The Tucker Carlson Show - Glenn Greenwald: The Truth About Epstein, Jake Tapper's Humiliation, & Insane New Push to Nuke Gaza

Episode Date: May 30, 2025

CNN spends five years lying about Joe Biden’s dementia, gets caught, and then instead of apologizing, pretends to break the story that Biden has brain damage. This, says Glenn Greenwald, is why ever...y honest person on earth hates corporate media. (00:00) Introduction (07:40) How Corporate Media Rewrites History (17:46) How Political Tribalism Is Destroying Society (29:07) Who Really Hacked the DNC? (53:58) The JFK Assassination (1:10:51) Greenwald’s Thoughts on Russia Paid partnerships with: MeriwetherFarms: Visit https://MeriwetherFarms.com/Tucker and use code TUCKER25 for 15% off your first order. iTrust Capital: Get $100 funding bonus at https://www.iTrustCapital.com/Tucker XX-XY Athletics: Use code TUCKER25 for 25% off at https://thetruthfits.com Beam: Get 30% off for a limited time using the code TUCKER at https://ShopBeam.com/Tucker Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 It must be a little weird to get scooped by CNN on Joe Biden's dementia. Like, you had no idea. None of us knew. You know, but now Jake Tapper has uncovered the truth. Like, it turns out Joe Biden was in cognitive decline. Did you know that? How did he find out? Just hardcore shoe leather investigative reporting.
Starting point is 00:00:16 Just working his sources. Working his sources, like calling all the people in Washington, digging up, like, FOIA documents. I just find the Epstein file so fascinating because the two biggest issues are, are there people to whom he's trafficked minors that nobody has been charged with being the recipient of that sex trafficking? But the much more interesting question for me is, was he working with or for any foreign intelligence agencies? Israel is the number one recipient of NSA technology and
Starting point is 00:00:45 NSA intelligence. But at the same time, the documents that describe who are our greatest intelligence threats, who are our greatest intelligence adversaries, who spies on us the most, who is capable of last time you were here, I ambushed you just by rolling the cameras. Not doing that. We are on camera right now. Right, it was funny because last time you were here, I ambushed you just by rolling the cameras. Not doing that. We are on camera right now. Right. It was funny because every show you ever go on, it always begins in some sort of way to
Starting point is 00:01:31 indicate that you're actually starting. Like, Glenn Greenwald, welcome to the program. Thank you, Tucker, for having me. But the last time I was on, we were just sitting here chatting and it turned out 10 minutes in, I was like, oh, we're rolling? Yeah, we've been rolling since we started. Yeah, but you are one of those people, and this is the highest compliment I can give, who's exactly the same off camera, exactly the same as you are on camera.
Starting point is 00:01:49 Right. Exactly the same. There's no difference at all. I thought our conversation was just the conversation that we always have, and it turned out it was just the show, but you made no difference. Your staff courtesy let me see the first time minute. I was like, yeah, that's what I think. That's how I speak, and that's all fine.
Starting point is 00:02:03 Yeah. There is, if you like Glenn Greenwald, you'll like him at dinner. Trust me. That's what I think. That's how I speak, and that's all fine. Yeah, there is. If you like Glenn Greenwald, you'll like him at dinner. Trust me. That's what I can say about you. So you are, I think, the dean of alternative media. You've been doing this longer than anybody that I know personally. So it must be a little weird to get scooped by CNN on Joe Biden's dementia. Like, you had no idea.
Starting point is 00:02:23 None of us knew. You know, I mean, there was that debate and we were all shocked, but we were like, but we were told he had a cold. So I was like, okay, he's on some cold medication. Like, who hasn't been there before?
Starting point is 00:02:32 He makes you a little drag, like a little draggy, a little groggy, a little just like dragged. But no, now Jake Tapper has uncovered the truth. Like, it turns out Joe Biden was in cognitive decline. Did you know that? How did he find out? Just hardcore shoe leather investing. Just working his Joe Biden was in cognitive decline. Did you know that? How did he find out? Just hardcore shoe leather investigative reporting. Just working his sources.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Working his sources, calling all the people in Washington, digging up FOIA documents. No, it really, it's one of those things where you kind of can't believe what you're witnessing because Jake Tapper is pretending to have uncovered a scandal that he himself led the way in the media or one of the leaders in the media in covering up to the point where if somebody would go on his show and say, Joe Biden is obviously in cognitive decline, he can't get a sentence out, he would say, how dare you bully kids who stutter?
Starting point is 00:03:24 Like, are you at all ashamed of what you're doing? That's what he told Laura Trump when she was like, yeah, I just, I feel bad for Joe Biden. I wish he could get a sentence out. And he's like, do you ever think about what you're doing to kids who stutter and the kind of world you're creating for them? And she's like, what? Like everyone else, I never even knew Joe Biden had a stutter. I've been watching him for decades. I never saw him stutter before. The whole stuttering thing was just itself. Did he actually say that? Yes.
Starting point is 00:03:48 He told Laura Trump that she was like at an event and she was a very like, you know, benign remark. She was just saying, yeah, you watch Joe Biden. Cause we, we've talked about this before when I,
Starting point is 00:03:58 you know, I was on your show. It wasn't even when he was president, it was in the run-up to the 2020 campaign. And we were talking about this and we always talked about about, everybody I know did, no one takes joy in it. Like, we've all had that experience of watching an older person in our family, you know, go through cognitive decline. It's actually quite sad. So the way she was saying it was like, yeah, you know, honestly, as a human being, I watched Joe Biden, and he's in the middle of a sentence that he can't finish.
Starting point is 00:04:22 I'm like, come on, Joe, get that out. And then when she went on Jake Tapper's show, he played that tape and he said, do you understand the world of bullying that you're creating for kids who stutter? And she was like, what? I'm just protecting stuttering kids. Yeah, and she's like, I didn't even know he had a stutter. And he said, and we all know he has a stutter
Starting point is 00:04:43 and I know that you are mocking his stutter. And so this was not just a person who didn't speak about Joe Biden's cognitive decline, who's now uncovering this shocking truth that 85% of the public has known for years, according to polls. He was, he would go on. I heard him this week saying one of the very few people, because he was asked, why didn't people in the Democratic Party speak up and and say this since they all knew it he said well dean phillips tried and he got mauled and maligned and his character was attacked by the democratic party
Starting point is 00:05:15 i was like by the democratic party go watch what happened when dean phillips went on jake tapper's show and said that one of the reasons he was running for president, he was concerned about Joe Biden's age and his infirmities and how he couldn't win and couldn't govern. And Jake Tapper said to him, do you know that your Democratic colleagues despise you? And they've been telling me the worst possible thing. That's what he did to everybody who went on his show in order to say, hey, I think Joe Biden's inc in cognitive decline. He was, I mean, obviously he wanted Biden to win desperately and would not tolerate anyone going on the show and saying that Biden was in cognitive decline.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And now he's making millions of dollars off a book. But the only good thing is that his credibility is so in tatters from it that he had to hire a PR crisis firm, like the kind that Anthony Weiner had to hire, that like Puffy Combs hired. Like imagine being a journalist and being exposed as such a fraud that you have to hire a PR crisis team of the kind that like public figures hire when they're involved in some like big, you know, sex scandal or like bribery scandal.
Starting point is 00:06:20 That's who's managing Jake Tapper's behavior and his comportment. They've tried to place like hit pieces on me and succeed in like, you know, shitty places like the Deli Beast. But every and everything he says now is scripted, you know, like every interview he does now at first, it was like, I did. What are you talking about? This is outrageous. And now every time he's in an interview, he says, I look back on my coverage with humility. You know, that phrase, they feed you to make it seem like you're accepting accountability even though you're really not? False humility it's called, yes. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:48 What's interesting, though, is that it wasn't just, you know, I disagree with you. Biden seems fine to me. What's interesting is that he used the kind of most vulgar moral blackmail. Like, you're attacking children who stutter. You're attacking disabled kids when you criticize the president of the united states like that is so low it's hard to believe that happened i haven't seen the clip but yeah yeah i mean he claims he called laura laura trump to apologize maybe he should do that on his show since that's where he told his audience she was attacking kids who stutter like that's a pretty that's like one of the worst
Starting point is 00:07:24 things pretty much that you could do is like bully kids with disabilities, right? Like if my kids ever did that, I would punish them for three months. You know, so like accusing her of having done that, like probably doesn't warrant a private apology or maybe it does too, but also, you know, you go on air
Starting point is 00:07:38 and you were like, hey, I did something really despicable. You know, what's so amazing too is they're trying to rewrite history. Obviously, one of the ways they're trying to rewrite history is to say we were the victims of the fraud. We in the media were the victims of the fraud, and we're so angry at this inner team of Joe Biden's White House advisors who kept this from us, who hid this, even though the entire public knew
Starting point is 00:07:59 forever. But I've written about this so many times, it drives me crazy how easily history is rewritten. The first time I ever heard concerns about Joe Biden's cognitive decline was back in 2018 when the Democratic field was coalescing of people who was going to get the nomination solely by virtue of name recognition because he was the vice president to Barack Obama for eight years, was viewed as loyal, has been around forever. And they all knew there was no way he could sustain the rigors of an election because he was in cognitive decline. And so it was like these Democratic operatives like Andrea Mitchell talked about it, Cory Booker and Julian Castro in that 2019 debate all made fun of Biden for not being able to remember what he had said three seconds ago. It was the Democrats who were raising it, trying to alert everybody that you shouldn't vote for Joe Biden because he's not the same Joe Biden he was. I'm not talking about 2023. I'm talking about 2018 and 2019. The minute it was down to Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders in the 2020 primary. That's when all of a sudden the media narrative shifted and it became the only people who are talking about Biden's supposed cognitive decline are Bernie bros and MAGA people. And it's absolutely immoral and disgusting.
Starting point is 00:09:18 And that's when I wrote an article saying, what do you mean you were the ones who first raised it? I heard it from you, you know, those who first raised it i heard it from you you know those dc insiders so it's not and the only reason why you know what saved joe biden from that was that covet happened and he got to run the campaign from his basement where he only talked to like nicole wallace who spoke to him like some you know ailing grandpa you know that voice that you use for like your ailing grandpa like mr president Mr. President, Mr. Biden, hello. And then you do that fake laugh. They get even close to a joke because those are the kind of interviews he was doing.
Starting point is 00:09:51 And he was in that basement in Delaware. That's the only reason why he could sustain that campaign. But it was so widely known. I mean, his sister, Valerie, told a good friend of mine that she didn't want him to run in 2020 because he had dementia. My former makeup artist, a makeup artist, was there in the room when he was injected with amphetamines before an event more than once during that campaign. And like I said all that on TV and everyone I knew in D.C. who knew Biden, I knew Biden, said, yeah, no, he's got dementia. Like every everybody knew. I knew Biden. He said, yeah, no, he's got dementia. Like, everybody knew. Everybody knew. It wasn't just like some right-wing Twitter thing where people were being cruel. It
Starting point is 00:10:30 was like the people who knew Biden knew that. So, like, how could you not know that? Well, I think the reason this media fraud of all the other media frauds that have been perpetrated is probably the most damaging. In 2016, they pushed this whole deranged, demented conspiracy theory that Vladimir Putin had sex tapes on Donald Trump where he was being urinated on by a prostitute. And of course, if you know Donald Trump, that's pretty much the last thing that all the people on the planet. It's one sin he didn't commit. Yeah, no. Yeah. But but, you know, it was it was that sort of thing. Like they always accuse people on independent media or, you know, whoever of being conspiracy theorists.
Starting point is 00:11:05 Think about that conspiracy. Donald Trump was being blackmailed by the Russian government into sacrificing the interests of the United States to serve the interests of the Kremlin. That really was the predominant media narrative from 2016 to 2018. So that's what they did to try and stop Trump the first time. In 2020, you know, weeks before the election, the New York Post had very serious reporting about the Biden family unethically exploiting Joe Biden's influence in Ukraine and China to profit not for themselves only, but also for Joe Biden. And we were told by the media over and over the lie that this is Russian disinformation, that this laptop should be, the contents of it should be ignored because it's inauthentic. That, of course, was when I left the
Starting point is 00:11:42 intercept because they wouldn't let me write about it, claiming that there were doubts about its authenticity when I knew there weren't. But that was, and then Twitter and Facebook censored it. But on those kind of questions like Russiagate, the authenticity of these emails, like for most Americans, they don't have the competence to judge that because they do other things. But when it comes to seeing older people in cognitive decline, most of them have had that experience with like a grandparent or a parent or a sibling or a neighbor or whatever, and don't need to be told by quote unquote experts that is happening because they can see it with their own eyes. And for the media to have sat there for a year and a half and told everybody, as Joe Scarborough said, this version
Starting point is 00:12:24 of Joe Biden is the best Biden we've ever seen. I mean, imagine being such a state propagandist that you do that and then keep your job. I think that's why this scandal is so devastating to them and why like when Jake Tapper stands up to write a book saying, I've uncovered the truth with investigative reporting, you know, everybody is reacting with justifiable nausea. You got to admit, it takes some balls to do that, though. I mean, I famously advocated for the Iraq war, realized in 2003 that it was a bad idea and said I was wrong. What I didn't do was write a book saying, like, it was wrong and I always thought it was wrong.
Starting point is 00:12:59 Or like, hey, I'm here to write a book saying why the Iraq war was based on falsehoods. It's like, we already know, Tucker. Thank you. Right? Like, you didn't go and write that book because you were the one helping to perpetuate that. I totally agree. So, I guess without repentance, without the acknowledgement of wrongdoing, of dishonesty, without saying, I screwed up and making that the headline, nothing that follows is credible at all.
Starting point is 00:13:23 It's like all fake unless you admit your role in the lie. Right. And if that happened, if you said like, look, I was really swept up in the media bubble I was in, and I want to tell the story of why I did this or how I got, I convinced myself of this lie, then there would be some nobility to it. There would be some value and worth. But this is what i mean like you know i was there were several people but myself but was included who was i was bashing the table every day you know we were compiling tapes of jake dapper doing all the things that i had just referenced and i remember at the time jake dapper always serving the democratic party in these ways and his initial response was to send out like publicists to try and you know plant stories that i was lying that i was manipulating media there was one in the daily beast one of the huffington post we actually
Starting point is 00:14:09 attacking you oh yeah they were pitching stories like yeah and there's so you know they were in like shitty liberal sites that no one like huffington post and the daily beast there was a couple others um but they had pitched them like to the new york post at the wall street journal i think as well like new york post got in contact with me they didn't they didn't run it because it was so easy to prove that what was the allegation that all of these incidents that i just described and there were others as well of things he did on his show were like taken out of context or the video was manipulated just like they did when people saw joe biden wandering around on that D-Day and had to be redirected by Georgia Maloney or having been taken off the stage by this. That's the other thing.
Starting point is 00:14:51 They didn't just deny it. They attacked anyone who said it. People in 2024 who were saying, oh, look, Biden clearly doesn't know where he is, including at that event with Obama, that big George Clooney fundraiser. The Washington Post wrote an article saying they were using, it was a new phrase, cheap fakes. Like they weren't exactly fake, but the narrative was fake. And anyone who said Joe Biden clearly is in cognitive decline, if you look at him at these events, they were called right-wing disinformation agents. And as it turns out, George Clooney ended up saying, the reason why I wanted Biden not to run was because the Joe Biden I saw at that event was completely unrecognizable. He has dementia.
Starting point is 00:15:32 And at the time when people were saying, clearly he doesn't know where he is, being let off the stage by Barack Obama. None of this was new. This is what we had been seeing for so long. The media affirmatively used that disinformation term that has become their weapon of deception and propaganda and smearing people who tell the truth to label all of that disinformation. And so they were the ones who perpetrated the fraud. And now they're pretending like they're the ones uncovering it. I think the reason they don't get it is because of that insulated bubble that they exist in. They all do believe that they're truthful, they're good, they're benevolent, they're nonpartisan, and that unfortunately there was no way for them to have told the story
Starting point is 00:16:18 because Mike Donilon was lying about it or Jill Biden was keeping the truth from them. And so what can they do? So here's a company we're always excited to advertise because we actually use their products every day. It's Merriweather Farms. Remember when everybody knew their neighborhood butcher, you look back and you feel like, oh, there was something really important about that, knowing the person who cut your meat. And at some point, your grandparents knew the people who raised their meat so they could trust what they ate. But that time is long gone. It's been replaced by an era of grocery store mystery meat boxed by distant beef corporations, none of which raised a single cow.
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Starting point is 00:18:40 other side. We're going to start with the other side is evil and anything that helps them we can't do. Therefore, we're going to have to make some accommodations that may include lying, but it's not really lying. It's in the service of a greater good. Oh, yeah, which is what every person who has ever done anything evil has said to justify it. I'm not an evil person. I'm not a sociopath. I'm doing something that seems evil, but it's for a greater cause. The end is justified by the means. I mean, that's the most basic, basically immoral statement you can have. And since the emergence of Trump, that is all that journalism has become. Not just journalism, but so many academia, so many different institutions have renounced their core function, whatever that might be, science, in order to devote themselves to this monomaniacal mission of stopping Donald Trump and his movement.
Starting point is 00:19:25 And Sam Harris, just whether through stupidity or just like inadvisable candor, was the first one who came out with the Hunter Biden laptop stuff after he realized it was a lie and said like, yeah, I guess this laptop was true. But at the end of the day, I really don't care if they have to lie about it. Fine. The evil of electing Donald Trump is so much greater. And he was the first one to really candidly acknowledge what they are all thinking, which is we'll lie, we'll spread disinformation, we'll hide things because the destruction and fear that we have of Donald Trump in power is so great that anything we do to try and impede it is not just justifiable, but almost like morally imperative. That is how most of these
Starting point is 00:20:12 institutions ended up reasoning, and that's why they've lost their credibility. We're all Dietrich Bonhoeffer at this point. Right. Yeah, it's very self-glorifying, too. Like, we're on the front line of fighting fascism. What, I mean, this is such a tired question, but I've never really gotten an answer that satisfies me what is i mean i look at trump and i'm like you know this is not a radical person in most ways why and a lot of the things that he says are things that the democratic party was like officially for 10 years ago um you know less wars pay attention to the forgotten man free trade is kind of bad right exactly right I mean these are not
Starting point is 00:20:48 he is not a radical right winger as I would have conceived of a radical right winger in 1998 or 2018 so why but the hive like reacted to him like the devil does holy water just like I can't be near you
Starting point is 00:21:04 what is that I still don't fully understand it reacted to him like the devil does holy water, just like, I can't be near you. What is that? I still don't fully understand it. I think it's two things. One, less important, though still not trivial, which is comportmentally, he's just such a radical departure from the way anybody who has ever gotten close to the presidency has conducted themselves. And I remember so well the time. That's fair.
Starting point is 00:21:32 Yeah, it's true but like but once you understand what that is you can put it in your proper in the proper context and not go insane about it i remember the time that i realized just how far gone the media was when it came to this and like the political establishment generally which was during the 2016 campaign when they kept asking about like collusion with russia and collusion with russia and all that and he said i don't know anything about that i have nothing to do with the russians but hey russians if you're listening they were asking did you participate in the hacktick yeah and he was like i didn't have anything to do with that but hey like russia if you're listening maybe you could find hillary clinton's like 87,000 deleted emails, which was obviously like a joke,
Starting point is 00:22:09 just a joke. I have nothing to do with Russia, but if they're such great hackers, maybe they can find... The media took that and they, for over a year, earnestly pretended that this was proof that he was in cahoots with Russia because he submits hacking requests to Russia.
Starting point is 00:22:25 Like if you have some like back channelahoots with Russia because he submits hacking requests to Russia. Like, if you have some, like, back-channel secret relationship with Russia, the way you're going to, like, submit your request is by standing in front of 130 cameras and be like, hey, Putin, this is my latest hacking request. Go find those emails. Instead of, like, having, you know, Don Jr. meet in a parking lot with some, like, Russian agent or whatever. I mean, but the fact that they were willing to, they really thought that that was a smoking gun and could not understand how Trump jokes, how he uses irony, how he like purposely trolls was, you know, the time that I realized just how far gone they were. But I think the bigger reason why they were, I think we've talked about this before, is I would say since the end of World War II, maybe before that, but
Starting point is 00:23:11 certainly since the end of World War II, what we have more or less is a continuity of core Washington dogma on foreign and economic policy. You have, you know, on the margins, things that make it appear like the parties are so different. They fight about abortion, they do discredit abortion or culture war issues, all of that. But on the question of how power is distributed, on how the U.S. maintains global hegemony, on feeding the war machine, on how our economic system functions and who it serves, there is complete continuity between Republicans and Democrats. Those permanent power factions in Washington, the corporatism, militarism,
Starting point is 00:23:49 don't care at all who wins because their policies prevail no matter what. You can vote for whoever you want. You can vote against it. You can vote for it. It doesn't matter. It continues. Trump, by necessity, because the Republicans had already chosen Jeb Bush as their candidate, we all expected it was going to be another Bush-Clinton race. It was going to be Jeb Bush and Hillary Clinton. That was the assumption that everyone had. Hillary would have lost had the DNC not cheated for her, but they did cheat for her, so she was the nominee. But the only way Trump could break through, how do you break through against all the Republican money behind Jeb Bush? You have to run against the Bush family. You have to run against conservative Republican dogma on both finance,
Starting point is 00:24:28 economics, and foreign policy. He ran against the Iraq war. He ran against permanent war. He ran against serving corporatism at the expense of the working people, against free trade at the expense of, you know, like having an industrial base. And he became a kind of threat. And Steve Bannon was the architect of the time, and Steve Bannon's vision very much was that. The Republican establishment is at least as bad as the Democratic establishment, and he was a threat to disrupt this bipartisan continuity on which power factions in Washington depend. And I think that's what made him so unathema to so many different factions.
Starting point is 00:25:10 He was a challenge to the post-war order, basically. Like questioning the viability of NATO? I know. It's like walking into a church and saying, are we sure Jesus is divine? You know, like that alone. That actually changed my life when he said that. I grew up around NATO, grew up supporting NATO unthinkingly, never thought about
Starting point is 00:25:28 NATO. NATO's the good guys. 100%. NATO keeps the Soviets from rolling into Belgium, you know, and like, that's good. Why is that bad? Of course, we love NATO. And then he was like, hey, but like, the Soviet Union doesn't exist anymore. No one had ever, in a lifetime in D.C., no one had ever
Starting point is 00:25:43 mentioned NATO in a way that challenged me to think about what it was or its role until that. And he just said it offhandedly. And I was like, NATO, really? He's against NATO? How could you be against NATO? And that began a chain of thinking that totally changed my view of everything. So I think you're right. It's dangerous to have people saying stuff like that. I mean, what you want is continuity with the status quo. And like who was a more reliable maven of the status quo than Hillary Clinton or Joe Biden? And so that's why they were so desperate, including all the neocons and conservatives that you knew. So many of them openly supported Clinton and Biden. And many of them, to this day, half the Republican Senate caucus at least hates Trump, hates his ideology, hates his policy. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:34 You really think Mike Rounds voted for Trump? I don't think so. I don't know. But I'm just saying. Right. Those types. Yeah. So can I just go back?
Starting point is 00:26:42 I want to ask you more about that and the place of neoconservatives. And I guess we're not allowed even to use that term. So think of a new term as I ask. All right, I will. But before we get to that, like, you mentioned Russiagate a couple of times and the hacking and the subsequent leaking of those emails from the DNC. Who did that? It's possible, of course, that the Russians did it. Like, sometimes you get the official story and it's possible.
Starting point is 00:27:13 You know, I know Julian Assange a long time. I know him very well. What a good man. Oh, I think he's like one of the heroes of our lifetime. I totally agree. And not just a hero, but like incredibly consequential. And just a decent person too. And like brilliant and courageous.
Starting point is 00:27:30 I agree. Not without his personality flaws, but oftentimes that kind of courage. Whenever people used to complain about Julian's difficult personality, let's use the generous term difficult personality. I would always say like, who do you think is going to go and, like, spill the secrets of the world's most powerful government? You think it's going to be some, like, mild-mannered, like, gentle, congenial person? No, it takes a certain personality type. Yes, yes. And, but in any event, he had insinuated several times that it came from within the DNC.
Starting point is 00:28:00 He had raised the possibility that Seth Rich was murdered because he was the leaker. And it was Julian, it was WikiLeaks who ran those docs. It was WikiLeaks who received them. Yeah, but who shared them with the world. Who then published them all, exactly. So it's not a small thing when the guy who runs WikiLeaks suggests something. Correct. That said, if you are the recipient of leaks, as I've been many times, you don't actually know who the kind of, you're not sure if the person bringing you the leaks is the person who actually engineered it.
Starting point is 00:28:34 That could be a cut, you know, go between. And, but at the same time, you know, Julian is extremely smart. You know, I talked to him this day. He's, I think, not fully recovered. He'll never be. I mean, after what he went through, but his brain is,
Starting point is 00:28:48 you know, just like a font of insight. And I trust his judgment so much. You can go back and look at stuff he said and it proved to be so prescient. I know. And
Starting point is 00:29:00 so when he says that, I do think Julian sees himself for good reason as an enemy of the intelligence agencies in the West. I mean, he is that. So undoubtedly. We did like seven and a half years in confinement because of it. Yeah, like eight years in the Ecuadorian embassy and then four and a half years in the prison that the BBC calls the British Guantanamo.
Starting point is 00:29:21 Mike Pompeo, the head of CIA, plotted his assassination. Plotted his assassination, badgered the Ecuadorians into lifting the asylum they had given him and promised him and allowed the London police to go in and, you know, coerced, threatened, bribed the Ecuadorians to lift that grant of asylum so that they could
Starting point is 00:29:39 then go in. Mike Pompeo in his first month as CIA director gave a speech saying, we're going to destroy WikiLeaks. It's time that they stop hiding behind the first amendment. So he was very serious about that. Mike Pompeo should be charged with plotting someone's assassination. That's a crime. You can't do that in the United States. I mean, there's so many things Mike Pompeo should be charged with, but we know for certain that he was wanting, I mean, he was the CIA director thinking, oh, now I get to murder people who i want yeah who embarrassed me who've never been not who committed crimes he'd never been charged with a crime in the united states
Starting point is 00:30:12 when that until like until 2018 right when when when they engineered this you know obscenely baseless indictment that they knew they never wanted to bring him to the United States to stand trial. He would never have been convicted. They wanted to break him psychologically and physically, and they came very close to doing that. But in any event, so when Julian Assange says something like that, part of me knows that he views himself as an enemy of the intelligence agencies and wants to use the same methods they use, which is sometimes you spread disinformation for confusion. But I also believe that he believes there's something to it. And so we never had a real investigation into anything relating to Russiagate at all, because in the first term, Trump was, you know, that whole administration was commandeered. It was run by people who were opposed to Trump's agenda, for the most part. And part of this new administration is constructed to
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Starting point is 00:34:36 those emails came from a DNC employee? Honestly, I don't know. I just, I don't like to, I'm open to it. I'm definitely open to it but i'm not going to affirm it i think it's very strange probable i got from an mpd metropolitan police department officer who was a friend of mine uh the fact which i've checked which is that the fbi immediately took over the murder investigation now why would the fbi of a routine supposedly routine random attempted robbery attempted robbery why Why would the FBI take that over? Like, is there a good reason for that? That's bizarre.
Starting point is 00:35:09 Yeah, I know. That's why I say I'm open to it, even though that's been something that is immediately branded like such an obvious conspiracy theory that the second you suggest that you're receptive to it, but that's exactly when conspiracy theories are often ones that deserve attention.
Starting point is 00:35:26 I don't know. An American citizen got murdered in my city. And so I feel like I have an absolute right to ask, why did the FBI take that over? And what did they learn? And like, what is that? That's a totally fair question. They don't, you know, it's so funny.
Starting point is 00:35:37 They set themselves up as the arbiters of everything, as the moral arbiters, for sure. And you're like not allowed to ask that question. It's like, I live, I spent my life in dc i know the street he was shot on he's an american just like me i have absolutely a fundamental right to ask like and same with epstein why wasn't there a real investigation into this and like this seems anomalous like what's the answer well shut up you know and then the tactic is by like the ben shapirs of the world the people who are the same like the the people who have anointed themselves to be the guardians of official versions or no challenging any sorts of like, why did the USS Liberty happen?
Starting point is 00:36:13 Those kind of things. Like, what happened with JFK? My favorite was, why was JFK murdered? I don't care. It was a long time ago. Yeah, it was so long ago. Yeah, it was a long time ago. And the president got murdered. that now is just asking questions they'll be oh
Starting point is 00:36:29 it's like i don't know i feel like my job is like a not just a journalist but a human being and a citizen is like i kind of want to be asking questions i don't want to just be ingesting what i'm told because what we've been told has been proven to be deliberate lies so often also i like people who ask questions. I'm uncomfortable with people who make declarative statements exclusively because you actually don't know the answer to most things. Like I said, where do you think those emails came from? Podesta's emails, DNC emails.
Starting point is 00:36:57 And you're like, I don't really know. But here are the questions that I have. Like, that's the honest answer. Well, also, you know how many times, not just in politics where deliberate lies happen, but in every field of discipline, like physics and chemistry and biology, everything, linguistics, where a certain time arrives and people believe they've discovered an absolute proven truth. And by the next generation, it's completely debunked. Like, if you don't have, and that's why I believe in the absolute necessity of preserving the right to question everything.
Starting point is 00:37:28 That's the scientific method. Yeah, and it's just basic humility. It's like to think that human beings have discovered unchallenged truths that can never be disproven and that from here henceforth you're not allowed to question. No, I'm not accepting that from anybody.
Starting point is 00:37:43 I want to print that and put it on my fridge i'll give you i'll sign it for you thank you um yeah okay so let me let me do the apps do you want to talk about the option files in relation to that as well yeah sure i mean just because i just want to i just find the epstein file so fascinating because all the people who are now in charge of the government under Donald Trump, particularly Kash Patel and Dan Bongino at the FBI, but others as well throughout the government, were over the last four years, everywhere in the media, on their shows, on every other show, banging on the table, demanding the immediate release of all the
Starting point is 00:38:21 Epstein files. We're now five months into the Trump administration. We haven't gotten a single document that wasn't previously published of the Epstein files. They made a humiliating showing of pretending to release it when they called those conservative influencers and they all waved around the binder, Epstein files, we were like, oh my God, what was in them? And then it turns out like nothing,
Starting point is 00:38:45 you know, just every document that was in this binder was already previously released as part of the litigation or journalism that was done. And Pam Bondi's new excuse, because I mean, I'm glad that there are a lot of people in the Trump movement and the Mug movement who are not contrary to how they're depicted in some sort of cult.
Starting point is 00:39:02 Like they hold these people accountable. Like, they want to understand. Like, we were promised these things. Like, why isn't this happening? And so, Pam Bondi's excuse now is, we have thousands and thousands of sex videos of Jeffrey Epstein having sex with minors, implying that it's obviously going to take a lot of time
Starting point is 00:39:21 to go through these videos, and therefore therefore we have to be patient before we get them it's like i don't care about sex videos of jeffrey epstein having sex with children because we already know that jeffrey epstein had sex with children that's kind of the reason we know who he is he's been twice charged with that once convicted and then was ready to be charged again for me the, the two biggest issues are, are there people to whom he trafficked minors? Because he was charged with sex trafficking, but nobody has been charged with being the recipient of that sex trafficking. But the much more interesting question for me is, and there's a lot of reason
Starting point is 00:40:00 to believe it's true, is, was he working with or for any foreign intelligence agencies there is no way they don't already have that answer maybe the answer is no maybe he wasn't working with any it's it would be it would shock me but maybe that's their answer maybe their answer is he was why don't we have those answers like have fbi agents for whatever reason go through those sex tapes for the next three years that that's fine. What stops them from releasing that question, that answer now? For people who may not be as familiar with the details, what leads you to raise that question? Is there evidence that suggests he might have been working with a foreign intel agency? Well, first of all, the source of his wealth has always been mysterious. I mean,
Starting point is 00:40:42 he wasn't just very rich. He was living the life of a multi-multi-billionaire. He had $50 million properties in Manhattan and West Palm Beach and bought that island, New Mexico, flying around on a 747. This is not just like somebody who's very wealthy. This is somebody with essentially unlimited resources, right? Like Bill Gates type wealth. And one of the ways, one of his primary benefactors is Les Wexner, who is a multi-billionaire, somebody with whom he worked closely. And I guess the argument or the claim is he was a brilliant strategist for how to save taxes, how to save money on taxes. He was like a highly competent accountant, basically.
Starting point is 00:41:26 Yeah, like a tax accountant. That's what tax accountants do. They tell you what strategies to use to save money. So maybe Les Wexner valued him so much that he gave him, I don't know, $3 billion.
Starting point is 00:41:35 In general, billionaires don't like to give money away that they don't have to. Maybe Les Wexner is like super generous, like, oh, I'm so grateful to Jeffrey Epstein,
Starting point is 00:41:42 here's like $2 billion. But Les Wexner has all sorts of ties to, like, his main non-moneymaking endeavor in life is supporting Israel and donating to pro-Israel groups and working closely with the Israeli government. Ghazane Maxwell, who's now in prison as having been essentially his right-hand man, her father, Robert Maxwell, who died in a very mysterious way, he slipped off his yacht, was a known Mossad agent. He worked with the Mossad. He had very close ties to Israel. We all know—
Starting point is 00:42:17 He was given a state funeral. Yes, in Israel. Yes. And when I did the Snowden reporting, people, there's a lot of documents that we released that in just because there were so many, they're not, not, not all of them got the attention they deserved. One of the set of files we released described the intelligence relationship that we have with Israel, the NSA has with Israel. Israel is the number one recipient of NSA technology and NSA intelligence. We share more with Israel,
Starting point is 00:42:45 even more than we do with the Five Eyes partners who developed this technology. We give more to Israel, more intelligence, raw intelligence about Americans as well, and more intelligence know-how. But at the same time, the documents that describe who are our greatest intelligence threats, who are our greatest intelligence threats, who are our greatest intelligence adversaries, who spies on us the most, who is capable of spying out the most, number one on the list is Israel as well. Obviously, the Israelis use, you know, some, I mean, the most dangerous spying programs like Pegasus and others come from Israel, are developed by Israel, are controlled by the Israelis, by which I simply mean to say that Israel uses every weapon at its disposal, including gathering incriminating information about its enemies.
Starting point is 00:43:31 Some people have suggested that, oh, no, it's not Israel. It's probably the Qatari intelligence agencies with whom he worked. Maybe it was Peru. Maybe it was Indonesia. People have said that Epstein was working with the Qataris? Yeah. I want to keep a list of people who make that claim. Do you know anyone? It's pretty funny. are now constantly trying to convince people that the real foreign government that is exerting extreme amounts of influence over our politicians and our institutions is Cotter.
Starting point is 00:44:10 I find it hilarious. And I'm always like, you know what? Let me know when Congress starts passing on a weekly basis pro-Cotter resolutions, or when students are being expelled and deported because they've criticized Cotter. Let me know when like uh we start sending billions of dollars a year to to cotter let me know when all that starts to happen and i'll be receptive to the fact that maybe qatar but anyway all i'm saying i'm not saying it's israel i'm just saying the the the the the nature of what jeffrey epstein was doing the amount of wealth that it
Starting point is 00:44:42 that that it required the number of the most powerful elites on the planet who were with him, who were involved with him, who were at his island too, despite knowing that he had been convicted in 2010 of having sex with minors, hiring prostitutes who were underage, who continued to consort with him in the most, you know, proximate ways. Something was going on there. It would be incredibly valuable. He kept, you know, he had cameras in every part of his house. He had tapes of everything. Obviously, that would be of immense value to any foreign intelligence agent. And American. I mean, he was close friends
Starting point is 00:45:20 with Bill Burns, the former head of the CIA. Maybe domestic intelligence agencies as well, but how, like, it really is starting to inflame my suspicions a great deal every day that goes by. Well, we're not getting that information, particularly because the people who have it are the people who spent years demanding its release and promising to facilitate it if they got into power. You're probably pretty sick in Nike. It's hard to blame you for feeling that way. Any company that worships Colin Kaepernick, any company that shills for the lunacy of the left social agenda
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Starting point is 00:48:12 which I think maybe is at the top of your memory, about why Epstein got off so easily. How is this not talked about every day? Okay, so in Florida, in the United States generally, having sex with minors, hiring, you know, using minors as prostitutes is considered like a pretty terrible crime. Yeah. Yeah, you know, most people agree on that. You don't allow it.
Starting point is 00:48:34 Yeah, you don't really have to debate that. That's considered like something that deserves huge amounts of jail time and typically results in huge amounts of jail time. Jeffrey Epstein barely went to jail for that. As part of a plea bargain, they had enormous amounts of evidence. It wasn't a question of could they prove his guilt. They gave him a plea deal, a plea deal, where he spent like six seconds in jail, and then like most of the time at home doing community service. And Alex Acosta, who was the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida at the time, which was in charge of the case, that's where Epstein was, ultimately ended up in the Justice
Starting point is 00:49:11 Department and other roles inside the government. And so he was constantly asked, why would you give Jeffrey Epstein such a generous plea deal that nobody would ever get for those crimes? And he ended up saying i was told that he's intelligence and therefore leave him alone that's what alex acosta the prosecutor says that he was told about what he should do with the jeffrey like leave him alone because he's intelligent well there were we're just kind of the conversation just like ended like we know now i mean if the prosecutor says the federal prosecutor in Florida says that, then I think we can assume that that's true. Right. So why do we know what that means?
Starting point is 00:49:49 That's what you know, like what would be the reason that people inside the Trump administration who have long expressed vehemently, vocally at the top of their agenda demands that the Epstein files be released? Why are they not telling us that information? I think the net effect of this is to drive everyone insane and to make everyone like angry and suspicious and paranoid and conspiracy minded. I do think that. It's like you expect that we're going to hear the truth and then it's like, by the way no everyone assumes the worst i mean why wouldn't you assume the worst well you know if that improves american society the thing is like you know i whenever i talk about independent media including from people who are supporters of it believe it's a positive development they all say oh but you know there's so many conspiracy
Starting point is 00:50:40 theories that end up being cultivated and spread that people embrace. And that's true. Yeah, of course it is. There's been a lot of conspiracy theories embraced by the credible legacy media as well. I mean, it wasn't like Reddit that convinced Americans Saddam Hussein had an active nuclear weapons program. Or that Joe Biden was the best version ever. Right. Or that like the North Vietnamese were the aggressors in the Gulf of Pumpkin, right? That came from like CBS and Walter Cronkite and the New York Times.
Starting point is 00:51:07 But in any event, of course, there's going to be Americans who are now amenable to every conspiracy theory. Because what have we lived through? The Iraq War, the 2008 financial crisis, all of the lies from 9-11 itself. And then if you go back further, like the Vietnam War, but then also COVID. And like one after the next, at best, massive fundamental systemic failure on the part of all the institutions we were taught to trust, and probably at worst, and probably more accurately, overwhelming deceit and lies and falsehoods and propaganda continuously disseminated by them in order to facilitate what they wanted what is going to happen to a society where people lose faith and trust in institutions not because you know charlatans are on the sidelines encouraging them to make that happen but because rationally those institutions no longer merit trust or faith. If you lie too much, I don't believe you. It's kind of basic.
Starting point is 00:52:08 So the only antidote to that is transparency is revealing the truth. And I really worry right now especially that this is hardening people's cynicism and rage and really at some point nihilism. Like nothing is true. That is the conclusion a lot of people are goingilism. Nothing is true. That is the conclusion a lot of people are going to make. Nothing is true. I don't believe anything. It's all fake. Also, you know, Cash Patel and Dan Mangino are people who
Starting point is 00:52:35 were among the most popular among the MAGA base. These were the people among the most respected. Dan Mangino's show on Rumble, a platform that still maybe like 30, 40, maybe even 50% of the people among the most respected. I mean, Dan Bongino's show on Rumble, a platform that still maybe like 30, 40, maybe even 50% of the people in the United States have never even heard of, was getting bigger audiences
Starting point is 00:52:53 than almost every daytime cable show. Kash Patel, you know, the surge of support for him when he was nominated to lead the FBI was massive because people thought, no, that's who we need to like get in and root this out and clean it out. And I believe that they, I believe there is something to that. I think they are authentic and genuine in that way. But at the same time, something is constraining them. And so I asked myself, what kinds of truths would people be determined to hide who are more powerful than they are? And when it comes to the Epstein files, I continuously zero in on that question of who was he working with or for whom? I can see people in government not wanting that answer to be disclosed, just like the same reason
Starting point is 00:53:46 we didn't have the JFK files and still don't. We still don't. For 65 years. I know Bongino well. I think of him as a friend. I think he is a man of integrity. And I think his integrity remains pure because of his rage. Like Dan's mad at and so i do i don't know what's going on um at all he and to be clear he said i know that epstein killed himself because i've seen the evidence so i'm pretty confident in the in the case of dan bongino i don't even mind that but then the question still becomes like they said they know how their their supporters are going to react to that right and they were among the people raising doubts about whether Epstein killed himself. I'm not that, I'm not,
Starting point is 00:54:28 I wouldn't shock me if Epstein killed himself. Like you live a life of great wealth and then suddenly, you know, you're going to spend the prison, you spend the rest of your life in prison. It seems odd to me that you can go to a federal prison and kill yourself. Like there's not safeguards against that,
Starting point is 00:54:40 but whatever. Think of things that are run by the government failed. I'm not suggesting that they're lying about that but even there they're saying like look i promise you we read the files he killed himself so then my question is well why can't we read those files well that is my that is my question too and um i would just say in the case of bongino i know cash patel but i'm not like a friend of cash patel's i'm a friend of Bongino's, and I do think that will come out. But I think big picture, DOJ is making a huge mistake, huge mistake in promising to reveal things
Starting point is 00:55:12 and then not revealing them. And that gives the whole country a kind of moral blue balls at that point. And it's bad. It's really bad. It's going to cause a lot of hate. And second, I think that we underestimate the physical threat that people in Washington face. It's always like blackmail or ideological affinity that gets people.
Starting point is 00:55:31 No, people are afraid of getting hurt. I do think that's a component. I mean, I know that's a component here. I mean, political assassination, political murder has been going on for as long as politics have. And the JFK case is an example of the president of the United States having his head blown off. Exactly. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:55:48 And you think that that's not ever present or constantly present in the minds of people in Washington? They killed the president, got away with it for over 60 years. So, like, clearly there are forces that are above justice. Oh, no, don't worry. Lee Harvey Oswald was killed and Jack Ruby went to prison.
Starting point is 00:56:04 Jack Ruby! The whole story is Jack Ruby, by the way. Lee Harvey Oswald was killed and Jack Ruby went to prison. Jack Ruby. The whole story is Jack Ruby, by the way. The whole story is Jack Ruby. I mean, he just walked up to the person they had claimed and just shot him in the stomach. And there's no evidence he even liked the Kennedys. There's zero evidence. He never campaigned for them, never gave them money. There's not one person who's ever come forward to say, you know, Jack Ruby was passionately attached to JFK. Not one person. Right. So, like, what was the motive
Starting point is 00:56:29 there? He was clearly sent there to silence Lee Harvey Oswald. So, by whom is the obvious question? There are very serious indications by whom, but whatever. I don't know. But I don't know why everyone spends all this time on Lee Harvey Oswald when the key to the story is so clearly Jack Ruby. Yeah, I mean, this is, I think we are so indoctrinated to believe that this sort of thing happens in other countries. Like how much, think about how much we've heard, for example, about Putin and Albani. Right. And we're all supposed to like obsess on the idea that in Russia, you know, if you get too much influence, you become too much of a threat to somebody, you get killed or imprisoned. The funny thing is Putin didn't even kill Navalny.
Starting point is 00:57:11 I think everybody, the CIA says that. Yeah, exactly. There's no, yeah, exactly. After months of just making it obvious that he- I got blamed for his murder. I was in Russia when he died. Oh, yeah, that's right. I can't believe you killed Navalny.
Starting point is 00:57:22 I remember that timing. You were going to go, you had your big Putin interview, and then like two days earlier, Putin killed Navalny, and you were like there with Putin. No, but that's a big part of how that propaganda works. You know, I grew up thinking that, like, these kind of bad things happen. They just don't happen in our country. It must be cool to live, you live outside the country, famously,
Starting point is 00:57:43 where, you know, you're a foreigner living in a country you've been a long time you speak the language you're engaged in the politics so you're like part of it but you're also from the united states so you're not coming at it with that baggage you can see you're just like you don't lie to yourself about what it is yeah i do think i think one of the great one of the things which for which I'm most grateful is that I was never embedded in the DC political and media scene. And obviously you removed yourself from it, which is why we're here and not in Georgetown.
Starting point is 00:58:13 It didn't help me being a part of that at all. I'll tell you, there's a, I've had a friendly relationship with Alex Thompson for a while. I've been, you know, Jake Tapper's co-author in that book. Former political reporter. Yes, who now works at Axios. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:31 And I've been very aggressive about praising him, like, going back two years when he was one of the only ones working for these news outlets who was on the story of Biden's cognitive decline, getting mauled and attacked by the entire Democratic Party. I was often praising him and defending him. You know, I mean, I wouldn't say we're great friends, but, you know, he, like, sent me a copy of the book with very nice words. And so, when I go to attack Jake Tapper, which is essentially attacking that book, of course, there's a part of my brain that, like, you know, thinks about, like, wait, what is that going to do to my relationship with Alex Thompson? And then you have to be like, I don't care. But if that is your life, you know, I mean, Alex Thompson is not like an important close friend of mine. But like if you live in Washington and your whole social scene is integrated into,
Starting point is 00:59:18 that is why there's no adversarial relationship between the media. You know what's so funny? Jake Tapper andompson were on that shitty pbs show that is now hosted by jeffrey goldberg so can you imagine the watch free goldberg is a pbs show yeah it's like the week in washington i did jeffrey goldberg hosted tv show yeah i'm a pbs like the week in washington just like it's the most i know i know you can't find anyone less telegenic but But anyway, he is the person that sits there like, anyway, Jeffrey Goldberg was defending the media,
Starting point is 00:59:49 saying like, I think it's outrageous that we're being blamed for this whole thing with Biden and cognitive decline when there was nothing we could do. And so at the end, he said to Jake Tapper, like, what is the lesson that we have to take from all this? And Jake Tapper was got very serious. He like furred his brow,
Starting point is 01:00:02 but he only looked down at the table because he just, it was a very weird thing like he's just kind of you know he's on television every day you know you look up you talk to people you engage he was like looking down his head bowed like the face of somebody who has a PR crisis firm and he said uh what I have realized is that you cannot trust what people in power tell you. People in power lie. And when they tell you things, you have to take it with skepticism. You cannot take it on face value.
Starting point is 01:00:36 So Jake Topper, at 56 years old, after 30 years of working in journalism, has discovered what if I were to teach college freshmen a class on journalism would be the thing that I would say on the first day about what the job is, right? Like why it's important to have journalism because people in power lie to keep their power. And this is something that now that Trump's in office, they've suddenly discovered is an important thing to do to be adversarial to people in power. And I think that is in their mind, like there is an element of truth to their revisionist history that makes them the victim. Like they are friends with Mike Donilon and like Anita Dunn. Their kids go to their same schools. They live in the same neighborhoods. They intermarry, you know, like half these couples are like one in the media, one in politics. And then the
Starting point is 01:01:23 door, they constantly switch and they're at lobbyist firms together. Washington is like, you know, Versailles. And so it's impossible to be adversarial. Man, we had dinner without naming names, but with a journalist last night, you and I did here, who I never met before, nice guy, actually, but from DC, grew up two blocks from me. Mother went to the same school that I did. He went to the same schools as everyone I know.
Starting point is 01:01:49 I mean, it's like, if you're from there, you are connected to every other person who's from there. Of course. But, like, to a much greater extent
Starting point is 01:01:59 than people understand, just physically. Yes, it's like the British court, like, totally incestuous. It's unbelievable. But, you know, this is what I think, I think think a lot of times you know because i've been a very harsh critic of media corporations and the like people you know ask me like when did this change or
Starting point is 01:02:14 whatever and i like there's always been a lot of closeness between the the the media and its supposed heyday in the 50s with like at jr uh with murrow and Cronkite and all that but you know they were you look at Time Magazine and the New York Times they were outposts for U.S. propaganda on foreign policy during the Cold War but I think you know there was a long time when journalism was considered this like working class you know outsider profession and the people who went into it didn't want to be like wearing Armani suits and, you know, going to dinner at the White House and with like BS celebrities. They were just like, you know,
Starting point is 01:02:50 working class guys who just wanted to like throw rocks at power. That was their personality. That's why they went into journalism. And of course, going back even further, like the First Amendment says, you know, all Americans enjoy freedom of the press. There was no such thing as like
Starting point is 01:03:03 this secret priesthood of called journalists like professional the press was literally the printing press that everybody could use and everybody did use you'd have to be a journalist to use it it was just a means of expressing and disrupting and informing and organizing and that's what they protected and as huge corporations started buying media outlets you know like westinghouse buys uh cbs and don't buy biocom or Disney now owns ABC, that sort of being a good soldier for people in power, who are obedient to it. And that, to me, has become the most fundamentally rotted part. And that's why, you know, what inspired me to get into journalism is, like, the blogosphere of, like, the early 2000s, which are, like, just all these angry people on the right and left, like, hating media, no credentials, but like seeing things that they weren't seeing, you know, hating the Bush administration, but either from the right or from the left, hating the mainstream media, same thing.
Starting point is 01:04:31 And like, you start realizing like, wow, like this mainstream media and politics, it's like a tiny little, like Obama once described it as, you know, like, well, like John Boehner is supposed to call me a communist, but you know, everyone knows the reality is we just fight within the 40-yard line. It's like we're basically on the same team, the 40-yard line. And you realize there's this whole other space and way of looking at things. And it was really the internet that gave rise to it, which is why the internet is, and controlling it and censoring it, is the thing that is on the top of their agenda because it's the biggest threat to them. So the people trying to wreck our civilization want you to be passive. They want you weak so they can control you. Weakness is their goal. No thanks. Our friends at Beam, a proud American company, understand that our
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Starting point is 01:06:15 Use the code Tucker for up 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. Move along and obey. No one believes that. Crime is not going away. Supply chains remain fragile. It does feel like some kind of global conflict
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Starting point is 01:07:38 Go to AmmoSquared.com to learn more. Why do you see things, well, I should just say, I think your mom worked at McDonald's, actually. Yeah, I mean, I think, you know. Which is like, I think. Which wouldn't be shocking if you were in any other business, but I don't think I know a single other person.
Starting point is 01:07:54 I don't think I know a single other person in our generation in media who can say that. Yeah, I think like, I do, I mean, Richard Nixon had this as well. This, you know, I think Trump has it to an extent too, even though like Trump grew up very wealthy, but it was like outer borough wealth, which is not looked upon kindly by like old money in Manhattan at all. And then he comes into Manhattan and started building gigantic buildings and being all like flashy about it, you know. And so he understood that he was looked down upon by those people. Same with Richard Nixon. Richard Nixon always knew that the intelligentsia on the East Coast hated him, thought he was disgusting. And I think if you grew up
Starting point is 01:08:31 feeling excluded from certain kind of power centers, there's always going to be a kind of resentment that you have toward it. And I suppose in some way that could lead to a desperation to be integrated into it. But I think more often than not, and certainly in my case, it made me want to like deconstruct it and show like the facade that they use to glorify themselves, but the dirt and filth that really lay underneath. And I think that
Starting point is 01:08:57 kind of distance really helps with clarity of vision. I totally agree. And traveling, you were saying last night that you think that traveling is one of the most expanding things you can do. I had this, I did that interview with Alexander Dugan. I know you've interviewed him too. And I know we're all supposed to hate him and he's a fascist, whatever.
Starting point is 01:09:19 But one of the reasons I really loved him is, you know, he's a philosopher. When I say I loved him, I mean, I love talking to him. He's a philosopher. And I was like loved him is, you know, he's a philosopher. When I say I loved him, I mean I loved talking to him. He's a philosopher. And I was like, that was, I know, sometimes I studied philosophy in college. It was my obsession. I wanted to teach philosophy.
Starting point is 01:09:32 I ended up being more practical in law school. But thinking about, you know, things in like terms of their first principles and like always needing a like rationale or a logical train that gets you from the start of your question to the end of whatever answer you think you've embraced is very important to me and just thinking about you know like not being reflexive so one of the things he said to me was he said you know i'm always accused of being like a racist or a white supremacist because i'm so devoted to preserving russian culture and r civilization. And he said, actually, the biggest racists by far are Western liberals because they believe that their way of being is so superior that every single other culture should give way to adapting itself to their way of life. Like, the whole world should be homogenized in their vision because they're
Starting point is 01:10:22 inherently superior. Like, they find a tribe, tribe some ancient tribe and they want to immediately like mold it into like washington neoliberals and what he was saying was like what makes the world valuable and interesting and ultimately like the way you advance and think about things is that you have all these different traditions all these different civilizations like r Russian civilization and Chinese civilization and Muslim civilization and, you know, Western civilization. And preserving those is what ensures that we have this diversity of thought. It's like a seed bank. Yeah, everything contributes something. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:10:56 And so, you are constantly told, and maybe this is universal, when you grow up in a society that your way of life is, you know, we're always told like the United States is the greatest country ever to exist in the whole history of the world. Like what a great coincidence for me that I was born in like the objectively greatest country to ever be on the planet, not just now, but all of human history. And there are some parts of the United States that I know I love and I think are very uniquely valuable for sure but the more you get to know other types of ways of thinking and you have this experience like some neighbor has a politics different than yours and you think they're crazy and then you go and talk to them and you understand them better yes and then that makes you be more open to ways of looking at things that that to me is what you know like intellectual vibrancy is is going to places that you don't understand, hearing ideas that you were taught to believe are crazy or evil or wrong. And then, you know,
Starting point is 01:11:52 when you talk to the human beings who believe them, you understand that they actually have as much conviction about it or as much rationale for it as you do for yours. I just think that's a beautiful sentiment and thank you for saying it. So, what you're really arguing for is diversity. Yeah, like diversity, like not the kind that, you know, we've been told is diversity, where everyone thinks the same thing, but like they have surface level diversity. The Indian guy, the black guy, and the white lady all went to Princeton, and they're diverse. Yeah, I remember this initiative where we wanted to diversify our newsroom at The Intercept, and so we hired like a black Harvard student whose parents were partners at Goldman Sachs and then like a Latino person who went to Yale and their partners were at JP Morgan. And then like, you know, and that was like diversity, like everything but like working class diversity or experiential diversity, you know, the most like superficial
Starting point is 01:12:40 kind, the most easily accommodated kind. Yeah, know very much so what did you think so you interviewed dugan in russia in moscow what did you think of it when was the last time you were there i had been several times because i visited snowden and you know we in citizen four the one of the last scene of citizen four the film that was made about the snowden uh our work with snowden that won the oscar that laura poiches directed was her and myself going to to russia to interview snowden about like a next sort of story imagine pardon interrupt imagine a snowden film winning an oscar now i mean at the time it was uh we were we when we started started winning all the awards and we did the whole
Starting point is 01:13:26 like award circuit and we started winning we were very shocked and at the time I remember after they announced Citizen Four
Starting point is 01:13:36 as the winner of the Oscars it was Neil Patrick Harris who was the host of the Oscars we had gone on stage and got the award and he then said Edward Snowden wanted to be here but he
Starting point is 01:13:47 was unable to for some sort of treason you know like playing doing a word play on reason but like with the word treason and it's like you fucking idiots like you're hollywood you went through like the mccarthy era you went through all these things that you claim well he was told to say that was yeah of course it was part of the script. But it was a very, you know, War is a brilliant filmmaker. And I think it won because of the quality of the film, like in the drama inherent in the story,
Starting point is 01:14:13 not because the politics of it were that we were exposing spying programs developed under President Obama, largely, almost entirely. But as you're so right, this was before Russiagate. This was before, you know, where anything connected to Russia was considered.
Starting point is 01:14:28 There's no chance. You wouldn't even get it here. I don't think it would even, yeah, they wouldn't even consider it. Right. At this point. So you'd been to Moscow before, but you were just there this winter, this spring? Just, yeah, a few months ago, two, three months ago. What'd you think?
Starting point is 01:14:40 Well, I mean, you know, we talked about this before this before but like I remember the first time I ever went to Russia I was so shocked by the immense disparity between what I had been taught to think what what Russia was like and what I was seeing in front of my own eyes and you know you can go anywhere and like you know people come to Brazil to Rio de Janeiro and they only go to the richest neighborhoods and they're like oh it's but you know there's a whole undergirding of misery and suffering that you don't see because you don't go there. So I'm very cognizant of that, right? You can't go to a country and spend like two days there and be shown the best parts and think like, oh, wow. Nonetheless, it's not only beautiful, it's extremely well run, it's clean. But the thing that, you know, that I felt like was most present was the richness of Russian history and dance and architecture. And I mean, it has been through like wars of like the most difficult kind.
Starting point is 01:15:50 And you just feel the heaviness of all of that, like the greatness of it. And obviously I understand that there's political repression there. I understand that there's a huge, all kinds of social problems. I'm not denying any of that. That's true everywhere, right?
Starting point is 01:16:06 Pretty much. But you understand why Russians have this immense pride in their country and in their civilization. So it didn't feel like a gas station with nuclear weapons, as McCain said? Exactly. Right. Has there ever been an uglier thing than any politician, just a dumber,
Starting point is 01:16:27 I mean, and McCain was dumb. I knew him very well. Very, very, very. He was low IQ. Totally. Wasp. Hate to say that,
Starting point is 01:16:34 but it's true. With good qualities. He had good qualities, but he was an idiot. But to say something like that out loud is like, there's just, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:16:44 Like, if you're an idiot, keep it to yourself. A gas station with nuclear weapons, that's just, ugh. Yeah, I mean, that's what I mean. Like, you know, you're taught in college even, like, the greatest literature is like Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, who are the greatest novelists ever. And, you know. Which is true. I mean, undoubtedly. And also just the history, like the role they played in World War II and like the Bolshevik Revolution and the, you know, the wars of the 17th and 18th centuries. And then, you know, Moscow itself and St. Petersburg even more so are so, you know, beautiful and striking.
Starting point is 01:17:22 Overwhelming. Like, in a way that, like, the best Western European cities are. You know, like, the history of it, the grandness of it. And so, yeah, I mean, that you have to go see things for yourself and you start realizing how much your, how much, you know, that, this, like, when I started writing about politics,
Starting point is 01:17:40 I'll just tell you this quick story. I never intended to be a journalist. I didn't go to school for journalism. That was not part of my life plan in any way. It was just after 9-11, you know, as I saw these radical changes to our civil liberties and the name of fighting terrorism, but also just the climate became so repressive in terms of what you could question, what you could say. That's when I started feeling a need to want to say things
Starting point is 01:18:05 that I felt like weren't being said. And when I started doing that more or less full time, it gave me the luxury of going and looking at things so that I wasn't being told by the New York Times what a document said. I was able to go spend the three hours to read the document. And when you go and do that, you have the like luxury of that time, which most people don't have. They're taking care of their kids.
Starting point is 01:18:27 They're working, et cetera. You can't fight propaganda if you don't, you know, have the resources to do it, especially time. I started realizing how many things I had believed. And I had like a, you know, high opinion of my intellect. I thought I was like a high-end political consumer. You know, I like lived in New York. I like went to good schools. In many ways, that makes it worse, not better. I've learned that, yes. Yeah. And so, you know, just going back and I basically
Starting point is 01:18:54 decided I had to dismantle almost everything because so much of it was just ingested through no critical faculty. But why would you want to dismantle your assumptions? I mean, that's such a painful process. It sucks. But why would you want that? Why wouldn't you just say, you know, I believe what I believe and that's it. Like, I decided in college I'm not changing. This is like right after 9-11 and the war in, like the Iraq war, which everybody was
Starting point is 01:19:20 kind of like, wait, what just happened? We just went and did this massive land war, this invasion on the other side of the country, a country that had nothing to do with 9-11, because we were told they were somehow responsible based on nuclear weapons and chemical weapons they actually didn't have. Like, everybody at that point, more or less, was starting to question. And, you know, you feel angry and betrayed when inside your brain you're led to believe things that are just false. Yes. And you want to expunge it from yourself. You want to cleanse yourself of that. I think that's a virtuous response.
Starting point is 01:19:57 Well, I think you've done that. That has been- I have. It took a little longer, but yeah, and it was- Because you were so much more immersed in it than I was. It was a little more painful. Yeah, I was right in the middle of it, but a lot of people didn't do it.
Starting point is 01:20:08 I just want to call to the attention of listeners how rare what you did was. And that process of a self-examination, which is the root of wisdom, is unusual. People just don't want to deal with it. Like Jake Tapper saying, I look upon some of my coverage with humility, like that fake kind of like.
Starting point is 01:20:26 Well, there's really nothing more galling than fake humility. I mean, that's like meta fake. Scripted, scripted fake humility. Because like the one thing you hope is real is humility. But it's not. So I got to ask you about something. So because of AI, I'm a little suspicious of things I see on the internet. Because could that really be real?
Starting point is 01:20:46 So someone sent this to me the other day. This is a person who I confirmed is a real person. I didn't believe it at first. Congressman Randy Fine of Florida. And he said this the other day on Fox News last week. Quote, in World War II, we did not negotiate a surrender with the Nazis. We did not negotiate a surrender with the Nazis. We did not negotiate a surrender with the Japanese. We nuked the Japanese twice in order to get unconditional surrender.
Starting point is 01:21:11 That needs to be the same here in Gaza. There is something deeply wrong with this culture, and it needs to be defeated. So we're going to nuke Gaza because of its culture. We're going to kill everybody because we don't like the culture, which, by the way, lots of Christians in Gaza, Muslims its culture. We're going to kill everybody because we don't like the culture, which, by the way, lots of Christians in Gaza, Muslims in Gaza. Just innocent people in Gaza of all kinds. Of course, but to say there's some
Starting point is 01:21:31 Gazan culture that's cohesive, it's like, what? But we're going to kill them all because we don't like their culture. And so I didn't believe that was real. I didn't really think he was a member of Congress. He's newly elected. Like in the last, he filled Matt, I think it was Mike Waltz or Matt Gage's seat, one or the other.
Starting point is 01:21:50 It was Waltz. Waltz, yeah. So I texted a friend of mine in Congress. Is this really a member of Congress? Yes. It's like, I don't even know what to say to that. But that, first of all, it's evil. But how can you say something like that and not get expelled from Congress or the Republican?
Starting point is 01:22:03 How can that person be a member of the Republican Party? I don't understand. So let me say two things about that. And yes, Randy Fine is very real. I've been watching him for a while now, ever since Trump endorsed him as this America first candidate. He had served in the Florida Senate, in the Florida legislature, maybe the Florida House, but one of those two bodies. So he was a member of the Florida. Hates, DeSantis hates him.
Starting point is 01:22:27 He hates DeSantis. He has a feud with DeSantis. And his entire political existence is centered around a foreign country, which is Israel, not the United States. He barely ever talks about the United States. So that's America first? Right, America first. So let me just say two things. One is this broader point, and then I want to get to the more important
Starting point is 01:22:48 one. I started noticing this in like 2006, 2007, and I know you hear this all the time. World War II was one of the worst things that has ever happened to humanity. And the reason it happened was because you had these massive military powers with these new technologies that had never previously been used in war engaged in mass destruction and a madman who was leading and had started the war for all kinds of reasons and you had the world's most powerful factions throughout the world destroying each other in the most inhumane way to the point where we not only used nuclear weapons, but after the war was over, we decided we never wanted to have a war like that again. We imposed by convention. We agreed to all sorts of limits through the Geneva Convention and all these other treaties and conventions, ways to make sure that what happened in World War II never happens again. The people who got blamed for it, it was a form of victor's justice at if the principles were enunciating applied to all
Starting point is 01:24:05 countries in the future, including the part of the countries presiding over the tribunal. It was meant to enunciate universal principles that all countries agreed to on earth because it was so inhumane. Like, it just stripped everybody of their humanity. And yet, so every time we have a new war where someone wants to sell a new war in the United States, the only historical framework that they'll use as if they only studied one thing in high school and college, like the only thing they know is World War II. And either you're on the side of Churchill- And they know nothing about World War II, by the way.
Starting point is 01:24:39 No, but they know, all they know is that- The Wikipedia version. Churchill is good because he went and fought, and Chamberlain is bad because he tried to use diplomacy. I wrote an article about this six months after I started writing about politics in 2006, how everything was superimposed on it was the framework of World War II, and you are either Churchill or Chamberlain, and you choose one or the other the other neocons to this very day, by which I mean people who always want the United States to go to war in the Middle East and elsewhere, the minute you say you're not interested in war, you're Chamberlain. And the minute that you want to go to war, you're heroic Churchill. And so the idea that because we use nuclear weapons against Japan, Imperial Japan, filled with enormous amounts of skill and money and know-how and a massive military force allied with Nazi Germany, one of the most industrialized military
Starting point is 01:25:32 forces ever, that because we ended the war with nuclear weapons then, we're supposed to now use it on a completely defenseless population of 2 million people, half of whom are children who have no army of any kind, can't even break out of Gaza, let alone threaten any other country in the world, is absolutely demented. But that is one of the war propaganda themes that are always used is everything is World War II,
Starting point is 01:25:56 and that's the only war that we can reference, even though at the time the idea was we have to prevent all this from ever happening again. They want to replicate it eternally. But I don't know that I can support a party with someone like Randy Fine. I don't understand. Like, how could someone like Randy Fine? I mean, that's so disgusting.
Starting point is 01:26:14 It's demented. That is psychotic to say that. Does anyone say that about Randy Fine? Well, I think Randy Fine is such an important uh despite his how repulsive he is uh ethically morally and physically despite that i think he's a very important instrument for looking at this radical contradiction within the republican party and especially the the america first movement so donald, and obviously there were a lot of Republicans who wanted to run for that Mike Waltz seat
Starting point is 01:26:47 and for the Matt Gaetz seat. And whoever Trump endorses is essentially guaranteed to be the winner. And he endorsed Randy Fine and said, Randy Fine is all America first. And I remember the day that that happened, thinking Randy Fine actually is not even concerned about America, let alone placing it first his entire
Starting point is 01:27:07 political existence is driven by loyalty to a foreign country everything for him is israel everything and to to like even to an extent that is very severe for a congress that in general prioritizes israel to a shocking amount I can't think of a foreign country that is as important to, as Israel is to the United States, that has any other kind of foreign country placing its interest on par with, if not above it. And so here you have a member of the Republican Party who identifies as America first, who Donald Trump endorses as a member of America first, and whose loyalty is to a foreign country, who wants to have the American worker fund that foreign country,
Starting point is 01:27:50 wants the American worker to pay for their military, give $4 billion automatically every year in a deal negotiated by Obama and Netanyahu when Obama was on his way out. And every time Israel wants to have a new war, we send them whatever they want, billions more. We feed them all these weapons paid for by the American taxpayer. We isolate ourselves from the rest of the world. We block every UN resolution that the entire world supports in order to tie ourselves to Israel. We lose our own standing, our own soft power, our own imagery in the world. We lose massive amounts of money.
Starting point is 01:28:22 All sorts of people have said that the reason we have, there's so much anti-American hatred in the Middle East, the reason why people want to attack our country, the reason why we can't get things done in the Middle East, a region where we have a lot of interest, is because of the hatred for the United States driven primarily by our standing behind and doing everything for Israel.
Starting point is 01:28:42 Well, some of them, Laden said that in his manifesto. He spelled it out. Can we just talk one second about the fact that Bin Laden wrote a note to the American people explaining why al-Qaeda was driven to attack the United States. And there were some religious references, obviously, because al-Qaeda is a nominally religious organization.
Starting point is 01:29:07 But overwhelmingly, he listed very specific grievances with American foreign policy, all having to do with the fact that we constantly interfere in that region. We place military bases on sacred Saudi soil. We imposed a sanctions regime on Iraq for years that killed 500,000 Iraqi children that Madeleine Albright said was worth it. We overthrow their leaders and impose the ones that some country that's just sitting there peacefully and that never bothers us. And we decided, hey, look over there, they let their women wear bikinis, so we better go and attack them, right? Like we were attacked for our freedom. So he writes this letter. I remember the letter at the time. He was interviewed by Al Jazeera and previously by the New Yorker. So we got to hear from Osama bin Laden. Although right after 9-11, the US government told media outlets, do not broadcast any speeches or interviews with Osama bin Laden. And their reasoning was, we're concerned that he may
Starting point is 01:30:21 have embedded within his speech some sort of secret code that will activate sleeper cells inside the United States, like he was going to blink Morse code or have secret phrases and then people inside the United States would hear it. So they told ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, CNN, do not air any interviews with bin Laden. Of course, it was because they didn't want Americans to hear from bin Laden why there was so much anti-American sentiment. It was because of our interference in the Middle East in general and our support for Israel in particular. They were selling this lie that it was because we're free and they hate our freedom. There are a lot of countries that are free. Like Brazil, women walk around in bikinis. They have elections. Al-Qaeda has never attacked Brazil or Japan or South Korea
Starting point is 01:31:02 or Norway. And bin Laden was explaining why there's so many Muslims in that region who hate the United States, but the United States government didn't want anyone to hear it. 20 years later, while October 7th happened and we're supporting this ethnic cleansing, and I would call it now a genocide as well. In Gaza, that's what most genocidal experts, including Israelis and Jewish ones, call it. It's hard to say anything else, but whatever. In the middle of all that, a bunch of young people who were told the history of 9-11 that the U.S. government wanted everyone to believe discovered the bin Laden letter because it was on the Guardian's website, because the Guardian's a it was not no no no american news outlet despite its historical importance
Starting point is 01:31:49 and they started passing it around on tiktok and saying oh wow i never knew any of this i never understood that one of the reasons why these people attacked us was because we are so monomaniacally devoted to israel and why why we're constantly interfering in that region, bombing them, sanctions, overthrowing their government, overthrowing their leaders. Of course, people are going to get angry at us and want to attack back. And the minute that letter started to become well-read by the American people who were, you know, primarily younger, the U.S. government went ballistic and demanded that TikTok ban it. The Guardian, a news outlet, immediately took the letter off their website
Starting point is 01:32:32 so nobody could read it any longer. All those links that people were posting on TikTok to go read that letter would no longer work. And then TikTok immediately, under pressure from the U.S. government, which was obviously already threatened to close TikTok and ban it from the United States anyway, started banning all the hashtags, Bin Laden letter, you could not anymore read or find. I mean, this is like the stuff we're taught that the Soviets did, right? Like hiding letters, hiding documents, erasing history. And I continue to be shocked by that event that everybody thought that that was fine. To take a letter that is of great historical importance
Starting point is 01:33:08 from the person that is alleged to have been responsible for the single worst attack on American soil, maybe on par with Pearl Harbor, but in terms of like a single day casualty count, explaining from his perspective why he did it. Like you want to hear from your enemy, right? Like you want to understand like what they're claiming. I, you want to understand, like, what they're claiming.
Starting point is 01:33:26 I want all relevant information, and I'll decide what it is. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You don't want people deciding for you what you can and can't read. Yeah. They were petrified that young Americans were going to hear the reasons proffered, and they made that letter disappear. Why would The Guardian, which is supposedly, like, this left--wing british publication like why would they go along with that the guardian is very you know supportive of the western establishment the uk is aggressively supportive of israel always has been finds it
Starting point is 01:33:59 with arms does a lot of reconnaissance fights over g to feed the Israelis' intelligence. And when that kind of pressure comes to bear, TikTok, a gigantic multi-billion-dollar corporation, The Guardian, one of the oldest newspapers in the West, they fold in a second. Like, they're no match for that kind of pressure. A pressure that said, we want that letter censored so Americans don't know about it, have never read it, don't hear from it, so they only hear from us. But so, okay. So that was just a, I'm still amazed every time.
Starting point is 01:34:31 I didn't mean to go into that because there's something else. So why do you love Osama bin Laden so much? I mean, of course that's, and then that, I remember being shocked by it and saying like, how can it possibly be the case that we're watching this? And it wasn't, there was no pretext to it. It was explicit.
Starting point is 01:34:48 Like, we can't have people reading this. This is terrorist propaganda. And then, exactly, if you stand up and say, no, I actually think people should be able to read that. And then they'll say, like, oh, you're pro-Al Qaeda. You want terrorist propaganda to spread? And I'm like, no, I just think adults should have all information that they want to have available to them. And I don't think the government should be prohibiting certain information from being
Starting point is 01:35:13 accessible. Also, 3,000 Americans were murdered that day. And I'm an American. I have an absolute right to know all available information about that. I don't understand what's the justification for keeping that information from me, an American citizen who faithfully pays his taxes and obeys the laws that was born here? What? You can't do that.
Starting point is 01:35:31 You know, after the 2022 invasion by the Russians into Ukraine, one of the first things the EU parliament did is made it a crime to platform Russian state media. So if you wanted to say, you know what, I want to hear from Russia. I want to understand like what Russia's argument is for doing this. You couldn't get it.
Starting point is 01:35:51 I mean, if you looked hard enough, you could. If you went to rumble, you could. That's why they're banned in France because they refused to remove RT and Sputnik. Think about what that says. Like we want to make sure that we monopolize the flow of information that our citizenry gets and nothing that disputes what we want them to believe can even be heard or available i went to russia because it drove me i had no interest really in going to russia but it
Starting point is 01:36:14 it i'm so grateful that i did but it drove me so crazy that i wasn't allowed and the americans were not allowed relevant information about what their government was doing yeah like i want to hear from them what their perspective is like maybe i, like I want to hear from them what their perspective is. Maybe I'll walk away and think like, oh, they're murderous imperialists who just want to consume their neighbor. 100%.
Starting point is 01:36:34 Or maybe there's some other way of looking at things that I'm not permitted in the West to hear. I just want to know what the truth is. And that's the whole point of living here is I get to know what the truth is. I get to decide for myself what's true. And if you take that away, then why?
Starting point is 01:36:46 Well, speaking of that, let me just finish this thing about Randy Fine if I could. Okay. So, I, like in 2022 and 2023, there were a bunch of MAGA people who were opposed to the funding of the war in Ukraine. And some non-MAGA people too, like RFK Jr. And I was obviously very opposed to it from the start. You were too. I went on a show many times to talk about that. And I had a bunch of them on, like Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene and RFK Jr., a lot of them. And I always had this same plan. I would ask them, like, why are you opposed to having the U.S. fund the war in Ukraine? Like, don't you want the U.S. to stand up for Ukraine against Russia? And they would all
Starting point is 01:37:28 say, this isn't our business. This is on the other side of the world. It doesn't affect my constituents. Our communities are falling apart. We have fentanyl addiction sweeping our communities. Nobody has jobs. Nobody has healthcare. Our country is falling apart. We don't have the money to keep sending to foreign countries. And it's outrageous that we keep doing it. And they would be very passionate and very adamant. I would encourage them to keep developing that idea. And they would all stutter to try and distinguish why it was that they had one view for Ukraine and a very compelling rationale, but then had to say, oh no, Israel is different. To the point that RFK Jr., and I actually really appreciated this about him, when I kept pressing him about it, I said, you're saying we don't have money to fund foreign wars, that our country is falling apart.
Starting point is 01:38:34 Why are we sending billions of dollars to Israel when Israelis have a higher standard of living than millions of American workers, than millions of American citizens? Why is the American worker forced to subsidize Israel? You said we can't be doing that. We can't afford it. When you came to Ukraine, why isn't the same applicable to Israel? And he then finally said, you know what? I'm going to think about that. Maybe it is time for Israel to stand on its own. I was like, oh, you think? So, this is the utterly irreconcilable contradiction at the heart of the America First movement, which is America First means we use our resources for ourself. We build our military to
Starting point is 01:39:01 defend our borders, to defend the American people. We use our resources to improve their lives materially, to build better roads and better schools and better communities, to offer them addiction services and whatever else they need, health care access. And we do not anymore use it for this globalist agenda of going around the world, giving it to other countries and funding other countries. That is the America First philosophy as Trump has articulated it, and many people have articulated it for years, and the foreign policy of America First as well. Excellent. And then on the other hand, those same people, many, are adamant that we have to fund Israel. We have to fund its military. We have to fund its wars. We have to subsidize its society. We have to sacrifice our own interests to protect theirs. We have to put the lives of our service members in risk, have American citizens die in order to protect Israel and the wars that it
Starting point is 01:39:57 starts with its neighbors. And there is no reconciling this. There is no way to take an America first ideology and make it consistent with this constant prioritization of Israeli interests, let alone what is now happening, which is the aggressive erosion of our free speech rights and core civil liberties guaranteed to us by the constitution, not to protect our own government from criticism, but to protect this foreign country from criticism. And I do think there are people now starting, finally, to understand that these two things cannot be maintained simultaneously. Well, it's going to blow up the Trump movement, I think.
Starting point is 01:40:39 I don't think it needs to. I think there's a, you know, you could pivot, but I agree just conceptually that those are irreconcilable goals. They're so blatantly irreconcilable. And of course, the proof in the pudding is going to be what happens with Iran. You know, I woke up today, I'm here, and I saw the New York Times and the lead story on the front page of the New York Times is Israel may attack Iran despite Trump's desire to reach a deal. And it's like, how can that even be possible? What do you mean Israel might attack Iran despite Trump's desire to reach a deal? Their weapons came from the United States.
Starting point is 01:41:17 We pay for the operation of those weapons. They can't attack Iran without some kind of military and logistical support from the United States. And who is Israel that depends on the United States, that is a vassal state of the United States, supposedly, to say, we don't care what the president of the United States wants in his foreign policy. We're going to subvert it and undermine and blow it up and destroy it if we want to. That's not the behavior of an ally. And I think that, you know, someone who's really tried to avoid this topic and bears no animus toward Israel, actually like a lot of Israelis, talked to me the other day. But I think the idea that we're getting a lot out of this, our interest in being served is clearly not true.
Starting point is 01:42:02 It's the opposite. Well, you know, the Israeli government has, you know, the Israeli government has had a relationship, a close relationship with the Chinese communist government for over 40 years. And there have been a lot of transfers
Starting point is 01:42:13 of military technology from Israel to China, including transfers of American military technology to China. It's a fact. People lie about it. And it is true, actually. And I don't think that's widely known. I mean, the Chinese help operate the port of Haifa,
Starting point is 01:42:30 one of the most beautiful ports in the world. Wonderful place. But yeah, they're in the port of Haifa. So how is it that the main recipient of American support, both financial and moral and legal and, you know, all the things that we have done for our closest ally. How is it that that country is materially supporting our main global adversary, a country really described by the Trump administration as an enemy? Okay, that's their posture toward, you know, China's an enemy. And our military technology is going to Israel and then winding up in China? That's a fact? Like, how? I don't think, again, I don't think most people know that. And I don't, I don't know even if people in the
Starting point is 01:43:10 administration know that. I mean, some do. How could that? What is, what's the answer to that, Mark Levin? Well, also, you know, there's this fascinating history, but because it's 30 years ago, a lot of people didn't live through it. People did forgot about it. It's been whitewashed. But the last two presidents that tried to exert independence with respect to Israel and that told Israel, you cannot do this
Starting point is 01:43:33 if you want to continue to receive our deaths were Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Ronald Reagan called the Israeli bombing of Lebanon a holocaust. I know. And picked up the phone and ordered them to stop. And they did. And then withdrew the military barracks. 1982. Exactly. George H.W. Bush. And then our Marine barracks were bombed a year later. Right. But then he didn't go to war as they were demanding he did with Iran, whoever. He said, why are we even there? But how did our American military, I mean, whatever, without getting into this, but like,
Starting point is 01:44:07 did anyone know that the bombing was coming? Is it possible that information, intel about that bombing was withheld from the United States? I mean, the Israelis do have a lot of their neighbors under extremely heavy surveillance, as you imagine they would. But the other interesting thing was, in the George H.W. Bush administration, which was run by these kind of realists, like that of the kind, you know, that they didn't call itself an America first, but the idea was, you know, we do foreign policy, not for
Starting point is 01:44:36 benevolence to other countries. We don't rebuild other countries. We prioritize American interests, people like James Baker and Brent Scowcroft, who were the key foreign policy figures in the Bush 41 administration. He was in the CIA, had a very similar foreign policy. And their argument was what American presidents have always said, which is that one of the worst threats to American national interest in the Middle East is the ongoing Palestinian-Israeli conflict. And the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank was a direct threat to American interests. And James Baker said, as part of the State Department policy,
Starting point is 01:45:10 if you continue to expand West Bank settlements, which prevent an Israeli-Palestinian two-state solution that harm our interests, we're going to cease giving you the loan guarantees that you desperately need. Why are we going to give you loan guarantees if you're directly harming what we keep telling you are our interests? And what happened was there was this massive smear campaign. You can
Starting point is 01:45:30 go read it in any newspaper. It was led by Bill Clinton, who was preparing to run against George H.W. Bush, calling the Bush administration anti-Semites, suggesting that they were inflaming anti-Semitism by disagreeing with Israel in public. And since then, there has been no president. James Baker, I mean, this is like one of the most respected, you know, foreign policy operatives in the world. And I hated James Baker for a lot of what he believed at the time. I would have to probably go back and revise some of that and think about why. I mean, if only we had that now. But there was like zero, zero, zero, zero evidence that he harbored any animosity.
Starting point is 01:46:11 Well, there's also evidence that there are plans to commit violence against George H.W. Bush, the president. Actually, that's been incredibly alleged. So whatever. No, of course, you're absolutely what you're saying is absolutely right. And no one wants to deal with with being slandered, and it is slander. It's not true. It's unfair. It's actually pretty over the top.
Starting point is 01:46:33 Well, the irony of it, Tucker, is that— You're transferring American military technology to China. If they're operating, at least in part, the port of Haifa, we're supporting you. You have to explain that right away, or else we're going to stop all aid. Because why would we want to be supporting? Why would we want to be helping the transfer of American military technology to China? What the hell is going on? So what is the answer to why the Trump administration, given their views of China, doesn't?
Starting point is 01:46:59 I think that the first step, well, I'll just say my position is probably different from yours but like i'm not against israel i like israel like going there like the israelis nice people i'm not you know don't seek any kind of argument i'm not anti-israel but i think what america lacks desperately lacks and it's gotten to a point where it's dangerous for the country is like an honest conversation about any of this stuff and that that's because certain ruthless actors, and it's coordinated online, like attack everyone as like a, you know, call them really hurtful names that affect your personal relationships when you raise these questions. But like someone needs to be brave enough to just say, let's have a rational conversation about our national interest. I don't think it's harder than that.
Starting point is 01:47:43 But you know what the irony of it, the core irony of it is the conservative critique or grievance about the American left over the past 20 years has been the minute you try and have an honest conversation about any kind of policy, you instantly get smeared as a racist, a misogynist. Because of identity politics. Because of identity politics. I don't know. And you may be suggesting that something like that's going on here. Oh, it might be a little bit similar, that the minute you suggest a question
Starting point is 01:48:12 or even a peep of criticism about Israel, you instantly are branded an anti-Semite. It seems pretty similar to me to the tactics long used by the American left that the conservatives have been vocally complaining about for a long time. That's, you know, Glenn, I would love to shout you down and say that's unfair, but it's not. That is fair.
Starting point is 01:48:29 It's true. What you're saying is true. And it's, I agree. And it's, you know, shameful. So, but, you know, the choice is not between like being a Nazi or being Randy Fine, there is a reasonable, sensible, rational course forward where our country, like every other country,
Starting point is 01:48:52 makes its foreign policy decisions on the basis of what's best for its own citizens. Like you can say, I don't think it serves our interest to keep the war in Ukraine going and paying for it without being a Kremlin agent.
Starting point is 01:49:03 Exactly. Or saying, I don't know, how is it good that American military technology winds up in China or Pakistani fighters that they receive from China through Israel? Like, if that's true, and I think there's a lot of evidence that it is true, like, how is that a good arrangement? And why is our greatest ally doing that to us i don't understand i'm like really confused like why don't you answer the question and it's not enough to call me names you should have to have an honest conversation about this and i do think when that begins like healing begins things get better when people can be honest i think i mean but there's so
Starting point is 01:49:40 many mechanisms like we just i i just i'm still every i know i've talked about it so many times but my mind always gets so blown when we talk about it again. Talking about honesty and discourse, they banned the bin Laden letter. There's so many mechanisms designed to prevent any honest conversation from being held about all sorts of policies that people in power want to keep immune from questioning or challenge. Like, hey, why are we still in NATO? That's, to me, the thing that turned people against Trump, turned people in the establishment against Trump more than anything. We already talked about that. But, like, that's not supposed to be a questionable topic.
Starting point is 01:50:17 Like, why are we still in NATO? defensive alliance except like we bombed uh serbia and like yugoslavia with it even though they weren't actually posing a threat to western europe and had nothing to do with the soviet union or like it went to war in libya to remove mohamed kaddafi because he wanted to start using libyan oil more for like the benefit of people okay glenn if i could say it's a defensive alliance okay it was those were pre could say it's a defensive alliance. Okay. It was, those were preemptive words. It's a defensive alliance. It's a defensive alliance, not to be defensive. No, it's, yeah, no, I, look.
Starting point is 01:50:52 So there are all those mechanisms, including like calling people racist for a long time who wanted to raise issues about whatever. Well, sure. I mean, I remember this in 1991 when I got into this business doing a story on Head Start. I've never been against Head Start as an idea. The original idea was like we're going to literally raise children's IQs through better nutrition and early childhood education. That is not a crazy idea. It didn't strike me as crazy at the time.
Starting point is 01:51:18 And you start asking questions like, well, does it work? I don't know. I'm supposed to help these kids. Is it helping them? Shut up, racist. It's like, how is work? I don't know. I'm supposed to help these kids. Is it helping them? Shut up, racist. I was like, how is that? I was so confused. And I realized no one even remembers what Head Start is. But it was a very promising program in the minds of many that didn't work. But the point of calling you names was to continue doing things the way they'd always been done. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:51:39 Because some people are benefiting from that. It had nothing to do with race. Just as I don't think this argument has anything to necessarily to do with ethnicity or religion. It's just like, what's best for America? The protest movements of college campuses were, I don't want to say led by, because that's maybe an exaggeration, but in many cases is definitely true, but driven in large part by Jewish students vehemently opposed to the destruction of Gaza by Israel. So the idea that somehow it's anti-Semitic to question either the Israeli destruction of Gaza or the U.S. financing of it when you have huge numbers of Jews on the streets every day marching
Starting point is 01:52:17 in protest against it by itself should reveal how corrupted that tactic is. And yet it's just, it's so effective because it's instantaneous, right? No one wants to be called a racist. No one wants to be called an anti-Semite. And it is an effective tactic, at least like it makes it so that you think like, maybe it's just easier for me to keep my mouth shut about this and talk about something else.
Starting point is 01:52:39 I've always felt that way. It's way easier. I don't want to get involved in it. It's not worth it. I've got all kinds of concerns about my country, which really is kind of falling apart in key and measurable ways. People are dying younger. I feel like that's something we should think a lot about and try and fix and everything. It's like, I don't want to get involved. And I do grieve when I see our public conversation hijacked by what I consider foreign concerns. Like both sides, like, you know, you
Starting point is 01:53:04 shut down Midtown Manhattan because of some conflict thousands of miles away. It's like we... Except it's an American war, though. Well, that is it. But it's not just Israel. I mean, you see it all the time. You see people getting murdered in, like, the upper Midwest
Starting point is 01:53:19 because of, like, there's a sick Hindu, you know, whatever. All that stuff. I just feel like... i do feel like this country needs a lot of care and attention and it's been neglected and that's how i feel so i or maybe that's how i justify staying out of it i don't want to be involved in that but you have kind of been a little bit more involved than you used to be and i think but also because what's going to destroy the maga movement which i think is really important it's in a sense not just about trump of course i love trump i've said that many times. I have displayed it. I campaigned
Starting point is 01:53:49 for Trump and I'm glad that I did. But I feel like if there's one thing that could destroy this essential reform movement, it's like kind of our last chance to make government responsive to the people who own the government, which is the citizenry, this will destroy it. Because the massive contradiction sitting at the heart of it. That's what I'm saying. It's not all the stuff we talked about, but also free speech, free expression, not being punished for your views was also a vital part of this movement. American right and with the MAGA movement over the last 10 years because of my vehement opposition to attempts to censor the internet or introduce laws to characterize certain views as hate speech and therefore punishable and that's exactly what has been done and it's still being done. I couldn't even believe it like when I always liked DeSantis I spent a lot of time in Florida I was there for
Starting point is 01:54:38 part of the pandemic and I like DeSantis he's smart you know he's not a warm guy or anything but I don't I'm not looking for new friends I like respect DeSantis. He's smart. You know, he's not a warm guy or anything, but I don't mean I'm not looking for new friends. I like respect DeSantis. And he's very on it on the details. Then he signs a hate speech law. He travels to a foreign country to sign a hate speech law in Florida. And I was so confused. I didn't even think this was real. And I said to somebody, well, that was a hate speech. It's not a hate speech law. Looks like a hate speech law. It looks like Sharia law, kind of a version of Sharia law. In Florida? Shut up!
Starting point is 01:55:10 And no one said anything about it. And then, like, all the DeSantis people start attacking me for noting that I've never talked to DeSantis again. On the basis of that, like, I don't, what is that? How can you do that in the United States? anti-Semitism to include statements not only about Jewish people who should be subjected to critique, like you should be able to say, huh, that Ben Shapiro seems to care quite a lot about Israel, maybe even to the point that he cares about it more than the United States. Like, you should be able to express that critique. So, this expanded definition prohibits not only statements like that, accusing any Jewish person of having greater loyalty. I can say, oh, that person's Irish.
Starting point is 01:56:06 He seems to really care a lot about Ireland more than the United States. Or that person is Indian. He really seems to care a lot about India, maybe even more so. You're allowed to say all that. Or in my case, Swedish. I've been accused of dual loyalty many times. Oh, your obsession with Sweden is so annoying and very disturbing. But the other thing is you cannot say, this is just one example, you cannot say Israel is a racist endeavor.
Starting point is 01:56:31 You can say Iran is a racist endeavor. You can say Hamas is a racist endeavor. You can say the United States is a racist endeavor. You can say anything. You can be a student at a school a month away from completing your PhD with a completely clean record, and you can write an op-ed saying, I think America is a country of violence and imperialism and evil and was founded on racism, and you'll be totally fine. You write an op-ed, one-tenth of those criticisms, but about Israel, and ICE is coming to get you and to deport you. Why is that? Why is not just our free speech being limited, but being limited not even to protect our own society and our own government, but to protect a foreign government from critique? So, this is the kind of thing that cannot be sustained by a movement that has certain values
Starting point is 01:57:20 that it professes that are being radically assaulted by this one single policy and loyalty toward this other country. I could not agree more. I mean, it's no matter. And I do think and I know people who love Israel and believe in the project. And it's fine. I have a million friends who believe that and that I'm not mad at them about it. But you could believe that and say America America's founding documents, its bill of rights is sacrosanct. And under no circumstances should American citizens be stripped of their
Starting point is 01:57:52 rights, any circumstances, period. It doesn't matter whether it's in the service of a foreign nation or any service of anything. Like that's the whole point of America. Like you could have that position, couldn't you? I mean, there's the whole MAGA movement is about preserving American identity and American values. So what does that mean? It certainly has to include America's founding documents. I don't know what else it would include. I don't know what else there is.
Starting point is 01:58:16 Right. So if you cannot simultaneously say that you want to be a movement that is devoted to preserving American identity and American values, while at the same time permitting attacks on the core rights and the core founding ideals on which the entire country was founded. Right, right. No, I couldn't agree more. For all my really sustained efforts to just stay away from stuff I don't want to deal with, it upsets it's like not my greatest interest in life it's not even on the top 10 and I shouldn't have to care this much about a foreign country that's kind of like my internal monologue on this question I feel like
Starting point is 01:58:53 it's being pushed to the point where it's in a this whole species of news stories ideas developments is a threat to to our bill of Rights. And that has to be the point where you're like, no, stop. Right?
Starting point is 01:59:11 I mean, you know, I was said before that you go to other countries and you see all these values of other countries that you're told have none. But I also said, like, there are certain things about the United States that I consider uniquely valuable. And one of them is, you know, the stuff that I went and studied in law school, which I became incredibly enamored of and still am, which are, like, the Federalist Papers and the debates over, like, how to form this new government to prevent it from replicating the tyrannies of other governments, including the empire that they had just risked all of their lives to wage war from
Starting point is 01:59:40 and gain independence from, and created these documents that to this very day continue to be our guiding principles. And the idea that we're going to permit the erosion of those for any reason is offensive to me, but to do so in defense of a foreign country on the other side of the world, because they have so much influence in our politics, that is, I mean, that is just so offensive to me. I don't care what impact it has on my career. I don't care what people say about me. Like that is something
Starting point is 02:00:08 I will never stop talking about. I agree. And I think it's not, it's not sustainable because as you said, it's the contradiction is just too, it's just too obvious.
Starting point is 02:00:15 And the last thing I'll say is not that it's like a top concern of mine or whatever, but I don't think it's great for Israel actually at all. Like long-term, this is not the way to play. Well, an Israeli politician, actually a general, just said Israel's on the way to becoming
Starting point is 02:00:28 a pariah state. Yeah, that's not, I don't know how that helps. And you can't transfer American military technology to China. I just want to say that for the fifth time because I don't think most people know that that's happening, but it is. I want to ask you one last question. We had this long and deep conversation off camera about what makes people
Starting point is 02:00:50 happy, and there does seem to be quite apart from politics or global affairs, like an epidemic of unhappiness, at least in the world that I live in. In the West. In the West. Not, thank God, in my family,
Starting point is 02:01:06 but everywhere else. People are really unhappy. It's measurable, suicide rates, all that stuff. Where do you think, what is that? Well, first of all, there's a documentary that is on Netflix
Starting point is 02:01:15 that I watched many years ago called Happiness. And it measures the rate of happiness in various places around the world. And it turns out that in some of the poorest countries in the world, the levels of happiness are at its highest. In some of the richest countries of the world, the rate of happiness is at its lowest.
Starting point is 02:01:33 And in many of those poorest countries, they live in villages where they have their children around them all the time. They have extreme connectivity and connection to other human beings who live in their community. They live in a communitarian way. So, they are constantly receiving one of the things, I might even say the greatest thing that constitutes human happiness, which is connection to other human beings. We are political and social animals. We can't survive isolated. You look at any people who have been put in sustained isolation, and they will say that
Starting point is 02:02:09 there's nothing worse than that. John McCain talked about that all the time, that he was physically savage, but that that was nowhere near as horrifying and terrorizing as the sustained isolation that he was kept in, where you have no human beings around to connect to or talk to or interact with we need that so fundamentally and you look at how the west is now constructed where people leave their house early in the morning both couples you know both parts of a couple the children don't go run off to so everybody's running off in different directions uh when our parents get sick we put them at homes we don't you know when parents get sick, we put them at homes. When they get old, we put them at homes. We don't stay together as families anymore. And then when we work, we all go scatter far away and we spend all day in cubicles. And then the worst part is the internet encourages
Starting point is 02:02:58 us to stay at home. People got trained during COVID especially how to live completely isolated from the rest of the world and from everybody else. They were forced into it. And if you deprive human beings of connection, then you can have all the money in the world, all the fame in the world, whatever you think is the thing that will make you happy and you will never find happiness. And I think we both know Yohan Nahari, who's a friend of ours, who wrote this incredibly, I think, revolutionary book about how to understand addiction. Yes. And depression and sadness in general, emptiness. Right.
Starting point is 02:03:30 He then wrote another book about just like the depression epidemic, especially among younger people in the West. That first book about addiction, the thesis of it was that people think the opposite of addiction is sobriety, when in reality, the opposite of addiction is connection. And by that, what he means is that all of these things are spiritual diseases, depression and addiction and anxiety and all these disorders that people suffer from that are new. Like, you talk to anyone in Gen Z, I have colleagues in Gen Z, my kids are getting to that age. You know, they're 16 and 17,
Starting point is 02:04:09 I see their age group. There's so much like mental disorder. It's because society is not giving human beings what they want, which is connection. And that's why like the only, you can go talk to medical doctors about addiction and they will all tell you the same thing, which is like, there is no cure for addiction chemically medically the only cure for addiction is going to places like an a or a or whatever because there you find this
Starting point is 02:04:34 instant and immediate connection based on with any kind of human being based on shared experiences and that's the only thing that cures that disease because it's a disease of the spirit, like of the soul. It's not a biological disease where chemical medications will cure it. And I think that the ability to be open to human connection, to have it readily available is probably the foundation of human happiness and the deprivation of it is what will eliminate human happiness. And all of modern society is about keeping people stratified and isolated and away from each other. And, you know, I think there's like surveys that say, you know, people who are in their 20s will say on average, they have like one friend at most or like two friends at most that they rarely see. People live away from their family. Everything is about depriving people of connection. Not saying that was the intent or the plan, but that's the outcome. And there's no way to have human happiness without connection. I know that in my life, the place where I've seen it most clearly is in AA. I haven't, so over many years, haven't been in AA a ton,
Starting point is 02:05:43 but the first time I ever went, I was so struck by how what I was seeing was kind of what people have talked about, but sort of presented an ersatz replica of, like, true connection between people from totally different backgrounds, cultures, races. It was the diversity we're always promised, but like we're so cynical about, I am so cynical about this whole bullshit. You go to an AA meeting and because it begins with stripping away, with basically ritual humiliation. Oh, I'm Tucker, I'm an alcoholic.
Starting point is 02:06:17 It's like, look, say that out loud. It hurts. Even if it's true, which in my case it is. And like the first admission is like, I am powerless. That's exactly right. Like to confess your impotence. But you have to confess it.
Starting point is 02:06:29 And once that strips away all the pretense, and then you like, you experience people on a level that church promises, but I personally have never experienced in church. I want to, but where it's just like, you are dealing with people on the most human level like all that matters is the other person's soul or something i don't know i you know it's into like the new the new pope and like this is the part of catholicism that i really admire so much like the ethos of the gospels you know jesus always wanted to minister to the like
Starting point is 02:07:05 the lepers and the prostitutes and the outcasts even though there was no necessary like common bond between them other than their humanity which is what the gospels teach you to to uh basically think about the world as as being about is human connection is as as as the ability to look at the lowest people and see their soul see that they're all equal before god all of this exactly and one of the things diversity does like diversity in this like modern corporatized hr sense is it pretends to do that but it actually is constantly reminding you of these differences and forcing you to think about them like oh i have three black co-workers that I'm supposed to get along with
Starting point is 02:07:46 and I have like two gay ones over here. And like, it is constantly stratifying people across the lines, like categorizing them and counting them based on their differences. And so there's any kind of like similarity or connection is forced. It's like very self-conscious. Nothing causes more division than that.
Starting point is 02:08:04 Right, but you strip everybody down to like no ego and have everybody converge based on their greatest weakness and suffering and difficulty. And you don't even have to give the slightest thought to, oh, this person is different. And yet I'm able to have communion with them. That's so genuine. It just happens automatically. Like All those things fade away. People can walk into an NA meeting and just feel like they're living in a different world and thinking about other people and feeling other people in a way, and then they walk out, and the whole world then reappears that constantly teaches us to keep everybody at arm's length. But you walk into those kind of meetings, the idea of it is you strip down
Starting point is 02:08:46 to the deepest core foundation of your humanity, and then on that level, everyone is the same. And the connection that emerges from that is why it works, why people go their whole lives to it. Even if they haven't had a drink or a drug for 25 years, they still need it. Well, that's why I went.
Starting point is 02:09:06 I have no interest in drinking. I went because a loved one, you know, someone I love needed to go. So I brought that person and I was like, I want to go every day. I've never seen anything like that in my life. It makes you see the potential for what the world could be. What's what everyone wants is the connection. Right. Because other people are all that matters.
Starting point is 02:09:24 Just to receive other people are all that matters. And to re-see, other people are all that matters. And you, gosh, that's so easy to lose that thread. Yeah, that's like our humanity. That's like the soul. That's like the spirit. It's everything. And that is what Western society is assaulting and
Starting point is 02:09:39 depriving people of. And so it's no wonder we have epidemics of addiction and suicide and anxiety disorders and depression. And distraction. It's so easy to see why. You should write. You should write on this.
Starting point is 02:09:53 Yeah. I mean, I've thought a lot about it. I think a lot about it. I try and incorporate it. And at some point, maybe I will. I hope you will. You describe it much better than I do. I'm still trying to sort it out in my head.
Starting point is 02:10:03 I've really, it was less than a year ago I saw this I was like I've not stopped thinking about it yeah we talked about it last night and so then I thought about it last night this morning so it's fresh in my mind as well like in terms of what it means and how to think about it
Starting point is 02:10:15 but yeah it's something that is I think it's kind of like sitting there right in plain sight it's a solution to a lot of things but for a lot of reasons you need a lot of vulnerability and humility to strip yourself down that way, to admit your powerlessness. We're constantly taught to affirm our invulnerability, like I'm strong, I'm powerful, I can deal
Starting point is 02:10:36 with anything. But human beings are, by themselves, not all that powerful. There's a lot of things we can do. There's a lot of things we can't. And the whole point of these kind of addiction groups or whatever, there's a lot of things we can do. There's a lot of things we can't. And the whole point of these kind of addiction groups or whatever, there's a lot of these different kinds of groups. I think all communities are like them.
Starting point is 02:10:52 It's like together, like human beings connecting to each other creates a much bigger power than every human being sitting kind of isolated and alone. Yes. I mean, I believe in a religion that extols humility, in which humility is like the cover charge. Like, you don't get anywhere without humility that teaches that God, like, submitted to being tortured to death. So, like— And you get on your knees in a church.
Starting point is 02:11:16 A hundred percent. Islam, you, like, bow on the ground. That's exactly right. It's all an expression of that same— I remember after 9-11 when I was, like, you know, all about attacking Islam. I knew nothing about Islam. I'm not Muslim, by the way. I don't work for Qatar.
Starting point is 02:11:28 Contrary to what a lot of people think, despite the paychecks from Qatar. I'm not a secret shit. But I remember hearing someone on... I worked at CNN at the time and like we had all these endless experts, most of whom kind of worked for the CIA, but whatever, I realized that later.
Starting point is 02:11:42 But I remember who it was come on and be like, you know, Islam is bad. And I was like, sounds bad, you know, whatever. I don't know if I ever met a Muslim, but he's like, you know what Islam means? Submission. And like, let it hang in the air. Like, that was self-evidently disgusting. And I was like,
Starting point is 02:11:58 I kind of think submission to God is like the whole point of life, but I didn't say anything. I was like, I don't think I'm against that, actually. Anyone who submits to God, like, I'm just for that. Well, and the foundation, I mean, I think a lot of religions seek the same things, just find different ways to think about how to find them. But the whole point of AA and NA, like the foundation of it is that you submit to a higher power.
Starting point is 02:12:26 It can be, you know, understanding that there's a lot of people who are now atheists or secular. It doesn't necessarily have to be some like religious conception of a God. And so many people go into these groups and they're adamantly contemptuous of this idea. Like, this is so irrational. I'm not going to pretend that there's some magic thing. And, you know, I used to think that way too. And then I got to the point where I was like, no, you know what actually is irrational?
Starting point is 02:12:48 Thinking that there's no higher power than you. Like I am the highest power. Like that's the absurd thing. But it's all about, you know, losing that sense that you're invulnerable and understanding that, you know, you can find something higher than yourself.
Starting point is 02:13:06 And it could just be the connection of the human group, whatever you want it to be. Like, whatever you recognize as being able to, something being able to do things that you can't do is already an acknowledgement that there's a higher power than you. But if you think you're God, you're not allowed. I mean, if you think you're God, you're going to have a lot of difficulties in life. You're going to be Toria Newland. So, it's not good. Glenn Greenwald, if you think you're God, you're going to have a lot of difficulties in life. You're going to be Toria Newland. So it's not good. Glenn Greenwald, thank you.
Starting point is 02:13:28 Really always my favorite person to talk to. So I appreciate your time. Thank you, Tucker. I always enjoy it as well. Thank you. We want to thank you for watching us on Spotify, a company that we use every day. We know the people who run it, good people. While you're here, do us a favor. Hit follow and tap the bell so you never miss an episode. We have real conversations,
Starting point is 02:13:51 news, things that actually matter, telling the truth always. You will not miss it if you follow us on Spotify and hit the bell. We appreciate it. Thanks for watching.

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