The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Come Back, America! with Rory Stewart
Episode Date: April 24, 2025As Trump's actions and rhetoric rock the global economy, Jon is joined by Rory Stewart, former British Cabinet Minister and current co-host of “The Rest is Politics.” Together, they examine the ra...pidly shifting relationships between the U.S. and its traditional allies, discuss the opportunities these shifts create for China, explore which policies and failures have contributed to the rise of populist leaders worldwide, and consider what these developments mean for the future of the West. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast > TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod > BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/theweeklyshowpodcast.com Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Researcher & Associate Producer – Gillian Spear Music by Hansdle Hsu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Welcome once again.
Weekly show podcast with Jon Stewart.
My name is Jon Stewart.
I'm actually the person in the intro.
It just, I don't know, it just worked out that way.
We are talking to you Wednesday, April 23rd. We always try and date it because of the speed in which current events has been moving.
It is exhausting.
We are approaching the first hundred days of Donald Trump's re-presidency and the first
congressional casualty, Mr. Dick Durbin, Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois.
Illinois, Illinois.
I like to add the S, although what would he plural,
Illinois, Illinois's?
I don't know, we'll figure it out.
He said he is not going to seek reelection.
And here's the shocking part.
He's only been in Congress, I think 40 some years,
and he's only 80. To see a senator self-deport at the ripe young age of 80, my God, my God,
what have we become as a society to drive these kinds of adolescent junior senators from office.
It's like watching someone declare for the draft as a freshman.
No, sir, you're not ready.
You're not ready to go.
You must, you must mature.
So generally fucked.
And that the trade war is apparently now, this is going to be such an interesting Houdini-esque
escape from these utterly disastrous self-inflicted tariffs.
You saw Trump today in a press conference.
Well, you know, China, they've got to make a deal.
They've got to do it.
And so because they have to make the deal and because everybody's kissing my ass even though
No deals are done. I'm probably just gonna you know remove the tariffs at some point having nothing to do with the fact that yesterday
I sat down with Target and Walmart and all the big box stores and they were like you're fucking killing us
We are the only thing keeping the economy going for cheap goods and we will have
nothing on our shelves in like a week. You're going to see a run on toilet paper that would make
the COVID era panic seem like a stroll in the park for God's sakes. And somehow they'll pull off the the feat of saying this was the plan the whole time and what a brilliant
Strategy it was to tank the global economy for as
Long as he did while still getting nothing out of it. Meanwhile overseas who the hell knows
How it will will the EU move towards?
China will Russia just be able to consume Ukraine in the way that they want to?
We just have no idea.
This is a failure on all levels.
The first 100 days have been nothing but storm and drang and noise signifying nothing.
And it doesn't have to be this way.
So many of their policy goals could be achievable
in non-chaotic terms,
and yet they seem incapable of playing that out.
Fucking madness.
But we're gonna get the view from Europe today
with our guest, which I'm very excited about.
Quite a Renaissance gentleman that we have joining us
on the program today.
Delighted to have him.
Ladies and gentlemen, delighted today joining us on the program today. Delighted to have him.
Ladies and gentlemen, delighted today, the Stewart brothers.
That's it. Reunited Rory Stewart, Nye Leibowitz.
Brothers from a different mother, co-host of the rest is politics, but truly
an enlightenment gentleman, author,
former MP, former minister. We're just, we're excited to have you discussing things
with us today.
Rory, you are obviously, you know,
your career as an author and as a minister,
you're so ensconced in politics as well as broadcasting
and all these other things.
We just thought you'd be a great person to give us a broad perspective on the
view from overseas towards America. As you know, America, we're very shy. We
don't like people to think about us. That's right, John. Famously shy.
Famously shy. Yeah.
And obviously I don't want to start on a confrontational note and these are, you know, these conversations
should be civil and we're going to try and keep it that way.
But Rory, here in America, we're wondering why is Europe so hostile?
Why do they use us so?
The UK, the EU, why do they victimize America to such an extent?
It's hurtful, Rory.
It is.
It is.
You're right.
This is what JD Vance wants to know and all those wonderful signal chats.
Why are we so mean to you?
Why have we been bullying you for such a long time?
Why, Rory?
That's really the simple question.
No, that's right.
I mean, it's an amazing flip, isn't it? JD Vance sometimes wakes up in the morning and
thinks the United States is this incredible global superpower that's going to tell China what to do.
In other moods, he's like, oh, we're the victimized kid on the playground. Everybody's
stealing our lunch money. These horrible Europeans. I was trying to get my head around the mentality, but I guess the mentality
at the moment feels like from Europe that the Trump administration is obsessed with not being
taken for a sucker. They seem to think everybody's kind of ripping them off all the time.
Yes.
Is that right?
Oh, I don't think there's any question about that. And we have a very powerful man baby at the helm.
I think so much of this, what makes it so difficult
is that a lot of the ramifications that
are being felt economically throughout the world
are the product of kind of a psychological wound
that our present leader
suffered as a real estate developer from Queens,
who did not feel that he was given enough fealty
from the Manhattan real estate.
And so because of that, this is all a search for validation,
loyalty, and fealty.
Unfortunately, it seems to be plunging the world into a global depression.
John, it's weird, isn't it?
Because I noticed this, that we talk so much about his psychology.
Of course, it's very difficult to work out his psychology.
You'll get people who know him well, they'll say one moment, oh, he won't be able to put up freelance Musk for more than a couple of days because he can't
bear anyone else in his limelight. And then they'll have to change their view. And they'll be like,
oh, no, the thing about Trump is he really likes wealthy people. Or they'll say,
the one thing he cares about is the stock market. And then when he tanks the stock market,
everyone's like, no, no, no, he doesn't really care about
the stock market.
But what I think it's showing, if I was going to be pretentious for a second, is that the
structure is falling down.
You only start focusing on the psychology of the individual when the system isn't working.
Because when you've got a properly functioning system, the civil servants are working, the courts are working, Congress is
working. The details of the mysterious psychology of the president is less important. It only
becomes important when it all goes executive orders. I think that's what's so strange about
this. This is a guy who, particularly with tariffs, has suddenly found this emergency weapon emergency weapon that he can deploy. Then we all
have to start worrying about his psychology. Well, it's actually the modus operandi for
this administration is to, throughout the history of the United States, the executive has always had
a great deal of power, but it's always supercharged that power through the process of emergency
declarations. We have an emergency declaration, we have to suspend habeas corpus, emergency declaration.
What if we imprisoned all of our Japanese citizens?
Emergency declaration in the 50s for tariffs.
They're very shrewd about, you know, the alien enemies act.
They find those moments.
So he catastrophizes to get elected and then uses those trumped up, pardon
the pun, catastrophes, uh, to enact these emergency powers that basically
negate the other branches.
And I think that's how he operates.
And John, can I again, please, I'm here to help you.
I'm thank you.
You know, originally I was going to get Europe's a- Please. I'm here to help you. Thank you.
Originally, I was going to get Europe's vision of us.
I'm here to help you.
Well, you do need to help us.
Please.
Let me, I think, give a little bit of background.
I was briefly a British soldier, and then I was a British diplomat.
I served in the Balkans, so the Bosnia and Kosovo interventions.
I was then in Afghanistan. I was in the Balkans, so the Bosnia and Kosovo interventions. I was then in Afghanistan.
I was in Iraq.
Famously walked through Afghanistan
and wrote a brilliant book about it.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And in all those places, I worked very, very closely
with the United States.
And so I think I need to begin by sort of setting up
the world that I grew up in.
It was an American world.
I mean, European or British,. It was an American world. I mean, European or British,
but it was an American world. I think it's just trying to get across the sense that since the
Second World War, the world has been defined by the US. The US set up NATO, basically set up the UN,
set up the World Bank, set up the IMF.
When we deployed to Afghanistan, we deployed because the United States had triggered Article
5 of NATO.
That's something you've pointed out.
We came to help the United States, somebody who was in NATO being attacked, and we deployed
to help.
I developed so much respect for my American colleagues, for their professionalism, for their
seriousness. I really mean this. I mean, they were more professional and serious often, I'm afraid,
than we were because they had more power and more responsibility.
Right. And took that power and responsibility seriously. Is that the-
Yeah. And you really got that sense. I became close to people that listeners will be familiar
with, General Petraeus, General McChrystal, Richard Holbrooke, Hillary Clinton.
I worked with these people.
I was so struck by how committed they were, how serious they were, and how idealistic
they could be.
Often when we Europeans were being a little bit cynical, it was the Americans in the room
who'd say, no, we've got to do this properly.
We actually care about democracy or we care about human rights.
We're not going to allow this warlord to just go around abusing people.
And it was very precious to me.
I mean, it's very precious to me.
When I, I used to teach at Harvard, I now teach at Yale.
I'm married to an American.
Don't by the way, don't, don't think that that means that you can stay. Just know this.
We've changed the rules slightly.
Particularly not after appearing on your podcast, John. I'm going to blame you when I turn up and
some ICE agent looks at my TikTok account and flings me out.
That's right. We'll send you to Louisiana and whatever happens happens.
Yeah, exactly. I'm coming after you.
As you should, sir.
I'm going to be there. You better come and visit me in Guantanamo or El Salvador or wherever it is.
Because it'll be your fault. Absolutely. No, so just, just to finish the thought, I mean, I think
to really understand the bewilderment and maybe even the overreaction in Britain and Europe to Trump too. You have to understand how for 70, 80 years America created
this very, very complicated, delicate balance of allies. I'm going to finish with a final little
anecdote which mattered to me. When I was chair of the Defense Select Committee in the UK Parliament
2015, we were looking at basically options of shutting down most of the British defense
manufacturing and just buying from the US because it was going to be cheaper and they
produced at scale. We were looking at closing down most of our Navy and becoming a sort of Marine
Corps attached to the US. We didn't do it in the end partly because we were worried about
and we didn't do it in the end, partly because we were worried about employment in the UK and the Navy put up a fight for its own institutions. But nobody then, nobody 10 years ago ever said,
well, wait a second, are you not taking a big risk here? Because what happens if the US was
no longer a reliable ally? It was inconceivable. Literally nobody in that room said, well, hold
a second, you're going to put yourself completely dependent on buying US defense equipment.
What happens if a president comes in who says he's going to switch off the software on the
F-35s?
Or you're going to get rid of your aircraft carriers and your Navy and you're going to
design yourself into a Marine Corps to deploy with the US?
Well, what happens if the US is trying to take Greenland off you?
That never came up before? That wasn't something that got thrown around in the room?
It's maybe a silly point and obvious to listeners, but we had no doctrine. When we went to
military training or we looked at strategy, we had no doctrine for what to do if the US became an adversary.
We literally don't have any plans for defending Greenland because it was inconceivable.
Right.
So that you never thought that we would trigger Article 5 by attacking you.
Right.
I mean, we wouldn't know what to do.
It makes sense.
Yeah.
So here's where it gets complicated, I think, Rory, because you mentioned a couple of things
and we'll roll back. And this is maybe the explanation of where we,
you talked about sort of viewing America
as sort of this idea that our government
and our civil service, they all functioned really efficiently
and effectively and were run by serious people
who had created this
worldview where we were the centerpiece of a democratic free world. We amplified
our power throughout these various allies and we respected each other and
we supported each other. The truth is it was the failure of that world order to
live up to expectation that led to Trump
in the first place to a large extent,
as you've seen from Brexit and populist movements
throughout all of Europe.
And your experience in Afghanistan and Iraq,
you viewed the idealism and seriousness of the people
in a really positive light and it was moving
and you were impressed by how hard they worked.
But it was a disaster.
It was a pig fuck.
And that led to a real loss of faith and cynicism in this world order.
And Trump came in as a hard truth telling diagnostician.
This world that you thought was real
is actually where the victims of this.
The irony is we set up a world
that we now claim is abusing us.
Yeah.
It was our choice.
John, you've put your finger on probably
the most difficult thing that we face,
which is this contradiction.
Because you're completely right,
along with all the stuff that was so positive,
there was what you call the pickfuck.
I was just-
By the way, that's trademarked.
Don't think you can just slap that on T-shirts and go out there and sell that wherever you
want.
It's part of the Stuart Brother thing.
We can use this.
We're brothers.
Stuart Brothers, pig fuck T-shirts.
We're fine, yeah.
So I was back in Afghanistan in August, this August, just now, and I sat down with the
governor of B Bamyan. Last
time I sat down with the governor of Bamyan, she was a human rights lawyer. This time he
has an injured eye, a big turp, and he's surrounded by guys with clashy coughs, and he was the
governor of Bamyan before 9-11.
Is he Taliban or is he warlord?
He's Taliban. And he blew up the Bamyan Buddhhas. He was the guy that did all this and he's back again.
So if you wanted a symbol of how little we achieved, we literally invaded the country
to get rid of the Taliban.
We spent 20 years, we spent over a trillion dollars, a thousand billion dollars, and then
we hand the country back to the Taliban again.
So in that sense, of course, Trump's got a point, and I could add to that.
Of course, I ran the British International Development Institution, and I could see there
was so much wrong.
You were obviously being tongue in cheek when you're talking about government efficiency.
Of course, government's massively inefficient, and I could see all the problems with USAID.
But what's happened now is we live in such a binary world that there's not much room for the Stewart
brothers to say, well, yeah, government screwed up and it was inefficient and we got to reform
it, we got to do better.
It's all now either you're 100% behind USAID and it was the most wonderful liberal institution
in the world or shut it down, turn off the computer, cut all the funding worldwide. So it's the sense of,
and this is where I think you wanna call out Trump and Musk,
it's the bad faith that initially people thought,
oh, maybe they've got a point here,
here are some recommendations I could make
to make government a bit more efficient,
but of course they don't care about any of that stuff.
Well, no, and I think they do it,
where I think it goes wrong is the conflation with USAID and American hubris and adventurism
overseas.
The arrogance of we will spread democracy to Afghanistan and they will embrace it and
we will be famously viewed as liberators in Iraq and it will all work out.
And so I think to lump in programs that are distributing medicines to poverty-stricken
children with HIV with a foreign policy that seeks to impose a world view that may be alien to those areas and to enforce it.
Same thing with COVID. You know, you can go from, you may think that these governments
overreached and that they did certain things, but a lot of it might have been in very good faith.
But ultimately, when you begin to erode your belief in the civic institutions and the infrastructure that upholds them,
they become vulnerable to demagogues. Look, Brexit went first. You guys were the first ones to say...
We were the canaries in the mine, yeah.
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I think the way that I look at it is that there were three things that defined the world
after 1989. There was an idea of liberal democracy, and there were three things that defined the world after 1989.
There was an idea of liberal democracy, and the number of democracies in the world literally
doubled between 1988 and 2003. The second one was this idea of globalization, free trade,
open markets. The third one was this rules-based international order, UN interventions in Bosnia, et cetera. Something happened between about 2004 and 2014.
All those things were discredited. 2008 financial crisis wrecked our faith in markets. Iraq and
Afghanistan wrecked our faith in these kind of international interventions. The rise of China,
we don't remember, most people don't remember, in 2004, the Chinese economy was smaller than the Italian economy. It was the
seventh largest economy in the world.
No disrespect to the Italians, by the way.
No disrespect.
That is in no way meant to diminish the accomplishments.
The wonders of the Italian economy.
And goodness of the Italian people.
100%.
100%.
So as China explodes and becomes within 10 years the world's largest manufacturer and
exporter, it doesn't become a democracy.
So by 2014, we've got that and we've got the rise of social media.
And put all those things together and then it's very remarkable.
You talked about Brexit, but it's not just Brexit.
2014, Narendra Modi is elected in India.
2014, Putin takes Crimea. 2014, ISIS goes's not just Brexit. 2014, Narendra Modi is elected in India. 2014, Putin
takes Crimea. 2014, ISIS goes across the Mosul border. 2015, far-right party elected in Poland.
Erdogan also becomes a much more-
Absolutely.
Autocratic leader.
Exactly. This is Erdogan's route. 2016, Trump's elected for the first time. So the world is
beginning to change very, very quickly.
And now we've entered with Trump to the kind of shadow world.
So if I go through those three things,
liberal democracies become authoritarianism,
free trades become protectionism,
rules-based international order has become the strong
will do what they will and the weak
must suffer what they must.
Do you think that this is then
self-correcting pendulum swings, right?
So the overreach of, let's say, liberal democracies
who, you know, the fall of the USSR
and all of those Eastern European countries
becoming more democratic, these are natural swings?
Because it's not as though these, you know,
more autocratic societies function better.
And, you know, with China, it was really their entry into the WTO, but China was going to grow anyway.
Is it maybe a failure of expectation of the people in these countries, we believe things to want to be more successful than they are or should be.
Is it our expectations that are out of whack?
Or is it a natural cycle of kind of pendulum swings that go along in terms of these disruptions?
Or is it a failure of our societies to adequately remedy the unforeseen
collateral damage of some of these swings?
And I know that's a hugely broad question and you can take any one of those.
Well, I think it's four things.
I think it's power.
I think it's America.
I think it's a modern age and it's ideology.
And what do I mean by that?
I mean that 1899 to 2004 2004 America has defeated the Soviet Union.
It is completely unchallenged.
China is still a minnow in the world and power leads to overreach.
You're like, we've done this in Bosnia.
We've done this.
Hey, go easy.
Settle down.
The second one is America.
And of course America is a country based on can do.
I remember arguing with American officials in Afghanistan and I would say,
you literally, you can't do this.
You know, H.R. McMaster was trying to eliminate all corruption from the Afghan
government, he's the guy that went on to be Trump's national security advisor.
And I said, you can't do it.
And the answer was always we're American.
You know, don't give us problems, give us solutions.
What is it we need to do?
Is it, we need more troops.
Is it when we need more money?
And when I said, you know, there was a document that was circulating.
It, it, it, I, I, this is honestly true, right?
The American government, the European governments signed up to a statement by
Ashraf Ghani, who became the Afghan president.
And it ran as follows.
statement by Ashraf Ghani who became the Afghan president and it ran as follows. Every Afghan is committed to a gender sensitive, multi-ethnic centralized state based on democracy, human
rights and the rule of law, right? Okay. No, you think it's funny. I think it's funny.
But at the time- I remember that Hamid Karzai had on his resume, he, him. I think I remember
that. Yeah, yeah. No, but I mean, why did we not realize at the time how grotesque this was?
So that's partly about America. Then I think there's the point about the modern world,
which is that we are in a world of instant gratification. When I was waiting for you to
come on, I was scheduling my Uber eats and I don't want to know. I don't want someone to tell me that
it's going to take time or it's complicated. Right. I want it now, right?
Progress.
Progress, yeah. Then the final thing is ideology. I think we thought that democracy had won and we
couldn't see that we were in this funny, funny little bubble and that most of the world wasn't
really going in that direction and that even these words didn't mean the same to different people.
So, I remember feeling this. I worked part of my life in Indonesia and in Africa.
We call a hundred different countries democracies.
In some cases, it means it's Sweden.
In other cases, it just means there's been a vote, but there's a bunch of corrupt autocratic
bureaucrats who aren't paying any attention to anyone.
No, it makes total sense.
And I think the thing that America
had a difficult time reconciling is we can't remove corruption
from our country, let alone so when you hold other places
that you're going into.
And the other side of it is interventionism takes many forms.
And we've tried soft power, as they say classically, soft power,
hard power, economic sanctions, all those things.
None of it seems to be particularly foolproof in terms of influence and good
outcomes.
We've tried lightly bombing countries to decapitate their autocratic leadership
and that turns them into a God forsaken hell holes of warlordism.
We've tried toppling them with our magnificent army
and then holding those countries together
with the sinewy textures of our nation-building engineers.
That doesn't seem to work.
What we haven't learned how to do
is to manage the expectations and dynamics
to create little harm.
I'll go even further.
I think we caused a lot of this populist turn by destabilizing the Middle East
and causing a great deal of migration that ended up going into, you know,
globalization and all these other ideals are now being challenged by the idea of the nation state.
Yeah.
Don, so I think you're absolutely right, but I think we need to guard against too much
despair.
Yes.
The risk is that the right thinks we don't want to having to do with other countries
because we don't like poor people in other countries.
The left can begin to think a bit like you're saying now, well, we screw it all up anyway,
so maybe best we stay at home.
We don't do anything.
Of course, the truth is that under American leadership since the Second World War, and
particularly in that 89 to 2014 period, every year the world got more prosperous, more peaceful,
there were fewer refugees, there were fewer internally displaced people, more democratic
governments.
And the big success, which we don't talk about enough, is Europe.
If you look at countries like Romania and Lithuania in 1989, they were very, very poor autocratic states. They are now prosperous liberal democracies. It requires something that is quite
different from the kind of intervention you're talking about. It requires really rich carrots and sticks and it requires patience. How did this miracle
for these dozen countries in Eastern Europe work? It worked because they had the carrot
of being able to join the European Union. They had very, very generous structural funds
over a long time. Their population believed in it. They had a reason to get behind it.
Let's give US a bit of credit for the direction that
Japan went in, South Korea went in, Taiwan went in. But partly it was because you haven't talked
about it very much. I mean, how many of your listeners know that you still got 25,000
soldiers in South Korea, right? All of them because our listeners are very, very well.
So keep going for that, 60 years. And the truth is you went through South Korea being a pretty
poor military authoritarian Texas government to what it is now, which is one of the most keep going for that 60 years. The truth is you went through South Korea being a pretty poor
military authoritarian Texas government to what it is now, which is one of the most vibrant,
interesting, dynamic, liberal countries on earth. There's a lot of stuff which
has gone in the right direction since the Second World War, while the US has been
right at the center of this system. I want to keep making the argument
for that odd combination that American soft and even hard power, those 25,000 troops,
can push things in the right direction. Sure.
But it requires, I think, a couple of things. One of them is patience. The second thing
is don't talk to the American people too much about it. It turns out the places which are
going best are the places you never mentioned. How dare you, sir. I think you could be right.
I mean, the fact you don't talk about South Korea is part of the trick, right? You had 2,500 soldiers
in Afghanistan, no casualties for 18 months. You could have continued doing that forever,
but you talked about it so much. Biden felt he needed to go big or bust.
You don't think that was South Korea? Well, there has been, though, for a long time. And again, this is now the Trump kind of play
of victimhood is that South Korea has used us. All these countries, by not militarizing,
by using our defense as a shield and creating stability for themselves, were able to focus
their resources on this economic development.
So they've done great, but we've suffered desperately because of that, because we're
being forced to, you know, nobody ever talks about that.
We like our influence being global.
We have more than 750 military bases.
Nobody made us build those.
We did that.
That was us.
And as much as we want to pull back,
our Defense Department is getting a raise again.
It's going to be a trillion dollar defense bill
because we're going to build a golden dome
and we're going to do all these other things. I continue to believe this and I wonder if you feel the same way about the UK,
that the issue in our country is not trade or trade deficits or all these other things.
It's that we were unable to properly distribute and reinvest the gigantic wealth that has been generated in this country
over these past 30 or 40 years into effective, competent change in our own country.
That's completely right, John.
The story of Reagan and the story of Thatcher was that by releasing the markets, we were
going to generate growth, and you did.
Trickle down, baby.
Yeah.
You generated incredible growth.
I mean, I think one of the things that's difficult to understand in the US debate is you are
all thinking, well, the reason Trump came to power is that the American economy is relatively
weak and that what Trump's doing is going around the world saying, we've been taken
for a sacrament, they're all getting rich at our expense.
The rest of us have spent the last five years looking at you thinking you're an economic
miracle.
Right.
Europe's economy was the same size as the American economy 10 years ago.
You're now 50% bigger than us.
Right.
So we look at you and we're like, wow.
Then the question is, how do you reconcile that with how somebody
feels in Dayton, Ohio, who's voting for Trump? How does this make sense? On the one hand,
the American economy is going gangbusters. You've got the seven largest companies in
the world. You've got 70% of all global equities are in the United States, et cetera, et cetera.
And yet a lot of people feel their lives are very underwhelming, very disappointing.
They're struggling with cost of living.
So here's where it gets tricky, Rory, because you're right.
And by the way, the difficulties in those industrialized
or I should say deindustrialized areas is very real.
Those folks have much harder lives now
as we can't compete with China's low wage and low
regulation environment that creates those.
And it did hollow it out.
But part of the issue there in terms of the political pressure
is it almost invariably occurred in our small swing state.
There's only five states that matter in this country
because of our electoral college.
Generally, states are blue or they're red. There's some purple states that are still in
contention. They are almost all suffering from deindustrialization. So that because here's,
you could make another slogan in our country and it's called, nobody gives a shit about Oregon.
Because if Oregon was the swing state,
then their issues, which would not be deindustrialized,
they'd be something else, would be
the ones that dominate our policy and our public discussion.
If Iowa was a swing state, we would all
be talking about tariffs on any hog producing countries
that might be going along.
So this is an outsized response
to a narrowly focused geographic issue.
Sure.
Boom.
Taking a quick break, we shall be back.
Well, let's look at this problem with democracy, right?
Whoa, hey, what?
So this is-
Tread lightly, sir.
This is an issue in Brexit.
So I present The Rest is Politics, which is the UK's biggest podcast.
And the question that comes almost every week to us is why are we not rejoining the European
Union? And people point out that something like 65% of the British Republic now think Brexit was
a mistake.
So it seemed like a no-brainer, right?
65% of the public think Brexit is a mistake, we'll rejoin the European Union, particularly
when America is getting a bit erratic, why don't we get closer to our European allies?
But the problem is the problem you've just identified.
Labour and Conservative, the two
main parties, are fighting about this tiny group of states called the Red Wall. Those
people, and they're mostly in deindustrialized areas, voted to leave the European Union.
Although Keir Starmer, the prime minister, and his entire cabinet voted to remain in
the European Union, thought Brexit was a horrible idea.
They're not moving even a millimeter closer to even soft versions like rejoining a customs
union or anything with Europe because they're worried about those few swing voters.
And what will happen is reform UK will primary everybody from the right and they'll be the
ones that, I mean, I don't think labor's in trouble with that, but I would imagine that the Tories will be consumed by reform. Yeah. So this is another way in which
we all are a bit American. So this is a story in Canada, it's a story in Australia,
it's a story in the United Kingdom, it's a story in Germany. Germany, the far right now,
the AFD, which is this party that Musk was getting behind,
this neo-fascist party, now up at 26% of the polls. It's the biggest party in the polls.
I was a conservative member of parliament.
Yes. After having been a member of the Liberal Party.
The Labour Party, yeah. Exactly, the Labour Party. I don't know where my politics in US terms is probably a little
bit to the left of Hillary Clinton. But I'm not full Bernie Sanders, right? And when Boris
Johnson became prime minister, I was so horrified. I mean, the guy's a complete, he's a terrible
human being. He was clearly going to be a terrible prime minister.
But a wonderful zipline photo op.
Yeah, he's a funny buffoon.
He's a good clown, right?
I mean, it's the age of clowns in politics.
He's a funny guy.
Trump maybe can also be quite funny sometimes.
I mean, that's part of the problem with these people.
I mean, you're funnier than both of them, but they're quite funny.
Thank you.
They're quite good television performers, right?
Yeah, no, they're charismatic, but they play into a real sense of grievance. That is real.
The problem with a good diagnostician is they also have to be a good fixer. And that's where
we're starting to see the chaos unroll. And a couple of things there. So I and 21 of my colleagues would not put up with Boris pushing ahead with a hard Brexit.
And we resigned. We left parliament, which is one of the reasons I've been a bit
puzzled by why my Republican, Senator and Congress people, friends were not doing the same with
Trump. I cannot understand what they're doing. I mean, they say to me, well, you know, I'd lose my seat. Well, we all gave up our seats
to protest against Boris Johnson. So why are they not prepared to risk their seats to protest
against Trump?
I'm sorry, did you just say, are they not prepared to risk their seats? Is that? Yeah.
Are you suggesting that self-interest and self-preservation should not be the sole motivation for...
Listen, Donald Trump has a hold on his constituency.
I can't honestly think of...
Even Reagan did not have...
They keep talking about cancel culture.
The real cancel culture in this country is anybody who might speak out against Donald Trump who might be on the right
is immediately exiled. There was a gentleman, this just recently happened, there was a gentleman who
was full MAGA, Pentagon spokesperson, he wrote an op-ed about the chaos going on in the Department
of Defense. Donald Trump Jr. just put out a statement,
this man is excommunicated, this man has been exiled from the MAGA. You can be cast out like
it's Thunderdome, Mad Max, you must wander the desert. It's a bizarre purity test.
It's incredible. And for me as a conservative who's turned against this,
you see it very directly.
So, you know, I had JD Vance tweeting against me
and saying, you know, I've always said
that Rory thinks he's got an IQ of 130,
but actually he's got an IQ of 110.
So you're very right.
I love, by the way, I loved the specificity of that.
That it was that you think it's 130, but it's 110.
And most people are like 110 is pretty good.
I would take 110.
That's what I thought.
I was pretty, pretty proud of the 110.
Yeah.
Sure.
Yeah.
It sounds great.
Yeah.
Um, so yeah, so then you get, once that happens and I've had
Elon Musk tweet out against
me, I've had Donald J Trump Jr. Yes. It's amazing what's unleashed because of course they have
tens of hundreds of millions of followers in some cases. So then you suddenly a hit with a barrage
of, you know, five, 6,000 replies.. I'm trying to get in a fight with JD Vance
about my interpretation of Christianity and his interpretation of Christianity. But most
of the response that you get is you wouldn't be able to beat him in a push-up competition.
I really don't know how to press up.
He will punch you in the face, sir.
Exactly.
The amazing thing is the issue with them is they believe their IQs are 180 and they're
110.
There's an infallibility.
Now, what's happening right now will test their ability to the reality distortion field
that they have been able to project that's been really effective at inoculating them
against any kind of accountability or criticism
is really going to be pushed here
because of this trade war.
There is nothing that they pushed more vehemently.
There is nothing that they described in starker terms
as being the medicine that was necessary
to reverse the victimization that
Americans writ large have faced in the world and you are watching it crumble. The president sat
down with the heads of Target and Walmart and other big box stores and they were like, hey man,
I just want to let you know in two weeks, we are going to be out of shit.
Like, you are going to see empty.
And all of a sudden, and then the bond market went crazy,
and treasuries, you know, the dollar is weakening.
Treasuries aren't being bought up as much as the safe haven.
And all of a sudden today, Donald Trump said,
you know, I'm thinking actually, you know,
all these people are kissing my ass to make deals.
I'm thinking I'm just gonna drop the tariffs
to like 40%, 50%.
I don't know.
You know what?
China has to make a deal.
So why not just drop all the tariffs?
Because they have to.
And I'm wondering, will this be the moment
that finally they go, oh,
the man behind the curtain isn't brilliant, doesn't have the answers or will there be just another reality distortion kind of moment for them?
Well, John, I mean, again, you know far more about the US, but from the European and international perspective, we are in a real
existential crisis here.
For the first time in 70 or 80 years, Europeans are asking themselves, maybe we need to be
closer to China than the US.
It's mad.
There is no moral equivalence between China and even Donald
Trump's US. Yeah, I just can't see that being an option. I just can't. And yet, it's happening.
And China, basically China had one objective over the last 20 years, which is to break the link
between the US and its allies. As did Russia, same thing. Absolutely. And you can see Xi Jinping,
the Chinese premier, has been touring around Southeast Asia.
Usually he doesn't say anything, but the last week he's been saying, I'm going to be your
reliable ally.
You can see op-eds appearing in the Chinese newspapers about how Europe needs to reach
out to China.
We're going to get great offers on Chinese electric vehicles, which is going to make
a lot of sense to us because they'll be very cheap and it will help us in the energy transition. Poor people in Europe are struggling to afford electric vehicles,
which we're forcing them to buy. All this is happening. It's completely bewildering.
We're praying that the world is going to right itself. We're praying that the old United States
that we used to know is coming back
and that in the end, the institutions of the United States, the midterms, and of course,
sadly, in the middle of this, it's a really sad thing. People are slightly thinking, well,
I kind of hope he screws up the global economy because that might finally destroy him. People
are thinking, well, the one thing Hitler didn't do is screw up the economy.
He was quite good at creating jobs.
That's the authoritarian bargain.
You can disappear the unpopular, you can get rid of the immigrants and the trans and the
thing, but the trains, really.
You've got to get the trains running on time.
Trump is very interesting.
If he can be the first proto-fascist who turns out to be entirely economically illiterate
and completely incompetent and totally able to drive up prices in the United States, crash the
stock market, destroy America's position as the world's reserve currency, and it's felt by people.
It's felt in Medicare. It's felt in Medicaid. I'm talking to you from Yale University. Obviously, the average voter does not particularly care what happens to
an Ivy League university or even USAID or many of the stuff I care about, Voice of America,
the Wilson Center. All the things that have been holding our great country back.
That's right. And the tariff thing, I mean, I spend so much time talking to colleagues in Switzerland and Europe, in Southeast Asia, in China about this.
And it is bewildering.
I mean, your listeners will understand that Trump is saying four completely contradictory things.
Right?
He's saying these tariffs are going to generate a huge
amount of money for the US government. No more taxes, all the money from tariffs.
That's right. It's the most beautiful word in the English language.
Exactly. We're going to import all this stuff from China. The second thing is it's going to
create lots of jobs. That's the opposite. We're not importing things from China. We're going to
make them here, in which case you don't get the tax revenue. Third thing he's saying is, no, no, no, these are
temporary things which are being used to achieve something else. They're being used to get a
concession on fentanyl from Canada or Mexico. In other words, Canada has been flooding us
with over $40 worth of fentanyl over the last 10 years. That's a completely different theory.
That's like, I'm not actually going to keep tariffs. I'm not going to get the revenue from it. I'm not going to get the jobs from it. I'm just using it
to stop the fentanyl coming in. And then the fourth theory, which seems to be going with China,
is I'm using it to damage somebody else's economy. It's like sanctions. I'm just punching them. And
I'm going to take some damage in my own economy, but they're going to feel it more. Walmart will
feel the pressure. China Macroeconomics will feel it more.
He may be right, but then there's a whole question about
who's got more political resilience,
Xi Jinping with his people,
or Donald Trump with his people,
as the pain are inflicted on these two economies
in different ways.
I think we're seeing right now how it's changing.
And so just, I mean, that's a kind of overly complicated way.
If as soon as you, I learned as a politician, as soon as you have four points, you've lost everybody.
But the first one was good enough, Roy. I was, I was riveted by the first one. I don't,
I don't remember any of the rest of it. But let me ask you this then. So, but China, look,
nobody is going to trust, they have the same problem that Trump has. When you are creating something out of executive action,
you are not creating something lasting through legislation.
And people understand that that has less stability.
So a new president comes in four years from now
and immediately reverses it.
And so nobody is going to reshore the factories
that were going to cost billions of dollars.
So the question is this, though.
You keep saying, 70, 80 years post-war stability.
As Bannon would say, these are the great turnings,
the 70 to 80 year great turnings.
This is the new one.
So what is the new turning?
Because it's very clear that the populist leaders
have a very different view.
They have a nation state. Look, in the old days,
it was democracy versus authoritarianism or capitalism versus communism. Now it's woke versus
unwoke. It's purity versus multiculturalism, meritocracy versus DEI.
Now, I don't buy that any of those things are real
in the way that they are portrayed,
but that seems to be the organizing principle.
And how do you create stability out of that?
And can the EU and the UK be the leaders
of that old democratic order?
Or will they fall prey to the same pressures?
Will Russia and the United States be able to split Europe like they're doing now?
Yeah.
Well, I think first thing is you've made a really important point, which is the world's changed.
We've entered this funny shadow world.
And basically what we're looking at is a new form of fascism, really.
I mean, fundamentally these people, it doesn't matter whether it's Erdogan or it's some of the people around Trump or it's Narendra Modi.
Um, these are people who think like many people did in the 1920s and 30s, that
liberal democracy was kind of weak
and indecisive and incompetent and it failed people.
I think Musk said that empathy is the world's biggest problem.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, like you, I was talking to Esra Klein recently and he's, the whole
world's been talking to Esra Klein. I think you made that joke.
Kids everywhere. He's like Chalamet promoting a Dylan biopic.
You can't get rid of them.
It is like that.
Exactly.
You can't get rid of them anyway.
Anyway, and one of his points is he thinks that Musk was motivated by the fact that he
felt that his employees were rude to him and that they kept asking for empathy and that
a lot of this rage with DEI and wokeism is just Musk and other tech bros feeling that the people
who work for their companies were not obedient enough to the great leader.
That's interesting.
Anyway, this idea that we're going to come in, we're going to bring in strong men and
they're going to be efficient, they're going to get stuff done and we don't care too much
about all that other stuff.
In their mind, it's all nonsense and inefficiency.
You know, it might be woke, it might be law,
but also that they're going to reclaim something.
They're going to reclaim their country's default setting,
the default setting of America being white Christian and male,
the default setting of Germany being Germans. They, you know,
isn't there something that it's a,
it's a reset seeking to change what the great society or the new
deal or any of those other kinds of migratory globalistic, you know, it's a reset.
It's a reset and it's a reset that has two particular implications.
The first is corruption, which I think you talk about a lot, which is these regimes foster
corruption.
I mean, tariffs is a very good example.
Tariffs are a lovely thing for Trump because each individual business has to come on bended
knees and ask for a little exemption, right? The second thing that it breeds is violence and conflict.
So you mentioned Germany. The AfD in Germany say that there are real Germans and they do
say that there are real Germans and they do an analysis which basically in their ideology says that Muslims are not real Germans. That includes German citizens who are Muslims.
They have this idea of remigration, which basically means you push them out of the country.
Of citizens.
Of citizens. This is true in Austria too. These parties have a full ideology where they've actually counted the number of people from
different countries that should be.
So they say we don't want zero Afghans, but in a Germany of 100 million, we think there
should be 300.
They've counted the numbers.
It's a very, very weird.
Can those people have families or it's capped at 300?
I think it's capped at 300.
Maybe if you get above it, you leave again.
And actually, the Austrian far right, Kieckl's far right, has been very clear about this,
that this will extend to citizens as well.
Now, why does this lead to violence?
It leads to violence because it questions the fundamental idea since the Second World
War, which is the equality of everybody's rights.
It doesn't matter whether you're Muslim or white, you have the same rights.
Once you question that, then other things become more likely.
This is where it gets dangerous because then you begin to think, well, I should add a little
bit to my territory here.
And look at the way that Trump thinks about Greenland as an example of this because I
think other leaders are going to begin behaving like this.
What's so strange about it is that he doesn't even have the grace to lie or be a hypocrite.
So you talked about Timothee Chalamet.
Timothee Chalamet is being Henry V, right?
Yes.
He's going off to France and he's at least pretending that he has a legal claim to France.
His dad's mom's dad was actually the king of France.
Yes.
Yes.
When Hitler's invading Poland, he's at least faking a border incident, claiming he's responding
to the Poles attacking him.
What's odd about Trump and Greenland is there's no moral or legal excuse at all. He just says, I want it. Yes. I've got the troops. I've got the
money. Give it to me. And that collapse of international legal frameworks, morality is
very unusual. I mean, it's taking us back almost a thousand years. It's the mentality
of a warlord. No question. No question. But I think they are underestimating the role that stability
plays in the economic successes of the last 70 or 80 years. And I think liberal democracies
were underestimating the role that immigration or uncontrolled immigration played in that stability. That by, you know, there's a difference
between recognizing human equality
and not controlling borders.
And I do understand you welcome people,
but there has to be, the biggest problem in immigration
in this country is that our system is just utterly broken.
There are no rules.
They're bringing, getting green cards.
You could be here for 40 years.
You could be here.
We don't know how many people we wanna have in.
We don't, you know, by not being able to successfully
articulate and execute policies,
we make ourselves vulnerable
to these other kinds of disruptions,
which are far more existential. Yes, and I didn't quite get onto your point about Europe. Immigration, uncontrolled immigration,
is the number one reason for the rise of the far right in Europe. And unless mainstream,
centrist parties can come up with serious policies on how to be humane, generous,
but also control immigration, how to say, we're going to
take asylum seekers, but we're going to be realistic about the numbers we're going to take.
These are going to be the criteria. We're going to share the burden across Europe. If you can't do
that, you're dead. If you can do that, this is an incredible opportunity for Europe.
That's right.
An astonishing opportunity because suddenly we can be what we haven't been for a very long time, which is stand
up and be serious about these values which are at the heart of the European Union. We talk a lot
about democracy, we talk a lot about equality, and of course Musk wants to suggest it's all
fraudulent. It's not. Particularly in Eastern Europe where people have been through this
existence in 1999, they believe it deeply. Talk to a poll. They really believe this stuff. There is room for a law and order liberalism.
There is a room for a stable progressive feeling that is not just based in idealism, but based
in infrastructure and based in the idea of real governance that doesn't, you know, one
of the problems here on the left is
if you're gonna solve one problem,
that problem also has to solve every problem.
If I wanna do housing,
that also has to solve global warming.
Sure.
I also think, boy, this is getting us
into a whole other discussion and I apologize for this,
but, and I really appreciate you taking the time
and bringing these insights.
But I think that the world's climate policies
have been disastrous in a lot of different ways, one of which
is the rhetoric of we cannot get to 1.5 degrees.
We have six months left.
We have eight months left.
If we don't change our ways, they're
asking human beings to no longer be progress
oriented.
I think how many COP conferences has there been?
What has it been?
Forty now?
And then what they would do is say, oh, we'll just put a carbon tax on.
Oh, good.
Well, in six months when you're voted out of office, let us know how that goes.
I think we have to rethink how this is all being accomplished.
Yeah. And John, I mean, the most simple thing in Europe
is that most of our environmental policies
have been regressive, which means that they've
had the biggest impact on the poor.
Because what economists-
As everything does.
Yeah.
And this is partly because economists have got a perfectly
logical argument, which is what you want to do
is you want to tax people's carbon consumption
or their energy use, because that's going to encourage them to reduce it. But of course, who finds the biggest
proportion of their income going on filling their vehicle or heating their home? It's the poor,
not you and me. We are pushing a green transition onto the shoulders of the poor. This also involves
onto the shoulders of the poor. This also involves having much bigger conversations about tax, about redistribution, about the
kind of societies you want to have.
These are not easy, but to return to where I was, I was a working politician.
There's something very odd going on in politics.
I've written a book, which in the US, it's a title you might like, it's called How Not
to be a Politician.
And it's the story of my spending 10 years being a pretty useless politician, but I'm
trying to be honest about what it's actually like being a politician.
How totally mad your life is.
How much time you're spending wasting fundraising, how much time you're spending trying to negotiate
with the whips.
Even in the UK? Even in the UK. I mean, it's much negotiate with the whips. Even in the UK?
Even in the UK.
I mean, it's much worse in the US, but even in the UK.
When I'm running to be mayor of London, I'm spending a lot of time going to see very,
very boring, wealthy people trying to ask them for money and putting up whatever their
be in their bonnets is about residence parking or Israel or whatever they want to talk to
me about.
Right?
I decide I want to minimize the horrors of
what's happening with Israel and Gaza at the moment. But I'm saying to them, listen,
I'm running to be mayor of London. Why are you asking me about my policy on Kashmir?
Put that aside. I guess what I'm getting to is we have created a frozen system. Politics feels
paralyzed. One of the reasons you get the Musk's and the Trump's is
that they are offering to come in with a sledgehammer and smash the whole thing up.
One of the things I'm trying to get across, I guess, to people who've not been politicians
is until you've been in the system, you don't feel how you're just kind of stuck in treacle
all the time. You just cannot move. We spend all our time meeting people and
reading smart books about how we can transform things, and then when you try to do it, nothing
happens. A hundred legal reasons, a hundred process reasons. I found myself as a cabinet
minister in charge of budgets of tens of billions of dollars, And it was unbelievably unsatisfying.
I felt it was more fulfilling when I was restoring one block in the
old city of Kabul in Afghanistan.
I ran a nonprofit called Turquoise mountain, which my wife now runs.
It was really exciting and fulfilling.
And I'm working with a couple of hundred people.
I'm getting stuff done when I'm in charge of a huge government department.
The basic answer to almost everything you want to do is I'm afraid it can't be done.
And if it's not your civil servants saying it, it's the polling people or it's your political leadership saying, no, that's not going to work with this voter or that voter or the other.
How do we find energy and responsible energy? Because you began with this, and maybe this is
what I want to finish with. When I was running in opposition, I realized that the easiest way to win is you just say, this is all bullshit,
these guys are idiots, they've got no idea what they're doing, look at how crap this is.
Hey, stop describing my show. That's my job. Exactly. And of course, incredibly tempting,
and it works very, very, very well. But of course, it also feeds into all the problems of
our modern culture. This kind of Uber eats mentality, our lack of tolerance with complexity
or delays and produces ultimately Trump or in a smaller version, Boris Johnson,
which is the politics of spectacle, the politics of statements. It's not really about my boring four points
about how his tariff policy undermines itself, right?
It's all about claiming to do something.
It's the politics of reality TV.
And I think undoing that involves more than just
you and me being thoughtful and earnest.
It involves really thinking about the modern world and thinking about our culture, which
is quite difficult to look at and the role that things like social media play in our
culture, who our heroes are, what our morality is.
And a persuasive case to improve those that can have electoral success because ultimately
it almost sounds like you're describing this kind of strange paradox
of politicians in incumbent situations who show no courage
so that they can keep these jobs that they don't do anything in
and get very little satisfaction from.
Yeah, and deeply depressing.
I mean, most of my colleagues are depressed.
Most of them feel their lives are much less than they wanted them to be.
Let me finish with one last plug because I worked for an amazing American nonprofit called
Give Directly.
My slightly awkward link to that is they have a policy of giving unconditional cash transfer
to the poorest people in the world.
Like a microloan kind of a thing,
or is this a different?
Except they don't ask for the money back.
It's just a grant, and the results are spectacular.
You turn up in Rwanda Village three months
after they've received, literally,
unconditional cash for every house,
and the whole place has been transformed.
Electricity's up, everyone's got livestock,
the roofs have been repaired, the kids are in school. It's unbelievable.
But it's an exact example of what we've been talking about all the time. The evidence is there,
but the politics of it are unbelievably tough. How do you explain to a voter that actually what all
the research or the randomized control studies show that the best way to do international
development is to literally just give someone $900 in cash, not monitor them, not ask them
what they're going to do.
Right.
Bottom up, not top down.
Yeah.
And there is another example of amongst, I get hundreds of examples of the fundamental
challenges of our society, decentralization against centralization, bottom against top
and above all communication.
And that will be, and listen, your mouth to God's ears, but this is a moment, as you said
earlier, and I appreciate you summing it up in that way, of opportunity.
And something is going to be built in the shadow of this chaos.
And if we do it right, it's going to be something really lasting that can give the same kind of years of stability and progress.
And hopefully that emerges from all of this and that we still have podcasts after that happens.
And that we still have America because we love America. We want you guys back. Come back.
Come back America.
The perfect way to end it.
Rory Stewart, thank you so much for joining us.
Obviously cohost, the rest is politics.
Please say hello to Alistair and everybody else
and really appreciate you being here and taking the time.
Thank you for your time.
Bye bye.
Bye.
I don't know any other way to describe a gentleman like that
other than delightful.
You appreciated the accent.
I cannot tell you how much I appreciate an accent like that,
breaking things down.
What it is is the four things that will destroy the world
are simply this.
I'm sure he'll love that impression.
It's terrible. I don't have the accents down, but my God. The other thing is for the life that he's led,
you would think there'd be a little more wear and tear on the tires. He was in Afghanistan,
soldier then MP, minister, writer, teacher. I mean, Jesus.
I guess there's not too much sun damage in the UK
to be done, so.
Oh my goodness.
That is so, I cannot believe that you went to
the pastiness of his countenance.
I mean, look at me. How dare you?
At long last, Lauren.
But it is, you know what I thought most interesting is,
there is a wistfulness and a kind of confusion in the
accusatory tone of Trump and Vance and the kind of, hey, we were under the impression
actually that you in the United States were benefiting quite a bit from this and we appreciated
this stability, so fuck.
I know.
Looking into this episode, something that really sat with me was
the European commission chief's comments.
I'm currently having countless talks with heads of state and government around the
world who want to work together with us on the new order.
Everyone is asking for more trade with Europe and it's not just about economic
ties, you know, Lord it's different time now.
I think it's so amazing when you think about, you know,
what has been the cry of the conspiracy right forever,
this new world order, and what is Trump ushering in?
Yeah.
I mean, something that I'm sitting with is I'm like,
I can't believe we're kind of rooting for Trump to
like, and you guys talked about this in the episode, but it's like, we're hoping he screws
up the global economy. So people start to see the reality of like, who he is, man, boy, do I hope
that it doesn't take a screw up to the global economy for people to see who he is. And to be quite frank, I don't even think that will do it.
I just don't think that they view his actions and negative effects as being in any way correlated.
They'll always view it as sort of like in the old days, you know, the left used to cling
to communism.
Well, communism's never been tried, you know, just left used to cling to communism of communism's never been tried.
You know, just because Stalin killed 8 million people in a forest in Russia, communism's
never been tried. And I think you will always have that with Trump. And God, I hope it doesn't
take this economic chaos to do that. I hope we pull out of this spiral. Cooler heads have to prevail,
but man, it is wild to watch, isn't it? It is, yeah. It's been a hundred days, guy. I don't even
think it's been a hundred days. Look how old I look. I've aged so much. Not at all. Brittany,
what are the people saying? What are the good people saying? What are they saying? Yes,
our listeners. What do they want from us?
Oh, congratulations on a Webby Award.
Hey, congratulations to you.
The realm.
You guys, look at us congratulating each other.
We did it, guys.
We're like the Spider-Man meme.
Yeah.
Hey, John, whatever happened to Elon
coming on The Daily Show?
Oh, he came on and it was great.
I thought it was a productive conversation.
I don't know.
You know, the whole thing occurred.
I guess we did a bit on Doge and I obviously came up with all kinds of billions of dollars
that we could save from subsidies and corporate thing and blah, blah, blah.
That was the real cost savings to me.
He, you know, said, he said, not us, we didn't make any entreaty,
he said, I'll come on the show if you air it unedited,
and we went, sure, fine, that's how most of them air,
so sure, what the fuck, and then he said like,
ah, you're a propaganda son of a,
and he started to back away, and I said,
look, you come on or don't come on,
but don't pretend like it's,
I don't live up to a standard.
And that is the last time.
That is, and that is, I think, and I think Tesla was at,
you know, at least 80% of its value at that point.
And it's since I think plunged to whatever it is,
obviously not connected, but I did DM him.
Is that a thing?
Yeah, it is.
I texted him and just said like,
Hey man, so is there somebody I should,
you know, have our guys reach out to,
to make this happen?
And I got ghosted.
You got ghosted by Elon.
I got left on read, man.
Wow.
Yeah.
I mean, we've all been there, not by Elon, but.
Girl.
Well, actually, judging from his most recent revelations
of his baby mamas, I think everyone has been left on red
at some point.
Oh, man.
By that gentleman.
So yeah, I don't imagine it will, I would be surprised.
I think I have some bad news,
because I was reading that one of the reasons
he's claiming he's leaving government
is the nasty and unethical attacks from the left.
So that might be why you're on red.
Completely, I'm sure undeserved,
in no way reflective of standing on a stage
with a chainsaw celebrating the loss of livelihoods
for tens of thousands of well-intentioned government workers.
I'm sure, yes, no, this is all completely
out of the blue.
And,
Surely.
Listen, if there's one thing that this administration does better than anybody I've ever seen, it's
play the victim. I've never seen any people ever, including when my kids were three and
two years old, evade accountability and responsibility and blame others in the way that these people
do. It's truly shameless.
Amen, sister friend.
Thank you. Look at us, the sisterhood of the traveling pants over here.
Do you want another one?
Yeah, give me another one. Give me another one.
Is it worth it in this day and age to go to school for journalism?
Oh, wow.
Any question that starts with is it worth it?
I always wanna end with let me work.
Get down and reverse.
All right.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, it's a tough one.
I mean, I don't know if they're talking
about the financial.
I will say this.
Is it worth it to society?
Hell fucking yes.
We need committed, idealistic, tenacious, resilient,
young students to go into journalism
and try not to be defeated
by the general outrage, incentivized financial system
that we have of discourse.
Like we need those people desperately.
And the people that I've met that are going into that,
that are young people are impressive
and committed to all those incredible outcomes?
Is it worth it to them?
I don't know the world that you're walking into.
The executive producer of CBS, 60 Minutes,
just quit rather than apologize because he didn't do anything
wrong editing an interview, which everybody does.
It didn't change it.
So I don't know the world they're walking into,
but I know if that world can change for the better, we need those people. So whoever wrote
that, yeah. Do it. Do it. Yeah. I mean, I would, I was a working journalist who didn't go to J
school, so I might be a bit biased, but I will say that with the changing media landscape, I would just
urge people who do invest in a program to make sure it's forward thinking and thinking about the
new technologies and the ways you make a living now as a working journalist, how to be a freelancer,
those more practical forward thinking things.
So let me go with Lauren's answer.
Can we strike my answer?
Because the answer that Lauren just gave
was actually actionable and perfect.
I think, boy, that's such a good answer
is to think about what that environment is now
and choose a program like that, Lauren.
What she said.
A little bit of life advice.
Sister, what are, what, what,
I don't know which member of the traveling pants you are,
cause I'm not sure who's in that.
I think there was four of us,
but Jillian is working remote today, so she's not around.
But yes, boy, that's a good answer.
Brittany, how else can they get in touch with us?
What can they do?
Twitter, We Are Weekly Show,
pod, Instagram threads, TikTok, Blue Sky, We Are Weekly Show, pod, Instagram threads,
TikTok, Blue Sky, We Are Weekly Show podcast.
And you can like, subscribe, and comment
on our YouTube channel, The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart.
Great job, as always, guys.
Lead producer, Lauren Walker, producer, Brittany Medevec,
video editor and engineer, Rob Vatola, who,
Rob, I'm telling you, that pushing back my computer
was just a ticket.
I felt it.
I don't think I banged on the desk as much for our audio editor and engineer, Nicole
Boyce, researcher and associate producer, Gillian Spear, executive producers, as always,
Chris McShane and Katie Gray.
Thank you guys so much.
And we will see you on the next Weekly Show Podcast next week.
Bye bye.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast produced by Paramount Audio
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