And then he disappeared in a plane crash with baggage in 1972 in Alaska. The plane was never seen again. So I'm like, I'm not saying that he was murdered for that, though. You know, I would not at all be surprised if he was. But why is he the last guy to say anything like that? Well, because he died in a plane crash and was declared mentally ill. Maybe.
Starting point is 01:05:16 No, but, I mean, this is the thing is, you know, I remember doing this Snowden reporting when there was all this controversy about government spying on people. And the big reaction that I got that had been cultivated for a long time, not just by the government, but by Facebook. Mark Zuckerberg famously said privacy is an archaic value or whatever. Don't worry about privacy anymore. People are saying, I don't have anything to hide. I'm not a terrorist. I'm not a pedophile. I don't care what my government is spying on me.
Starting point is 01:06:06 And I would always say, everybody has things to hide. There are things that you don't tell anybody. There are things you only tell your psychiatrist, only your spouse, only your best friend, things that you don't want any other people to know that you're petrified. If everybody knew about you, we are private. We're social animals. We need connection to society and other people, but we also crave privacy. Without privacy, we go insane. And there's no freedom without privacy. None, because that's where dissent and creativity and exploration and rejection of societal mores, that's where it resides in the private realm. Without that, if you're just being surveilled and watched all the time, that breeds conformity. And so everybody needs privacy. Everybody values it. Everybody has something to hide. And the ability to surveil people, to know everything about, I think what actually happens is we're so inculcated from birth to have this very
Starting point is 01:06:39 idealistic image of our country and our government. And in some ways it's valid. Like I think I revere the constitution. You know, I went to school to study it and that I went to practice it. Like I believe in its values. Like I think it's a genius document. I do too. Comes from the enlightenment. Like,
Starting point is 01:06:55 I mean, just a very like intellectually based, philosophically based idea of how it was constructed, like very carefully. And there are things very good about the United States. But if you think that the most powerful country on the planet the richest and most powerful country arguably ever to exist doesn't have at its core in terms of the people who run it people who are willing to do
Starting point is 01:07:18 anything to preserve their power to augment their power again it just takes a kind of naivete that's almost impossible to fathom. People risk death every single day in this country to rob liquor stores for $300. So you can't tell me that control of a trillion-dollar federal agency or of a multi-trillion-dollar government with vast nuclear arsenal— Or just the power to decide who gets bombed, where wars start. That's what I'm saying. The most powerful institution in human history doesn't have sinister things going on. What would people do to control that?
Starting point is 01:07:51 No, the stakes are very high. And I think the closer you are to it, the more often you forget that. You're like, oh, it's just secretary of whatever. Who cares? Well, there's, you know, people care. Understandably, people will do anything for power and money. Wow, that's so distressing. Did you, in your reporting, and I always forget that, you know, you were behind the Snowden thing, and thank you for that. What a wonderful guy he is. But did you ever get any hint of what the pressure is that's applied to politicians to comply and obey? Yeah. Well, first of all, I do think, like we were just talking about,
Starting point is 01:08:30 like people who, why don't people stand up? Like Edward Snowden is a perfect example of somebody who believed the mythology of the government, believed in, you know, he went to enlist in order to fight in Iraq. He broke both of his legs. He couldn't join the military, so he went to work for the CIA and the NSA because he really believed in the, and then what he saw was so horrifying, was so corrupting, was so deceitful that he risked his life and his liberty, which to this day he's deprived of, to inform everybody about what was going on by stealing under their nose documents that he could give to reporters so that reporters could tell the world what was happening. That is kind of an example of that level of courage of somebody saying, here's what's going on. What Snowden gave us was a tiny picture of what the NSA does. So obviously, if there had been in their specific blackmail sort of documents about how they were spying on particular politicians,
Starting point is 01:09:24 that's something we would have, you know, reported on very aggressively and very early on. So I can't say I saw that. But what I did see is all sorts of incidents of people at the NSA abusing their authority to spy on people who they had no right to be spying on, including sometimes, you know, just things as trivial as like ex-girlfriends or family members. But also when in other countries they wanted to impede or harm somebody, they spied on those people all the time and use that information in part to gain power over them. So, of course, how can you expect human beings to resist that level of power when it's all operating in the dark? Strong families are built on strong foundations, and it all begins with what you bring into your home.
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Starting point is 01:12:14 and constantly expands its authorities and powers because there's no political gain. And its budgets, which are classified. And its budgets, which nobody, you know, that was one of the things we actually were able to see was the black book of the intelligence budget. And we were putting on the things that, you know, we thought were newsworthy about that. There's zero transparency to any of this. There's no oversight. You technically have like oversight in Congress and the Senate, the Senate Intelligence Committees, these select committees that were created after the Church Commission found all these, you know, what the Church Commission found just by itself, you know, CIA developments of medications to try and like, you know, make people lose control of
Starting point is 01:12:55 their brains or inject people with diseases, like really sinister, dark stuff that the CIA was doing that nobody knew about, not even the president. They just did it on their own. It was a discovery of a secret government inside the government. So the idea was, well, we need at least some oversight. This oversight, they tell nothing to these committees. The people who get put on those committees are people who are the ones who most support these intelligence communities. It was run in the Senate for years by Dianne Feinstein. Her husband was a military contractor. She was embedded in these agencies. She defended everything that they did. The one time she questioned them, which was when she wanted to investigate the use of torture in the CIA, John Brennan, CIA,
Starting point is 01:13:37 spied on Dianne Feinstein and on her entire staff. He got caught doing it. He lied and said he didn't. He finally admitted that it was done. He apologized and there were no repercussions. Like, let's buy guns. Go Google John Brennan spying on Dianne Feinstein. I'll never forget it. And when that story first broke, it was years ago, at least 10 years. He was CIA director under Obama. And I remember thinking, I don't think the CIA would ever dare spy on the select committee, on the Senate Oversight Committee of the CIA, of the intel community. I mean, I can't imagine they would have the balls to do something like that. That's insane.
Starting point is 01:14:12 But I had no idea. And they did it on somebody who was one of their most, their blindest loyalists. The one time she stepped a little bit out of line because she wanted to investigate exactly what happened in the torture program. So at that point, like, why don't you, why have people put up with that? I mean, I guess Frank Church did die of incredibly fast acting cancer. So maybe that's why, I mean, people must be afraid because you'd think out of 435, 535 with the Senate, there'd be somebody who was like, this is not democracy.
Starting point is 01:14:41 This is totally immoral. Like, I'm going to just stand up and take them on. But, Tucker, let's say that, you know, people had things on you that would, as you put it, destroy your reputation, make your kids think very poorly of you, would embarrass you for the rest of your life, would destroy whatever you value in life. It takes a very rare person to say, ah, i'm gonna risk that happening um and you know i think we have this self-preservation tactic that's why those kind of things like blackmail extortion are so effective is because they can force people to no i think No, I think you're right. Look at how much these sexual misconduct allegations are used. When Julian Assange really got dangerous, suddenly out of nowhere appeared two women claiming that he, quote unquote, raped them because the allegation was they had consensual sex with him, but he didn't use a condom when they had not given their consent to no condom.
Starting point is 01:15:46 And that became rape under Swedish law. That's what forced him to the Ecuadorian embassy and led to everything that happened subsequently. Now with Matt Gaetz, the minute Matt Gaetz, Pete Hegseth too, like out of nowhere appears this alleged rape that nobody had heard about, that nobody knew about. It's always, the thing that always amazes me, this is actually the best example in case anybody thinks, oh, our government doesn't do that. When Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times and the Washington Post, and I remember when I first heard about this, I was kind of confounded about why this happened. Obviously, they were saying the normal things you say about people like that, like, oh, he's a Soviet asset. He
Starting point is 01:16:21 hates America. He put troops in harm's way because he showed the public that the government was lying for years about the Vietnam War. Like, inside they were saying we can never win, externally they were saying we're on the verge of winning. But what they also did, and it's the only reason Daniel Osberg ended up free, is they broke into his psychoanalyst's office because they wanted to steal
Starting point is 01:16:40 all the documents about his most intimate admissions to his psychoanalyst about his psychosexual life and fantasies, because that was the weapon of choice that they wanted to use to destroy him. That's a fact. The next administration broke into the psychoanalyst's office of Daniel Ellsberg when they couldn't find the documents they planned to break in at the guy's house. And that was, they finally put a stop to that. But they did break into a psychoanalyst's office.
Starting point is 01:17:07 And only because of that government misconduct did the judge dismiss the charges against Danny Allsburg, who otherwise was headed to prison for the rest of his life. Why would that be a response to a whistleblower revealing to the press that then revealed to the public that the government was systematically lying about the Vietnam War? It's because if you can have that information over somebody and then use it against them, you destroy... I remember when it happened with Julian Assange.
Starting point is 01:17:31 No one wanted anything to do with Julian Assange anymore. No one wanted to mention his name. It's just like, ooh, this person's guilty of accused of rape. I just don't want anything to do with that. So if you could have shown that Daniel Ellsberg had this fantasy or had done this or had done that in the intimacy and privacy of his own life. It just, everybody would have wanted to avoid it.
Starting point is 01:17:51 It's totally true. Did you ever find yourself on the wrong end of any is that if you want to confront the government, if you want to spill secrets, if you want to bring unwanted transparency, which happens to be the job of a journalist. I know people forget that, but that is the job of a journalist. If you're going to journalism, that's what you're supposed to try to do. You have to, as best you can, guard against that. Like, you have to protect yourself, make sure that your own house is in order as much as possible, because that will be a huge vulnerability. But as I said before, everyone has things to hide. There's no one who doesn't.
Starting point is 01:18:37 100%. And it's also true that if you get really attacked in a scary way, you don't want to talk about it. I mean, I feel that. I've been, that has happened, you know, not sex stuff, but I've definitely felt a lot of pressure. And you don't want to, you know. It's not just sex stuff. Yeah, there's all sorts of things in our past that we do that we're embarrassed by. But did you ever worry the intel agencies would try and hurt you?
Starting point is 01:19:07 Yeah, I mean. Dumb question. Here's the thing. Like, you know, I think a lot of people remember, but my husband, who's now deceased, but at the time, he went to Germany because there was a part of the archive that was corrupted. And we knew there was a lot of important documents there. And it was with Laura Poitras and she, using her genius, had figured out how to access it.
Starting point is 01:19:29 No one else could. But she didn't trust anybody, including the Guardian, to give it to you to bring to me. The only person she trusted was David. I couldn't travel outside Brazil because there was a concern that I would be arrested by the US.
Starting point is 01:19:39 So I had to stay in Brazil. So only David could go and get those documents. And the way we talked about it was in a very secure, secret way where we're using the highest levels of encryption at the time that Snowden insisted on. And when David went to Germany, he came back home through Heathrow. But at Heathrow, the British arrested him and detained him and threatened to prosecute him under an anti-terrorism law. And the only reason they let him out was because the Brazilian government, it became a huge story in Brazil. The Brazilian government was like, give us back our citizen immediately. And so they let him out was because the Brazilian government, it became a huge story in Brazil. The Brazilian government was like, give us back our citizen immediately, and so they let him go,
Starting point is 01:20:09 and then David sued the British government over human rights abuses because they were detaining him for journalism, and the British government said in their papers when they defended their actions, we knew exactly what he was doing in Germany. We knew exactly what he was carrying, and that's the reason why we detained him, because we wanted to prevent these secret documents from getting out into the public, because it harms British national security. Now, obviously, we got the archive
Starting point is 01:20:31 anyway, and we reported on those documents, but they admitted they knew, and were listening to our conversations about why he was going there. They knew when he was going there. Everything was being tracked. And so, when you know— Did you ever figure out how? I knew they were using—I mean, part of the reporting that we did was that the NSA had cracked even the most sophisticated levels of encryption. So things that people thought were safe, there's nothing 100% foolproof. We were among the most watched people in the world because we had in our hands the most sensitive secrets from the world's most powerful government that we were going around the world publishing to inform people of journalistically. And so, of course, we knew we were being spied on by probably a lot of people. It's just that the British were forced to admit it. suspicion the level of invasiveness you feel is hard to express because they're not just listening to the parts of your conversations where you're talking about the snowden documents oh i know
Starting point is 01:21:30 oh i know firsthand yeah no i know yeah i mean you had private conversations leaked as well when you were trying to interview president putin but followed and had massive problems with ukrainian intel service uh etc cetera, et cetera. It's not about me. I don't hold any institutional power. It's just interesting if you see what happens in your own life just by talking about it. I haven't done anything ever.
Starting point is 01:21:55 Just sit around a studio, talk to people. But, you know, you see the pressure they apply to you. Like, what would it be like to be, you know, the chairman of the intel committee or the speaker of the house or the president of the United States? I mean, I can't even imagine. like to be, you know, the chairman of the Intel Committee or the Speaker of the House or the President of the United States. Exactly. I mean, I can't even imagine. And it just shows you what a remarkable person Trump is.
Starting point is 01:22:13 He is just, he's weirdly resistant to that stuff. And that is, that's why they hate him. I mean, remember all the stuff that came out in 2016 when they thought he might win, like the Access Hollywood tape that came out of nowhere. And, you know, the Stormy Daniels stuff, you know, they threw everything out there. And Trump is, is a very rare person who's just kind of shameless. Like he doesn't feel a sense of shame and he doesn't back down no matter what he goes, he gets more aggressive against people who tried to force him to. It's just his instinct, I watched him for many decades when I was a lawyer in New York, when he was a you know big real estate mogul constantly being sued in lawsuits everybody
Starting point is 01:22:48 knew how he was and that's what is so threatening about him it's not his ideology or his beliefs of the fact that i think he's in russia it's the fact that immigration racism or that he's a race right none of no one cares about that no one believes that it's the fact that he's a racist. Right. No one cares about that. No one believes that. It's the fact that he's immune to the type of control that for decades they've been able to impose on people who wield any power, let alone the power of the presidency. Just type the current state of U.S.-Russia relations or the war that we're about to get? Like, how do you think this ends? I mean, if you're sitting in Moscow, obviously, if there's a barrage of weapons, you know, aimed at Moscow, St. Petersburg, your major cities, that's one thing.
Starting point is 01:23:40 If there's a limited number of missiles aimed in Kursk, where, you know, Ukrainian forces are, that's another. And obviously, they know what we talked about, which is that in about seven weeks, there's going to be a new American president with whom they've dealt extensively. And despite claims
Starting point is 01:23:56 that he's some sort of, you know, lackey of Putin, he basically did the two things that were most threatening to Russian interests. He sent lethal arms to Ukraine after Obama refused to. Trump did. I didn't agree with it, but that's what he did. And what he did even more so that was more threatening, damaging to Russia is he spent years trying to badger the
Starting point is 01:24:13 Europeans out of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. He pressed them on energy. He was like, why would you be buying gas from Russia? You're getting dependent on Russia and we're the ones who pay for your protection. You should be buying it from us. That's the North selling natural gas to Europe was the anchor, the key to Russian vital interests. And Trump threatened those vital interests continuously. So the idea, like anyone who's even a little bit rationally thinking would understand that this claim that he's being blackmailed by Putin, while at the same time, he's simultaneously doing the two most threatening things to Russian vital national interest. You would immediately recognize what a fictitious claim that was. So he's being blackmailed by the U.S. intelligences.
Starting point is 01:24:49 And in fact, more so our government is the fascist state that they claim Russia is. Exactly. So, so, and that's not to say Russia's not addressing, but, but so I think they know that, you know, they obviously know Trump's coming in and, and they feel like he wants to go in a different direction with the war. And so even though there is going to be pressure on Putin, as there would be on the United States and any other country, to respond in kind to NATO and the United States now bombing Russia, basically. I think as long as it's limited, as long as it stays limited to Kursk, as long as it's not, you know, in large numbers. Knowing that Trump is coming into office, I think they understand that that's an opportunity to try and end this war without
Starting point is 01:25:29 its escalation. I hope. Again, as you said, we're depending on Putin's restraint and rationality. So is Christmas really about buying stuff? You'll be forgiven if you assumed it is because that's the message you receive, but most people sense deep down there may be a little bit more to Christmas. Maybe this is the time of year to focus on growing your relationship with God, to remember there is a God and reach out to that God. Well to do that you can check out Hallow, the Hallow app and it's Advent Pray 25 challenge. Hallow is the world's number one prayer meditation app and for good reason.
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Starting point is 01:28:10 And Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, they have a very low-rated show on MSNBC, which I do think has outsized influence. The numbers are really small. People in Washington watch it. That's exactly it. That's exactly right. And so I think the show does have influence. I disagree with every single word ever uttered on that show, but I don't think it's totally insignificant. It's not Joy Reid.
Starting point is 01:28:32 So they went to Mar-a-Lago to meet with Trump. Like, what do you make? And then now they're saying, well, we went because we were afraid that we were going to be persecuted if we didn't kiss the ring or something. No, their excuse is even more pathetic, which is, we're journalists. You have to go and talk to the people in power. We're journalists. But I think those two in particular
Starting point is 01:28:54 are singularly pathetic. And I realize saying singularly pathetic in the context of employees of the corporate media seems like a designation that no one deserves alone. But I think in their case, they really merit that distinction because I think like most of the people who work in corporate media,
Starting point is 01:29:13 like the Rachel Maddows and like the Lawrence O'Donnells and the Don Lemon's and those kinds of people, I think they believe all the insane unhinged stuff. Like I think they really believe that Trump is a Russian agent,
Starting point is 01:29:24 that Putin is blackmailing him, that Trump wants to, like, put them in camps. Like, I think it's insane, but, like, credit for at least actually saying what they really believe is as preposterous and laughable as it is. Joe Scarborough has no beliefs
Starting point is 01:29:37 other than his own advancement and self-importance. Okay, let's remember, in the 1990s, he was elected, not as a Republican congressman, but as a radical conservative. The whole new Gingrich, like young firebrands were going to go in and radically reform, change the country and Washington. No more of that anywhere in Joe Scarborough, like this radical transformation of institutional power. And then, as Megyn Kelly said, no show did more to boost Donald Trump in 2015 and 2016 in the Republican primary than Joe and Mika.
Starting point is 01:30:12 They were down at Mar-a-Lago all the time. They loved Trump. They were best friends with Trump. They laughed with him. They let him call in on their show all the time, in part because it was very beneficial to that show. It was the only thing that rated. Trump saved all their jobs.
Starting point is 01:30:24 But they also loved just being proximate to power like that. Oh, yeah. That's the thing that they crave most. And then once, what really happened was, Scarborough thought that he was going to be chosen as Trump's vice president. He really wanted to. And when Trump rejected him in favor of Mike Pence,
Starting point is 01:30:41 and then also MSNBC turned into this fanatical anti-Trump network where the only people who watched were Trump haters, both out of personal affront, but also out of survival. They had to turn into a full-on Trump-hating show. You couldn't have the morning show of three hours, be someone positive toward or neutral about Trump when the whole rest of the network, everyone who watched- May I just ask you to pause for a sec? I'm just digesting this. Scarborough, who I used to know really well,
Starting point is 01:31:09 he thought he was going to be VP. Yeah, yeah. That's what, remember how close they were? No, I remember that. I didn't know. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. He, that's. You should come to the United States more often.
Starting point is 01:31:18 I learn a lot. I think my distance is what enables me to learn things. So, yeah, that was a big part of it. And, but also it was a big part of it. But also it was survival at MSNBC. And so they turned into these, you know, Joe Scarborough, Mr. Radical Conservative, let's change all of Washington work, became Mr. Institutionalist. You know, the people he had on his show are like Richard Haass and like Norm Ornstein. Like all these like counsel on foreign relations and think tanks people who were obsessed with hating Trump as well and it became
Starting point is 01:31:47 grounds Europe for Trumpist Hitler. They were saying as recently as two months ago or a month ago like Trump is comparable to Adolf Hitler. He is a Nazi figure. Nika Brzezinski went on The View and cried and said Trump wants to murder women. Women are going to die because of Donald Trump.
Starting point is 01:32:04 He's a fascist. He's a racist. They said it every day over and over. And then Trump wins. And their whole influence was because they were Joe Biden's favorite show. Joe Biden would wake up at like 6 a.m. like many geriatrics do because he went to bed at like 7 o'clock p.m. And he would watch Morning Joe. And then he would hear, you know, Joe Biden is the greatest president in the art. Joe Scarborough said that he personally can assure the country, having spent so much time around Joe Biden, that he's sharper than ever. He runs intellectual circles around. All the Republicans were claiming that he's cognitively impaired. This was like a month before the debate he was saying that. So, of course, Joe Biden watched that show every day. That's what gave
Starting point is 01:32:42 Joe Scarborough his sense of importance, was like, oh, I'm close to the White House. He was at the White House all the time. Now Biden's gone. Biden's not an asset anymore. Trump is back in power. And one of the things that has happened amazingly since Kamala's loss is that the MSNBC audience,
Starting point is 01:32:57 which is already tiny, has basically completely disappeared. Like the number of people watching those shows when they're live in prime time with that big, gigantic corporate power behind them promoting it. It's, it's less than a lot of like YouTube shows.
Starting point is 01:33:11 Yeah. Including like, I don't mean like the cumulative audience of how many people watch YouTube or YouTube video at the end of the day. I just mean live watching like Dan Bongino show has, I think on rumble has like five or six or seven times more viewers than
Starting point is 01:33:28 MSNBC's Prime Time this is on Rumble you know which a lot of people don't even know about don't even watch that audience
Starting point is 01:33:35 is gone in part because they feel disillusioned that the people they trusted who told them Trump was going to prison the whole Trump family was going to prison
Starting point is 01:33:43 Trump could never win he was going to be in jail before the election, all the women were going to rise up and vote for Kamala out of anger toward Trump. None of that happened. And they're like, I've been watching this show every day for nothing. It was, I was, it's, I, I, I,
Starting point is 01:33:58 none of it happened. None of it was true. And that audience is gone, half out of disillusionment and anger, but half out of just like kind of checking out through impotence and helplessness and i think that they're desperate the only way they think they can get people to come back on is to have trump come back on their show and their trump is going to make them crawl around on the floor multiple times bark like a dog they were like joe and miko were like, Trump was incredibly cheerful and happy.
Starting point is 01:34:25 Of course he was. He loves seeing you humiliate yourself because he knows you need them now. I don't think that a weekly interview with Trump, which is not going to happen anyway, but even if it did, was going to save MSNBC. No, because who would watch it? Because no conservatives are going to trust that show or MSNBC. And no liberals want to see MSNBC. No, because who would watch it? Because no conservatives are going to trust that show or MSNBC, and no liberals want to see MSNBC host. Do you know how angry
Starting point is 01:34:49 liberals are about just even the fact that Joe and Mika went to Mar-a-Lago? So who's the audience for that? They're caught. Like Liz Cheney, I have to say, of all the reasons I'm so grateful that Kamala lost, seeing Democrats turn on Liz Cheney and seeing her stranded between the parties in no man's land.
Starting point is 01:35:10 It's the best. Honestly, I can't. There was a piece by John Nichols in The Nation today. I don't read The Nation much anymore. But, you know, occasionally The Nation is like kind of true to itself. Not always. But sometimes I don't agree with it. But John Nichols wrote this piece about Kamala Harris where he goes through like all the places that she went with, Liz Cheney went with Kamala Harris and like, not only did
Starting point is 01:35:32 it not work, she turned off Republicans. Like the idea was, you know, we've got Liz Cheney campaigning with us. A lot of Republicans are like, Donald Trump will vote for us. It's like just the opposite happened. You know, it was so predictable vote for us. It's like just the opposite happened. You know, it was so predictable and so obvious. It was predictable. Also, like what made Kamala's campaign like for the six seconds that it seemed like it had some like air to it. Yes.
Starting point is 01:35:53 Was this like vibrancy of young people, you know, like celebrating the emergence. Right, right. Yeah, totally. And so you then take Liz Cheney and like send Bill Clinton to Michigan to like lecture everybody in the Muslim community and Arab community who already hates you because you've been buying Israel about how the Israelis are totally right and it's all the fault of the Arabs. And then you take Liz Dick Cheney's daughter with you through the Rust Belt where like all those policies devastated their lives, all those wars. And you think Liz, think about, I mean, this is the thing. Think about how out of touch and cloistered and in a bubble you have to be to think that you're going to win an election depending on people who are in the working class, who feel alienated from society, who feel like DC doesn't work for you by taking the daughter of,
Starting point is 01:36:47 like the face of the American establishment, Dick Cheney, around with you as if she's your running mate. And people are craving change and you have sitting there with Liz Cheney, like people only know because she was the vice president's daughter. Her dad was Dick Cheney and not just Dick Cheney,
Starting point is 01:37:04 but somebody who supports a whole range of policies that Americans vehemently reject now. And I think that's more than anything what people in the media have finally had to come to grips with is, first of all, it's good that Liz Cheney actually isn't the Secretary of Defense or Secretary of State. That also is good. Even though there are a couple of people in Trump's campaign who have very similar views like Mark Ruby and Liz Cheney and Elise Stefanik. But be that as it's good that Liz Cheney specifically is not any of those positions. But I think the best thing is that you have all these people inside these cloistered bubbles in Washington who really thought that they were the conscience of the nation, the voice of the nation. And not only were they applauding the decision to take Liz Cheney, but they have been spending eight years claiming that Donald Trump is a white supremacist who wants to put minorities in camp. And not only did Donald Trump win the election, but there was millions of non-white voters who for the first time left the Democratic Party and went to vote for Trump.
Starting point is 01:37:59 So imagine you've wasted eight years of your life screaming and screeching like a petulant bird who has been like shot. Donald Trump's a racist. He's a fascist. He hates, he only likes white people. And then you watch millions of Latino people and black people and Asian people and Muslims refuse to vote for Kamala Harris. You obviously like, I have no influence at all. I'm completely out of touch. Well, but it's so good to know that about yourself.
Starting point is 01:38:23 I mean, that's happened to me, by the way. I'm vehemently opposed to abortion, which I think is horrifying, but lots of people don't agree with me. And so I see Roe v. Wade comes down and you see these ballot initiatives saying we're going to allow abortion until birth. And I'm like, wow, I'm so glad it's up for a vote. And then it turns out the voters just don't agree with me at all.
Starting point is 01:38:42 Even in red states. It's true. It's true. that was hard for me to accept because i am i never talked about it but i was just so i'm so sincere on the subject i'm just i'm not for abortion period and so but you have to be real like okay sometimes people agree with you sometimes they don't but there's something about the democratic base which really is just basically just like unhappy college educated white ladies that's really who it is honestly i mean and they say that they're like we're relying on affluent women in the suburbs that's their base exactly but the unhappy ones i mean i'm related to some happy ones they're not voting for kamala harris but the ones who
Starting point is 01:39:18 are sort of disappointed in their husbands and in their lives or whatever i get it i'm not being mean but it's just true but they should know that they're in the subset of a subset and that not everyone agrees with them. I think that's the beginning of wisdom. I mean, it has been for me. Like, not everyone agrees with me. That's okay. But the thing is, like, you were just saying you read The Nation sometimes.
Starting point is 01:39:36 Yeah. I go out of my way to read everything, everybody. Yeah, me too. Like, you know, I try and have people in my life who have very different views on, you know, I have a lot of people in my life in Brazil, for example, who worship Lua.
Starting point is 01:39:48 I have a lot of people in my life who hate Lua, worship Bolsonaro, people who are in between. I want that. Like I want to hear constantly from you. You want to be challenged all the time, not be ossified. I'm telling you,
Starting point is 01:39:58 I know a lot of these people. I used to be on MSNBC all the time. I've been friends with a lot of the people. Who do they hate? You know, though. Oh, they despise me with burning passion.
Starting point is 01:40:06 But in part because nobody hates things more than, no one, the person always most hated is the one perceived as the heretic. Of course.
Starting point is 01:40:14 You know, but, but I was never really on their side in the way that they thought actually anyway. But anyway, it doesn't matter. The,
Starting point is 01:40:21 I know a lot of these people and what has happened on MSNBC is that, or, or places like the New York Times op-ed page, similar. People who support Trump don't exist in that world. There's not one op-ed writer at the New York Times of the dozens who is a Trump supporter, even though half the country is, more than half the country is. Right. Like Ross Dufas is like the person closest to like sort of understanding the Trump movement, but he certainly doesn't like Donald Trump at all.
Starting point is 01:40:48 And other than that, they just don't have—it doesn't exist in the world. There's nobody ever on MSNBC, on their shows, who brings that perspective of why they support Donald Trump. So, if you're only talking to people who are like-minded, and a lot of them have now left Twitter, trying to go to some other platform where they're only there. They really don't want to hear any dissent. And you're living a certain kind of life. You know, they're well-paid. They are cloistered in these affluent places in the United States,
Starting point is 01:41:14 like in the East Coast, like Brooklyn and Manhattan and Washington and Northern Virginia. How do you not realize that the life you're leading is so fundamentally different from the people on whose behalf you claim to be speaking? And I do think a lot of them, even though they're going to resist it and battle it, have to swallow this election as a complete repudiation of not just themselves, but their nonjudgmental I feel about this. That has happened to me. I've been fired. I have found my views repudiated by the public at large.
Starting point is 01:41:51 Those are very important moments to me personally. They made me a better person. So I am hoping that they internalize the pain and learn from it. Do you think they will? Yeah. I mean, what always amazes me is like, you know, I really did grow up like in a working class environment, but like my whole life. You're the only one. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:08 No, I mean, there are other people who grew up like, you know, I wasn't like poor, but I was not even near middle class. Didn't your mom work at McDonald's? Yeah, my mom worked at McDonald's. She like, my parents got divorced when I was seven. My father was an accountant. He had three marriages. Actually, you are alone. Like, I don't know anybody.
Starting point is 01:42:22 And I mean this. I don't know anybody in journalism. I know people whose mom And I mean this. I don't know anybody in journalism. I know people whose mom worked at McDonald's. I don't know anyone in journalism whose mom worked at McDonald's. I guess my point is that, like, of course, that shaped me for a long time. But I realize now that that's not my life any longer. Like, and it hasn't been for, you know, 10 years, 15 years. Like, my life has been very separate from that.
Starting point is 01:42:42 So, I have a great amount of humility about my ability to speak for people who have a different kind of life because you're, of course, the way you live shapes your perspective, shapes your understanding, shapes your priorities. And it amazes me that these people don't have that humility at all. And so I think they're resisting it. Like they're, you know, that was what Obama did. Remember when he was like, yeah, I know there's a lot of black men who don't want to vote for Kamala who are going to vote for Trump. That's because you all hate women and you're misogynist. And then they're basically saying the reason a lot of Latino men. What an arrogant douchebag to say something like that. And, you know, and there's a perfect example. Like he spends all his time in like Richard Branson's yacht. Yeah, I know. And, you know, just with the highest level of jet set.
Starting point is 01:43:24 And then he thinks he's going to go and speak to, like, black working class men. If you disagree with me, you're a bigot. That's like, that's such a crazy place to start any conversation. It's so alienating. I think this kind of condescension, but the other thing is, like, the main argument is that, like, they're all stupid. Like, they're victims of disinformation. They're misled. They have all these alternative media they're listening to that don't have the controls that have with us.
Starting point is 01:43:48 They're getting fall. You know, basically they're stupid. They're they're like they're easily misled. They're gullible. So either they're racist or misogynist or stupid. That's their explanation. That's the thing they're clinging to. You know, like, oh, they don't realize how good they had it under Biden, how great the economy is, how much Kamala Harris and Joe Biden did for them.
Starting point is 01:44:06 They just don't because they were told that it was untrue. They can't figure it out on their own. Like the condescension reeks out of – it oozes out of every pore of their being. And then they wonder why people despise them and their culture and their subculture. Who wants that? It is nauseating but despite so what i'm saying is that they're not they don't have the attitude you had which is like oh it's actually good to be humbled to like realize that things that you thought about the world need to be re-evaluated there's no self
Starting point is 01:44:38 criticism no reflection in fact every democrat thinks like oh yeah i know why we lost it's been what i was saying all along none None of them are saying that. But, you know, they're like Democrats did this and Kamala did that. You know, they all are trying to pretend that if people had just listened to them, the Democrats would have won, even though all on they were like, oh, Kamala is running the most brilliant campaign ever. But what I'm saying is, is that the result is so overwhelming, so kind of pointed and devastating to their worldview. As I said, I think the thing that has really shaken them the most, even though they're fighting it, they're not embracing it, they're fighting it, but they can't, is that so many non-white voters are, and Trump made huge gains in almost every non-white sector of society. I mean,
Starting point is 01:45:23 Trump was saying that New Jersey and New York are swing states and people were laughing at him and he only lost New Jersey by five points and did the best any Republican has done in New York City in many, many years because of how many black and Latino and Asians and Muslims voted for Trump, non-white voters. And so when that happens,
Starting point is 01:45:46 like you don't even get to blame white people, but you have to accept that the people who you think you own, who have mindless loyalty to you, disobeyed you and didn't listen to you. That's what makes them feel really shaken inside. It's a slave revolt. And if you read the accounts of people
Starting point is 01:46:04 who lived through slave revolts, not just in the American South, but like in Haiti or, you know, anywhere, they're always, wherever you have slavery, you've got slave revolts
Starting point is 01:46:10 at some point. They're always so shocked. Like they, they, they can't believe that like the nanny came after them with a knife.
Starting point is 01:46:20 Like I, we thought you loved us. It's so crucial to their worldview to believe. No, it's the, I. It's so crucial to their worldview to believe. We thought you loved us. No, it's the, I mean, those people, central to their worldview is that they're benevolent leaders of these people. It's like that scene at Animal House. Otis, he loves us.
Starting point is 01:46:38 Sure he does, drunk frat boy. No, people always imagine that the people they control, their employees, their serfs love them. And what they need to understand, I think this is just true in life, is that the people subordinate to you resent you. They may like you, but they also resent you. Just the subordinates alone. That's what I'm saying. Right. And it's one of the reasons you see hostility among women toward men just in general. It's not a defining characteristic, but there's a little bit of that. If you're in the subordinate sexual position, you're like a little mad about it.
Starting point is 01:47:15 I'm sorry to channel Dr. Freud, but there's some truth in that. It's what we were talking about before. I've said this so many times. If you belong to one of these so-called marginalized groups that liberals think they own and have an entitlement to control, you will never see more naked and unadorned bigotry, contemptuous bigotry, than you will see toward individuals within that group who disobey. Obviously, I remember when I really started splitting from the left, I'd never had real homophobia in my entire life before. I only started seeing it once I had that breach of the left. Once you questioned, before you were a member of the LBGT community, you questioned a marginalized figure. Exactly, and a pedophile, whatever, all those things.
Starting point is 01:47:59 Are you serious? Oh, yeah. And then the way they have always talked about Clarence Thomas. I'm sorry to laugh. No, it's amazing. It's hilarious. The way they talk about Clarence Thomas. Oh, I know.
Starting point is 01:48:11 You know, any black person who's been a conservative, same with, like, women who are, you know, Gloria Steinem said about the people, the young women who were refusing to vote for Hillary and voting for Bernie when asked, like, why they were doing that. She's like, because young girls go where the boys are you know like the most demeaning insulting thing you can say about women that they they don't think on their own they just like mindlessly do whatever the boys are that and so now you're seeing this like oh yeah like Latinos like are very misogynistic and primitive so So are black men. They hate women. You know, they're easily misled. They're low information voters. You know, the amount of contempt that liberal elites have
Starting point is 01:48:51 for these non-white voters who didn't do as they're told is almost scary. Well, it is scary because it's a psychological condition. That's, of course, why they hate whites, that they've been because they're losing the white vote.
Starting point is 01:49:02 And the second they started to lose the white vote, then whites became the problem in the country it's like where's all this anti-white hate coming from well it's coming from the democratic party institutionally because they're being rejected by white voters yeah and they were ready to they thought they were going to get white women they're going to get to embrace like white women were going to rise up and join them against trump but a majority of white women voted for trump incredible so they're going to get i mean i will say to his hispanics in the States, you're about to be the subject of a hate campaign.
Starting point is 01:49:29 Oh, and Muslims too who didn't want to vote for Kamala because they were feeding Israel. I can't tell you how many times I've seen, I can't wait till you people are deported. I can't wait to see you blown up in Gaza. There's a sentiment like you're going to get what you deserve and I'm going to laugh about it and I'm going to cheer it. Same with Latinos. I can't wait till you're deported. You're going to get what you deserve when your abuela is deported. Like really sick stuff.
Starting point is 01:49:54 Joy Reid, I'm not talking about obscure people on the internet. She's gone on the air almost every night and talked that way. Attack the Hispanics. Yeah, and Muslims and Arabs. Well, so the best part about this is the language barrier. And so few liberals even bother to listen to what people actually think or say. They're not interested. It's like they treat everyone like a three-year-old. But when they find out the social views of your average Central American, which I find hilarious and kind of great, but whatever, leaving my views aside, the average social views of a Central American
Starting point is 01:50:27 just on the social issues are so far out of what's considered acceptable, but they have no idea. Which is so ironic because Democratic strategists used to openly boast about what, if you say you'll get called as a white supremacist, the replacement theory, that, oh, we're going to import all these people
Starting point is 01:50:43 into the United States, make them citizens, and they're going to be supporters of the Democratic Party, and we're going to reign forever, like a thousand years, because these are all our voters. And they get here and they find out that actually they, but I have to say, like, there's a great article in New York Magazine, which is words that pass my lips very, very rarely,
Starting point is 01:51:00 where this writer who actually wrote a very critical profile of me, like like five years ago. So his name is Simon. I just talked to him today about this article because it's a great article. I'm embarrassed I don't know his name, but I can't remember his last name.
Starting point is 01:51:16 It's hyphenated, so it's just a little complicated. But anyway, I really recommend this article. He just went, what he did was he purposely went to black, Latino, Asian neighborhoods where there was a lot of Trump votes, and he just walked around on the street and talked to as many people as he TV who are supposedly their display, have less in common with the people on whose behalf they're speaking than like the white
Starting point is 01:51:50 host of these shows. Oh, way less. And so you go there and like- Certainly less than me. I mean, I have like attitudes that are pretty popular
Starting point is 01:51:55 in those communities. Right, exactly. But still like, you know, a lot of them were just like, far from being like, you know,
Starting point is 01:52:03 deceived by disinformation, they were like, there's a Democratic Party that supported NAFTA. Like we're having trouble paying for our health care or food for our kids. And they're sending billions of dollars to Ukraine and to Israel, to all these other countries. They're just talking about the struggles that they have in their lives and the way in which the government doesn't care. There's some social issue stuff, too. But once you get to the United States, you become a citizen, you integrate pretty quickly. And the thing you,
Starting point is 01:52:28 you don't sit around thinking about trans people or whatever, gay marriage, or these are ancillary issues. Even if they don't agree with the democratic party on, they might, that might contribute to the alienation. The fact that, you know,
Starting point is 01:52:39 they had, that's why that Kamala ad was effective. Not because people are sitting around thinking about whether trans people should get government funded, uh, sexual assignment surgeries in prison, but because it was like a proxy for explaining that these people have nothing in common with your lives.
Starting point is 01:52:53 They don't care about you. They don't care about your values. Had they felt economically satisfied, I don't think that would have resonated because that's not what people care about. But most of them are just worried about the same thing everybody else is worried about.
Starting point is 01:53:04 And they finally got to the point where they realize we've been power so they're even more worried exactly they're the people who get most affected especially by immigration totally i mean the people who lose their jobs with immigration often are non-white people black black working class latino working class and they feel resentful about everything that's being done for you know there was a lot of oh they're giving free housing and free meals to illegal immigrants while I can't feed my family. I really recommend the article. It's not done with caricature. It's not like handpicking a few comments. It's a very long article and it just lets these people speak for themselves in a very revealing way. What's just so funny is you live in Brazil, which is another continent.
Starting point is 01:53:46 It is. You've been there a while. How long? years 20 years um but i bet if i had called you the week before the election once you should have done but i got busy but um if i'd said like what do you think black and latino people men married people in new york city around the country what do you think they think politically i bet you would have been pretty, I know you would have figured this out. Yeah, I was talking about this. But you don't even live here. I know, but I lived here like for the first 38 years of my life. It's the only country of which I've ever been a citizen.
Starting point is 01:54:13 I'm here all the time. But I do think that. But how do you know that? And they don't. That's the point. I think that distance gives you a perspective. Like the fact that my friends are not media and political people in new york and washington that i'm not cooked into their right to their worldview
Starting point is 01:54:30 that i'm not subsumed with that that i'm not dependent upon it in any way gives me i think a broader perspective like if you live in northern virginia and you like spend all your time in washington in green rooms or new york you're going to be so distorted and the things that you think about the world but also i think you have to like go out of your way to, okay, I don't want to be told what people think by other people who are reporting to their spokespeople. I want to hear from them directly. I want to look at the polling data. I want to understand what they're thinking. And you can just see it. You could hear it. You could feel it. You could observe it analytically in that data. But they just, I remember people on CNN saying, you know, I think it was Van Jones or no, it was Bakari Sellers who was like, I can, I don't care what the polls say. I can guarantee you there won't be more than 5% of black men voting for Donald Trump. I don't care what the polls say. There won't be anywhere near 15% of, you know.
Starting point is 01:55:24 He Bakari Sellers said that? Oh yeah. Just like, I don't care what the polls say there won't be anywhere near 15 of you know he bakari sellers said that oh yeah just like i don't care what the polls say i'm not like a huge you know i'm not a huge expert on black america and i don't have a million black friends but i have some actually like actual friends i don't know a liberal black guy i know some who vote for democrats or whatever but i don't know i literally don't know except like the guys you see in green rooms who went to Princeton or like fake preachers or something. But like actual black men, I don't know any. The only ones are in the media. That's what I'm saying.
Starting point is 01:55:51 I just don't know any person. I've never even met one. Right. So like what is this? But this has been – if you think about the Democratic Party, the thing you fear most is that these groups that have been voting for you for generations and have been passed had loyalties passed down from their parents and grandparents who don't even think about not voting for you every election once that breaks i'm not saying that those people who voted for trump will never vote democrat again but now they know there's an option they're free people they
Starting point is 01:56:22 get to decide for themselves who they want and nothing is more alarming or or or petrifying to Democratic Party elites than seeing that. I think it's really good. It's good for the country. The Democratic Party in its current iteration is just is almost purely destructive and shouldn't be. You need a two party system where both parties are represent. It's integrated. Like, I remember like the smartest Republicans, like J.D. Vance, Josh Hotley, like the ones who really understand that you can't have the same Republican party as you did in 1980, have always been describing the future of the Republican party as a multiracial
Starting point is 01:57:02 working class coalition. And to watch people identifying primarily based on their citizenship and their class. That's what you want. As opposed to constantly being divided by race. That's what you want. Is so promising to see. Well, it's essential or else you have Rwanda. I mean, because, you know, your class can change, but your race doesn't change. And so if you engender a conflict
Starting point is 01:57:27 on the basis of immutable characteristics, it's not solvable. And so you don't want to ever do that. You make people hate each other based on how much they make, okay, where they live even, but their skin color? Well, as you say,
Starting point is 01:57:39 that gives them the idea of change. Like, hey, we can change the government. Well, that's exactly right. Whereas immutable characteristic, by definition, don't change. No, no, no can change the government. Well, that's exactly right. Whereas immutable characteristic by definition don't change. No, no, no. That's like Albanian blood feud that lasts 800 years. Like, you can't do that.
Starting point is 01:57:50 But that has been the predominant liberal mindset is to encourage people to see themselves as part of insulated factions who hate other factions based on those characteristics. And there's almost nothing more offensive to me about what American liberalism writ large has done than try and impose that framework on people to divide people based on things that in fact don't divide them. Well, yeah, especially since the experience of just like living in this country, you know, is so different from what they describe. I have always been on the right. I've never had anybody, anybody who's black or Hispanic or non-white ever attack me one time in public as a racist. I've only had affluent white women attack me that way. I don't see people hating each other on the basis
Starting point is 01:58:34 of race. I'm sure there's racism. I know that there is because people are flawed, but it's not a defining fact in this country that I have ever known. I don't know what the hell they're talking about. I mean, they're trying to scare the shit out of people to get their votes. That's it. Well, obviously, millions of non-white people agree with you. They just went and voted for
Starting point is 01:58:50 the white candidate over the black one. I know. And the white candidate who they were told was Adolf Hitler and wanted to put all non-white people in camps. They were looking around. They're like, that's not my experience. So I got to, just one last question. Like,
Starting point is 01:59:06 we began the conversation with the war that we're now in. We're in a war with Russia. And that really is something that the Biden administration is doing to punish the incoming Trump administration, I think,
Starting point is 01:59:19 and to prevent it from acting, you know, with the autonomy any administration should have. But they're also going to leave behind all kinds of, I mean, they're not going to spend the next seven weeks doing nothing. And one of the things they're going to try to do is increase censorship, I think, over the next seven weeks. Or am I just being paranoid? I think you're right.
Starting point is 01:59:37 They're obviously not going to do nothing. They're going to try and fortify everything as much as possible from the kind of change that the American people just voted for. The Party of Democracy is going to do that um censorship in my view began like systemic censorship on the internet began as a reaction to 2016 without question both to brexit but especially to trump that's right that's when you saw the emergence of these highly well-funded disinformation experts the concoction of this well-funded disinformation experts, the concoction of this fake expertise called disinformation experts. How do people get to be that? Where do you go to school to be a disinformation expert, like a floating arbiter of truth? But they needed to
Starting point is 02:00:17 radically intensify censorship because they blamed free speech and the free flow of information on, they blamed that for Brexit first, but especially for Trump's victory. And they wanted to crack down on that. There's always now an ongoing effort to try and crack down on that. I think though, what they're going to try and do is look at the areas that they believe Trump is trying most radically to change beginning with foreign, that's foreign policy, the thing that they value most that's by far you know centerpiece of how america runs in their view and they're going to spend as much of their time subverting him and sabotaging him in advance even though he just won the election by a pretty like solid margin and there are some things that will be reversible but if you escalate
Starting point is 02:01:04 the war in ukraine and trump now is coming into a war that the russians perceive accurately to be not just a proxy war with the west behind ukraine but where nido is actually bombing russia it becomes infinitely more difficult to keep under control and to resolve the problem is is that the risks of this are so great that it it actually sickens me more than almost anything i've ever seen me too that they're willing to do this on the way out to just prevent this worth mending and trifling with the risk of a nuclear exchange and with the lives of every person on earth yeah um i just gotta close by saying uh there's been in journals in my whole life i you know spent a lot of time around journalists bragging about the risks they take i've never known a journalist who's been threatened with
Starting point is 02:01:56 prison more times than you have um probably once every six months i just check to make sure that you're not in prison yeah my friends do that too, my friends do that too. I'm always assuming you're going to wind up in prison for challenging the powerful and revealing what they're actually doing. So I just want to say congratulations on remaining free. Thank you. I appreciate that. It's not always been such an easy task. There have been times when I've gotten pretty close, including recently.
Starting point is 02:02:19 But I feel like if you're not hated by and perceived as a threat by people in power, you're not doing your job. That's for sure. That's what I really believe. Well, then by that measure, you're the most successful journalist of our generation, which I already thought anyway. But congratulations. Appreciate that. Thank you, Tucker. Glenn Greenwald.
Starting point is 02:02:35 Always great to see you. Thank you. Thanks for listening to Tucker Carlson Show. If you enjoyed it, you can go to TuckerCarlson.com to see everything that we have made. The complete library.

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