The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Debating Reality with Mehdi Hasan
Episode Date: July 31, 2025As mainstream media finds itself outplayed by Trump, Jon is joined by Mehdi Hasan, Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Zeteo. Together, they discuss his experience debating far-right conservatives, explore... how Democrats could match Republican ruthlessness and tactics, and examine how America’s failure to stop the crisis in Gaza has undermined both U.S. credibility and Democratic moral authority. Plus, Jon talks Jay Leno and vindictive pricks. Unrelated. This podcast episode is brought to you by: SAILY - Get an exclusive 15% discount on Saily data plans when you use code STEWART at checkout. Download the Saily app or go to Saily.com/stewart. 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)
Hello everybody. Welcome to the weekly show. My name is John Stewart. We're taping this.
It's July 30th, which is a Wednesday. It's got to be a Wednesday. There's so much going
on. I don't want to talk for those of you who are probably listening to this and not viewing it, you might not realize,
I have a giant like divot in my forehead, red and all that.
And if you're watching it on YouTube,
you probably do see it.
I just wanted to let people know,
nothing to worry about.
As you get older, you find that you have to go
into the dermatologist on a regular basis
and he takes out like a frizzy ray
and he just points it at your face
variety of different ways to try and keep your face
from being consumed by metastasizing skin condition.
So for those of you who might be watching this
and thinking to yourself, hey, does he know his face appears to be imploding on his forehead?
I do know, because this morning somebody shot liquid nitrogen at a wide variety of
scaly things that are growing on an old man's head.
But we're not going to talk about that today. Today is going to be a really a
potpourri with just, I think, one of the best communicators that I see in the, was in the cable
world now in the independent media world. And I'm just going to get to him because we've got so much
to get to within the world from him. So I'm just going to jump in on that.
him. So, I'm just going to jump in on that. So, we'll get right into it. Very excited to have our guest today. You've seen him from his work on MSNBC, but also now the founder and editor-in-chief of
Zateo. Mehdi Hassan is here. Mehdi.
John, thanks for having me.
Oh, my goodness. It's so nice to see you. How are things at Zateo?
Things at Zateo very well in this horrific media climate that we're in, where the media
is falling apart.
Those of us who are taking a stab at independent journalism, I'm glad to report, are thriving.
We just crossed a million subscribers on YouTube, which was a big landmark for us a year in.
Yeah.
No, I think this might officially make you an influencer. If that's, if that's
possible. I have to tell you, I was so, like everyone else in the universe was incredibly
struck by your Jubilee episode. No, I'm not so familiar with Jubilee, but I am familiar with
Medi. So, uh, I tuned in obviously because I always love a good Medi debate. Medi goes,
it goes hard and it goes fast.
It was you in the center of what appeared to be a circular firing
squad of the cast of Footloose. Like they all appeared to be these lovely,
you know, Midwestern. And when they began to open their mouths, you know, I understood, you know, it's, it's
going to be Medi Hasan and it's going to be against conservatives.
I did not in any way expect what I, what I saw and heard, which was, seemed to be very focused on
the fact that you don't belong in this country and are not a citizen.
And it was, was there a moment when you were in that environment where you thought, oh,
this is not what I had expected?
Yeah, I think that moment was minute one.
I think it was all the way through.
I mean, I went thinking as well, it would be some mega folks, some Trump cheerleaders,
some people are like, tariffs are great and Donald Trump's a wonderful leader and we hate
Joe Biden.
I didn't expect, you know, the second or third guy saying, well, where were you born in a
discussion about crime?
And I'm like, what does that got to do with the crime rate?
I didn't expect the guy just saying, I'm a fascist and I love General Franco and I don't
believe in democracy.
I didn't expect the woman who said, well, immigrants can't be Americans, except my parents who are immigrants, they are Americans, just you're
not. I didn't expect the guy saying, get the hell out of my country, you'll be the first
to go. No, I didn't expect any of that. And maybe I should have done, maybe when they
pitched it as 20 far right conservatives, that should have been a giveaway. Who self
describes as far right, at the same. And it was, you know, and, and the could have been more pleasant looking sounding folks.
But, but when they started to get into that sort of, I'm not so worried about fascism
because I don't think they're going to kill me.
Yeah.
I thought I'm a good Catholic boy.
I'm a good Catholic boy.
I don't like the Nazis because they were mean to Catholics. I was like, what about the Jews? Listen, that of course you can find some
justifications in there for those types of actions. But I thought in the middle of it,
there was a flip, a switch flipped in your mind where it says, oh, this is not a debate.
This is a gang beat in and I'm just going to have to survive the bananas
nature of like, how do you debate somebody who just says, oh no, I think fascism that
I think that might be the way to go because you'll, you know, the people will vote it
in and then from then on, we'll be fine.
Yeah, very much was they were trying to do a beat down. As someone who loves action
movies and comedy action movies, it did feel a little Jackie Chan-esque.
Yes.
Where you're kind of running up an alleyway, running up the wall and they're all coming
at you at the same time. Although they did come one by one. So it was one of those classic
fight scenes where you wonder why do they go one by one? But in this, the rules meant
that they had to come one by one.
It was. You were Van Damme. You were Van Damme, you got in position.
I'll take Van Damme. I can't do the splits like Van Damme, rhetorical splits. But 20 to 1 was the,
look, John, I like a good argument. I literally wrote a book about arguing.
So when Jubilee said, hey, do you want to come and take on 20 people? I'm like, I like those odds.
20 to 1, bring it. What I didn't expect was that they weren't interested in debating at all. I'd
watched some of the other Jubilees with Ben Shapiro and Charlie Kirk and my friend Sam Seder on the left.
And in those debates, some of the folks did want to debate and a few of them were crazy.
In mine, it was the other way around. Like two of them wanted to debate and 18 were crazy.
And that's what I didn't see coming, the ratcheting up. I went with like one of my claims,
John, was Donald Trump is defying the constitution. That was one of my four claims.
And I went prepped with the First Amendment, the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment,
Fourteenth Amendment.
I had it all, 22nd Amendment.
I'm good to go.
I've got every amendment.
Right.
The first guy's like, I don't care about the constitution.
Who cares?
Where do you go with that?
What do you do next?
I'm like, I don't have a chapter in my book for that.
How wonderful though, Matty, that is what this has become.
It's such an interesting metastasizing
of the movement on the right, which is, as you know,
it's always steeped in kind of the fetishizing
of the Constitution.
We the people, they've got, you know,
all the buses are wrapped with that Constitution picture
and it's the flags, and it's steeped in the rhetoric
of we are the minutemen and the revolutionaries and it's morphed into actually, now that I
think about it, now that we are in charge, fuck the constitution and we don't need like
watching them.
Fuck the constitution with a little asterisk, John John that says, but we love the second amendment.
The second amendment is sacred. As a matter of fact, that might be the only amendment
that was even put in there. If you really look at it. But it's such a shocking change. Have you
seen in your experience in debating the right that this has has shifted. Was any of that constitutional fetishization
good faith? Is this just a subtle shift now that Donald Trump has exposed how much authoritarianism
appeals to them?
Look, I think it was good faith amongst a minority of them, but that's the minority that has since become never Trumpers or mild Trump critics. So you've
got a kind of a Rand Paul in the Senate who will make some noises about, oh, you can't bomb
countries without congressional authorization. But he really got offended recently when Trump
didn't invite him to a party at the White House. So even for him, Rand Paul, it was like the
constitution. That was a step too far. Yeah, the party invite and then the constitution.
But you know, you're Justin Amashas, who was a congressman
from Michigan, libertarian. He's been very outspoken, but he's no longer in the party
or in Congress. The people who were in Congress and talked endlessly about the constitution,
they were clearly in bad faith. Mike Lee from Utah, the senator from Utah. This guy was the
constitutional guy. He never stopped talking about the constitution and liberty. And then
turns out he was involved allegedly in the attempt to rig the, you know, overturn the
2020 election with the fake electors. We know now that he defends anything Trump says online.
These people clearly were in bad faith. They just confirmed this week, John, a manifestly
unqualified, unfit judge to the federal judiciary.
You're talking about Emil Boves who was the president's personal lawyer.
President Bove allegedly told staff, according to whistleblowers, to fuck the judges, tell the
judges to fuck off when they get rulings they don't like. He's now been confirmed to the bench.
There are some, I think there's a guy called Greg Nunziata, I think his name is, former
Marco Rubio staffer, who has been very principled on this and spoken out. He said on Twitter this
week, if you're a conservative who claims to care about the
constitution, this is it.
It's over.
By confirming this guy, never pretend again that you care about the constitution or about
due process.
So I don't think it was in good faith.
And even this schtick about we don't care about the constitution, the guy who said I'm
a fascist to me on Jubilee, he was very explicit that he loves the Second Amendment.
It's just the other amendments he doesn't love.
And then he goes on a little sympathy tour last week apparently on far right TV saying
he lost his job.
Apparently he didn't lose his job.
He lost his job earlier, but he tried to say he lost it because of this to get a fundraiser.
Don't forget a key part of the modern conservative movement is GoFundMe.
And he interestingly he says, well, you know, my free speech was violated by being fired.
I thought you don't believe in the First Amendment.
I thought it was only the Second Amendment. It's so cynical and self-serving and convenient.
Alan Ross The victimization. You know, I almost think
that the right for all their critics, did you ever meet Roger Ailes?
Alan Ross Thankfully, I did not.
Alan Ross Oh, Maddie, you missed out on one of the love layer. I had one of those bananas types meetings
at Fox News in the bowels of Fox News behind.
When you were trying to get your prime time show.
Exactly. I wanted to work there so bad, if you would only let me. I used to go on
Bill O'Reilly's show. Every now and again, they would bring in the clownish liberal myself,
and I would go on there.
And one day one of the people came down and said,
Mr. Ailes would like to see you.
And I thought, wow, geez,
I didn't even know he lived in the building.
So we had to walk through the kinds of like get smart,
like doors would open and shut,
and you didn't really know where you were
until you got into this
one part of the building that was colder than the other parts of the building. You almost felt
the hair on the back of your neck and the chill and you could see everybody's breath in this one
part. And he and I yelled at each other in the office for about an hour. he wanted me to show appreciation to him because without him, I have no career.
And I wanted him to stop poisoning the atmosphere around the country that was killing.
But what struck me about Ailes was he meant all of it.
He meant every word of it yes but the strategy was cynical so the good faith wasn't what he believed.
It was the methodology that he would employ and his methodology was i am going to discredit all of the institutions or any of the voices that may in any way harm my movement.
I'm gonna make sure that editorial authority
is seen as elitism.
Yes.
And yet I am going to exercise authoritarian control
over my message machine.
And that's, I think, the genius of that movement.
They don't play by the rules that they ask you to play by.
No, not at all.
And this is why, and I can go on a long rant here about why liberals and Democrats and
leftists have got to understand that you are not on some ridiculous even playing field
where everyone, you know, I've been hearing this since Donald Trump came down the escalator in 2015. I've been hearing this since he won
in 2016. I've been hearing this since last year, you know, just because they don't play
by the rules doesn't mean we shouldn't. And it's like, no, that's exactly what it means.
Right? If you are playing a football match or a soccer game, as we say here, if you're
playing on the pitch and the other team picks up the ball and just
runs with it in the middle of a soccer game and you carry on just playing with the ball on the
ground, you will lose. I mean, there's no debate about that. At some point, you either have to
accept that you're going to lose honorably or you're going to say, I'm going to pick up the
ball as well and run with it. Now, for those of us listening at home, when you said pitch,
he means the field. For those, I'm going to translate this into suburban American.
The pitch was-
I've already confused everyone by saying football at soccer.
Of course you can carry the ball in football.
People have no idea what's happening now.
I've never understood why you call it football if you carry it.
I just don't understand.
Well, we don't.
There's so many more things we have to get to in the States that don't make that much
sense before we get to the names of our games.
But now be told I don't belong here again.
That was when you were saying that I'm be told I don't belong here again.
That was when you were saying that I'm a citizen. They're like, no, that's not my favorite was when he said, uh, white people
are native Americans and everybody starts applauding and he's like, I got applause.
And you just go to say to the guy like, well, they're all so fascist.
Like that's yes.
And then they voted him out and I couldn't help but dig it out. I was like, I think the people who clapped for you have just voted you out.
They've just voted. But that was the guy who was like in a green t-shirt and going,
his opening remark was, I've got this thing where I have to stay calm. I'm like, where the fuck am I?
Like how much security did I need to bring with me? And then it turns out, according to The Guardian,
this guy allegedly was involved in all sorts of violent protests a few years back in California. So I'm like, okay, makes more sense
now. Makes more sense. I like that he said, you know, my family's native here in the 1500s.
And I was like, I think, wasn't Jamestown 1600, like the first settle, I was like,
he was like, did you come with the Vikings? I was going to say, yeah, how could you have been
here for the 1500s? Unless maybe it was the Spanish, he came up from the West Indies, maybe his people were
with Cortez, which doesn't make him.
John, I think you're putting far too much effort into fact checking the white supremacist.
You're probably wondering there, what's today's episode sponsored by?
What is it?
Clouds?
Sandwiches?
Gelatin?
No!
Salie.
You ever had to deal with SIM card hassles?
Outrageous roaming fees, waiting in airport lines for a Wi-Fi box.
You gotta love this.
Salie, it's a new SIM app.
Let's just stay connected wherever you go.
You don't have a physical SIM card required. Have you ever tried to get a SIM card out of you?
Phone I'm still using a hammer and a chisel
To do that. It's it's it's not the proper way
But if you ever been abroad or badly need an internet connection, no Wi-Fi spot in sight
You really understand a difference a local SIM card can make there is a one download
understand a difference a local SIM card can make there is one download. eSIM provides an internet connection wherever you travel and saves you money on
roaming fees with SALE and eSIM can be installed just once and it eliminates
the need for users to install a new eSIM for each country. Once connected you'll
have internet access immediately making it easy to book Uber or search for maps
or you know message your loved ones or message
people you don't care for at all.
You'll have that kind of opportunity as well because it'll be that easy.
Get an exclusive 50% discount on Saley data plans when you use code STEWARD at checkout.
Download the Saley app or go to salee.com slash steward.
Medhi, you know, it brings up though, kind of that interesting point of how does the media handle
this moment? You've been a part of those institutes, you know, MSNBC was going to be the liberal answer to Fox, but I don't think they had any idea what they were up against.
Yeah.
You know, Fox News was absolutely strategically managed and controlled.
Yeah.
Top down, they understood the assignment every Every day part, working with every other day part
to create a messaging machine that would make sure that if any Republican fucked up the
way Nixon had, nothing bad would happen to them again. What was your sense of what MSNBC
was or what those are?
When I worked there, look, my thing is wherever I've worked in my career, I've probably been
the most lefty person at that institution.
And there was no different when I joined, maybe with the exception of The Intercept,
but when I joined MSNBC, that was the case.
I think Chris Hayes was probably the most progressive host there until I joined and
I was probably to the left of Chris.
And I had a great time at MSNBC and I did some great shows.
But what's interesting is I always found that critique both from the left and the right.
And by the way, it's on the left and the right, you know, that, oh, this idea that MSNBC
is the liberal version of Fox.
It's insane because to say that you have to not understand what Fox is, which you understand,
which is Fox is an organized propaganda arm of the Republican Party.
Always has been and certainly in the Trump era of the MAGA wing of the Republican Party.
And when people say, oh, well, you've got Fox on the right
and Memisimisi on the left and CNN in the center, it's a complete misreading of our landscape. First
of all, they're all corporate owned entities, which have corporate agendas. Let's just be very
clear about that. So this idea that you're left when you're owned by Comcast is insane. That's
just ridiculous when CNN now has its major shareholder, John Malone, a big Trump donor. Then there's the issue of like, well, hold on, Fox is not just the
right, Fox is a propaganda arm. Sean Hannity used to call Donald Trump up after his show
every night and chew the fat. Rachel Maddow, whatever you think Rachel Maddow, did not
call up Joe Biden to chat with him after her show. MSNBC anchors, some of them are ex-Biden
officials, but MSNBC serving anchors did not turn
up at Biden rallies and introduced Biden in the same way that Fox anchors have done. We've seen
20 odd Fox hosts reporters become members of this administration. There is a merger between Fox and
the Republican Party and especially the Trump administration, which doesn't exist in any other
part of our media. And as for MSNBC, look, it obviously has liberal
bent. It had liberal hosts. It was good on liberal issues like abortion. But there was no
organized agenda. Nobody sat around going, today, how do all the shows make the case for universal
healthcare? Just never happened. I wish. I wish that happened. It never happened. We did our own
thing, the hosts. I pushed my thing. Chris pushed his thing.
Joe Scarborough pushes his thing, et cetera, et cetera.
Sure.
The liberal host of five hours of MSNBC programming.
Some of the most prominent hosts on MSNBC are ex-Republicans like Nicole Wallace and
Joe Scarborough that doesn't exist on Fox.
Prominent hosts on Fox are not ex-democratic members of Congress or administration members.
I just found this equalizing so ridiculous because it A, doesn't understand what Fox
is doing, which is pure propaganda.
B, it doesn't understand how corporate media works, which is in the interests of corporations.
And C, it also kind of, it's the banality of evil.
It makes what Fox does seem normal.
What Fox does is sui generis. I've worked in the UK. No evil. It makes what Fox does seem normal and what Fox does is sui
generous. I've worked in the UK. I've worked around the world. There is no media outlet I know
of anywhere on the planet with the exception of maybe India where cable news is insane.
Really?
But Fox – yeah, cable news there is like pure Modi propaganda and they incite violence openly
against Muslims, Pakistan, etc. it's really jingoistic.
Arundhati Roy, the award-winning novelist, she said to me once, you know,
our media makes, is Fox on steroids, is Fox, you know, times a hundred.
But Fox in the Western world that I know of, I know of nothing else like Fox,
that pushes the kind of conspiracy theories, hate, and government propaganda
in a way that I just never seen anywhere else. And is able to pivot so agilely whenever there is, you know, so just as you said,
imagine this organization that makes its bones morning to night, every single day
part with a real directionality about Barack Obama, Barack Hussein Obama.
I'm sorry, I didn't pronounce his full name,
you gotta have all three names,
is born in Kenya, you know, they make their bones
on the conspiratorial nature
and sort of very cynically infused QAnon
into their programming and get it all.
The Fox cinematic universe.
The Fox cinematic universe and all of its tentacles.
And then the minute that the bomb that they planted needs to be diffused
to watch them pivot so quickly on especially something like this Epstein case is they are
really good at what they do. Yes. In a way that I think is shocking. Here's the question.
We know it's going to be corporate media. There is nothing right now that has the power of those
cable channels to amplify and continue to spin the circadian rhythms of social media. So social media is the thing that first,
it's incentivized for these really hateful,
really difficult conspiracy theories, right?
That's how those things, the algorithm is to that.
But cable news is the thing that infuses it
into the mainstream of American society.
Yes. And eclipse.
How do you battle that? And maybe it's not a right-left issue. Maybe it's the thing you
talked about earlier. Good faith, bad faith. Oh, 100%. And I think, well, not just good faith,
bad faith, but reality versus non-reality, decency versus indecency. This is not about
is non-reality, decency versus indecency. This is not about kind of left versus right.
There is a sense of – my critique of Trump, Maga, Fox is not about conservatism. I mean, I have my issues with conservatism, but like when I object to what Trump and Fox are doing,
it's not because I'm arguing about what is the best marginal rate of taxation. It's not about
what is the best crime reduction policy in major cities.
Those are old debates. The conservatives have abandoned that a few years ago.
Like when I turned up at Jubilee, I didn't think I was going to be having a debate about the Laffer
Curve. I'm not that naive. But it is now fundamentally about do you want a strong man or not? Do you
believe in equality or not? Do you think the media should be free or not? That is the essential question which you're tackling. That's why it's not just about right-wing
propaganda. It's about who here actually believes in the same stuff that we all used to believe in
or tried to believe in. I think that's what's so dangerous in this moment. I'm not expecting a
left-wing fox. For many reasons, I don't think such a thing could exist or should exist.
What I do hope for is a media that still has some
kind of independence, some kind of diversity of thought, some kind of adherence to basic
journalistic principles of independence, of holding power to account. That's what we're
losing right now. I'm not some huge defender of CBS News. I have my criticisms of CBS like I do
of all corporate media. But do I want to see CBS News become another Fox? No, I don't. And that's where
it's heading to right now with the recent FCC deal, with the merger deal, with the Trump settlement.
When I see what's happening to ABC and CBS, and maybe soon NBC, CNN, that is worrying because,
as I say, India. We've seen this show before, John. This is a global playbook that Trump is borrowing
from. India, Turkey, Hungary. What have all these
countries done? Orban, Erdogan, Modi, they've all taken over the media in their respective countries
and they didn't take over the media by sending tanks and armed men into newsrooms. They took
over the media the exact same way that Trump is doing right now, through lawsuits, through
economic harassment, through defaming and smearing journalists,
through violently attacking journalists
who are covering protests, through all of these methods,
through hollowing out public media, NPR, PBS, defunding.
This is the playbook in India, in Hungary, in Turkey,
in Russia, in Israel, and here in the United States now.
This is a very, very clear global playbook,
and I think we need to wake up to that fast.
I think you're absolutely right, Matty.
And I think part of it is what Trump understands.
And you have to give, and I have to give credit to him,
and I don't know if you've ever interviewed him or anything.
Steve Bannon, who I think is in many ways,
they always just call Karl Rove the architect.
I think he's the architect.
He understood this melding of populist rhetoric with kind of the more
authoritarian, anti woke Christian nationalists melding those movements together strategically to
gain the political advantage there was was the way that they went. You know, people always thought,
Oh, Russia must have something on Trump. He doesn't have anything on Trump
because they agree with each other on how to govern
and what you would wanna do.
You want less gay, you want more Jesus,
even if you don't believe in Jesus at all,
which I don't think Trump is a religious person,
but he understands it as a really wonderful
force amplifier of power.
And it's almost as though those discussions, you were just saying the Laffer curve and all that,
all those discussions I think are out the window. It's no longer capitalism versus socialism or
communism or any of this. No, it's do you agree with daddy or not?
That's right. And the framework of it is woke versus unwoke.
That's how they framed it, yes. That's right. And the framework of it is woke versus un-woke.
That's how they framed it, yes.
That's right.
And more than Steve Bannon, of course, who's now kind of on the outside is the guy on the
inside, is our de facto Vice President, Stephen Miller.
Boy, that dude, he's dark.
He's the guy who's pushing this.
He's got his hand in every pot.
I think he wants to be national security advisor now too, once Rubio stops acting as national
security advisor.
He's obviously the guy pushing the deportation agenda.
He's pushing the attacks on the media.
The irony of being Jewish and being part of a Christian nationalist white supremacist
administration.
Stephen Miller has been kind of cozying up to white supremacists for years.
That is very much the agenda.
And again, they didn't hide this stuff.
They said it very plainly.
Donald Trump said, I want to be a dictator for day one because dictators are only ever
for 24 hours. Do you remember in his first time he did an interview with Steve Doocy on the
White House lawn and he said, I just came back from North Korea and the way they stand up straight
for Kim, why can't my people do that? He loves it. He loves it.
Donald Trump, he's a liar, but occasionally he tells the truth. And that was a very truthful
statement. He does wish for his people to stand up straight and salute him. He got his crappy military parade this summer. It was deeply
disappointing that he got, that he was desperate for.
He was angry about his military parade in that he didn't realize that the tanks were all going
to be lined up with like safe stopping distance in case it was rainy. Like he wanted the,
I want all my weapons within two feet of each other. I was like,
I want bumper to bumper.
Yeah. And he wanted the goose-stepping, you know, military authoritarian displays and
all that. And it turned out to be kind of a nice, maybe grade eight to grade 10 little
military history parade.
And you had soldiers dragging their feet and not goosestepping, thankfully, some of them
showing their own acts of resistance.
They were waving.
Yes.
When was the last time you saw a North Korea parade where the guys would pop out of the
tanks and be like, hey, everybody?
I mean, it looked like Disney.
So the good news is we're not there yet.
The bad news is, as the Jubilee debate showed, there's an aspiration to be there very soon.
And the authoritarianism on the right is off the charts.
This desperation for a strong leader, for canceling the constitution, for getting rid of judges.
You look at the polling now amongst Republicans, the number of Republicans who say there should
be no checks on the president.
Congress should not be able to block the president.
The judiciary should not be able to block the president.
That is a very worrying sign.
Again, there was this complacency in the United
States of America. I came here 10 years ago. I became a citizen five years ago. I have a little
bit of an outsider perspective, and I have to remind my fellow Americans, it can happen here.
This idea that the United States of America is immune to authoritarian, global authoritarian
trends, especially when you have a tribune like Trump, who is Teflon when it comes to scandal and
controversy, that makes
it doubly worse for the US.
He has understood that some of the guardrails that were, people always think like, oh, well,
the businesses will save us because they don't want the trouble, they don't want the volatility.
What Trump understands is people don't want friction.
If I can create enough friction in their, it's the same way you ran his businesses,
by the way, like what he would do to contractors, he would pay them about 80%, 75% to 80% of
what he owed them, knowing that the hassle and the friction that they would need to go
through to get that last bit.
So he got himself a savings and that's the way he's approaching this entire
country. The thing I still can't- And he's settling. Look, he's calling for a settlement
with Fox. You've seen that this week, right? Yes. He said this week, oh, I hope they settle.
No, he said Fox wants to settle with him. Yes, which is planting the idea that that is out there.
He's very good at kind of testing the waters. Rupert Murdoch is an old pal of his, so he's
obviously put him on the spot. We saw what happened in the Dominion case where they settled immediately when they realized Tucker Carlson's
techs were going to come out in droves. Look, this is what he's... Corporate America, this idea that
corporate America is going to save us is the most insane one of all. Fascism is indeed an alliance
between the strongman and big business. Always has been. Going back to Italy, Germany,
et cetera. That's what's so depressing about some of these corporations bending the knee.
This idea that they're all being bullied into it isn't actually true.
A lot of them are happy to go along with the anti-diversity stuff.
They're happy to go along with the crackdowns on campuses if you're a university leader.
They're happy to go along with kind of ending any kind of initiatives to fight racism.
And of course, he rewards them with massive tax cuts, right?
We just passed this big, beautiful or ugly bill, and who's going to benefit from that? The owners of the big tech companies and the social media
giants, the owners of the corporate media outlets and the boards of those major networks. So,
he knows how to reward them and also how to bully them. It's a mixture of fear and greed on their
part. That's right. You know, as we look at this and we think like, okay, this is a function of Donald Trump,
but it's not.
There's this ethno-nationalism that is arising.
You mentioned Modi and you mentioned Orban and Putin.
It really feels like we move from,
and it was never particularly stable,
there was always conflagration wherever you went,
but it's a new world order that goes back to the idea of,
and to quote Thomas Shelby from Peaky Blinders,
big fuck small,
that this is about what you can get away with through your coercion
and power and what limits. And now you're seeing him apply it mostly to former allies.
The EU, you know, there he is much more willing to, as you said, lionize North Korea and Russia and these other authoritarian
governments, and much less, you know, to him, the EU is just too gay. It's too gay for Trump.
He likes those heterosexual countries like North Korea.
The classic example of that was, of course, Ukraine and Zelensky in the Oval Office, where
he and Vance ganged up to berate Zelensky. But they would never dare to behave in that way in Putin's presence or speak about Putin when he's not in the
room. Trump has said more vicious things about Justin Trudeau than he's ever said about
Xi Jinping. That's just a fact. It's a demonstrable fact. And you have to ask the question, why?
Why is this US president? I'm not saying previous US presidents were great defenders of liberal
democracy. All US presidents have cozied up to authoritarian tyrants.
But I don't remember one that's done so as enthusiastically as gleefully as Donald Trump
in the belief that he too should have those authoritarian powers at home.
Why can't I have what they have?
And I think Netanyahu is cut from the same cloth.
I think Orban is cut from all of these in illiberal democracies, people who are notionally
elected but would love to be dictators like Yoshiji and Kim.
Sure. And you see in the different ways that they go about it. Netanyahu, they try and get it so
that there's no Supreme Court now. They try and maneuver any of those. It reminds me of
the real triumph of this is Trump has shown us where the cracks are in our democratic
system.
And I think that one of the things that's difficult, and I wonder your opinion about
this, for us constitutionally is to realize a lot of these excesses and abuses are built
into the system.
Yes, 100%.
He's going out and he basically, he's got a couple of historians that sit in the back and go,
hey man, I just wanted to let you know, like in 1803, there was an emergency power we used on
immigration. You might as well just declare that because you get to do whatever you want. I mean,
look, the most progressive president supposedly we'd ever had in this country is FDR. And he
basically suspended habeas corpus on anybody of Asian descent and interned them in camps.
This darkness has always been in the system.
Yes.
And the second most progressive president, LBJ, just did a mass genocide in Cambodia,
Laos, and Vietnam.
Right.
So there's precedent for all this shit at home and abroad.
Look, I 100% agree with you, John.
I've been ranting and raving about
constitutional reform, political reform in this country for a long time. Again, as an outsider,
you come in and you think, this shit doesn't work and no one else does it like this. Electoral
college, what the fuck is that? Like no one else uses this stuff. You know, the whole gerrymandering,
which right now that Texas is doing and now Gavin Newsom says he'll do for the Democrats. No other Western democracy allows politicians to draw their own boundaries. None. Only the US allows
politicians to pick their voters rather than voters picking their politicians. That's a problem.
There are so many issues. And the problem is the Democrats left this space open. And I say this
about both wings of the Democratic Party are guilty of this. The liberal centrist wing,
the whatever you want to call it, the Biden wing and the Bernie wing. So Bernie Sanders,
bless him. I agree with him on universal healthcare. I agree with him on taxing the
rich and minimum wage. But I've never heard from that wing of the party about constitutional reform,
political reform, because they're also institutionalists. Bernie loves the Senate.
The Senate's got to go. The Senate is a huge problem. The Senate is a huge problem. We've got
to reform the Senate.
You cannot have a state situation going forward
where Wyoming has two senators.
Well, if you want to get rid of DEI,
the Senate is affirmative action.
Affirmative action for Wyoming.
Old white rural dudes.
Yeah, like 12 people get two senators
and like 50 million people in California get two senators.
Like the whole thing is insane.
And I think there's so many things at the Supreme Court, right?
What we've seen this week is another reminder that the Republicans gamed the system, rigged
the judiciary, packed the courts after accusing the Democrats of wanting to pack the courts.
Every accusation is a confession.
And meanwhile, Joe Biden, he did a report in his first year.
He commissioned an independent report from the great and the good on what to do about
the Supreme Court.
They came up with a bunch of milk toast recommendations. He ignored them all and
kicked it into the long grass. And here we are with a 6-3 Supreme Court, maybe 7-2,
God forbid, if Trump gets another one, is lucky enough to get four, which would be insane.
So that complete vacating of the field, the pitch on constitutional and political reform,
is a huge problem.
Don't go back to Europe.
I'm going to go to the pitch, the pitch, the pitch.
My pitch is that on the pitch of reform, we need to fix that.
The next Democratic president cannot simply say, oh, I will be, you know, Harris, we're
not going back was her thing, right?
You cannot just be, we're going to move beyond Trump and go back to business as usual.
It has to be, we're going to prevent future authoritarians from trying to destroy the
system from within.
Like the idea that, for example, you know, basic conflict of interest laws don't apply
to the president when you have a president like Trump.
Like the founding fathers did not anticipate the guy from Home Alone 2 becoming president
in the United States.
They just didn't.
It's a fact.
Like we want to have an intent.
But if you really…
Their intent was not to build a system for Donald Trump.
I have to take a second.
If you look at Federalist Paper 37, Hamilton said, there are no laws that are going to I can go on to my intent. But their intent was not to build a system for Donald Trump. I have to take a second.
If you look at Federalist Paper 37, Hamilton said, there will be a sequel of a very famous.
It really speaks to, I mean, think about when we talk about sort of representative democracy,
and again, this gets us back to the spirit of the revolution, the people, taxation without
representation.
So we live in a country that is,
by all measures, very closely divided politically. But there is one side that
has 78 million voters, a lot of people that do it, and zero power. And I'm talking about,
like, can't call a witness, can't hold a committee meeting, can't do, there is zero power invested right now in the 70 some million people that vote for Democrats.
They have, and I'm talking on the federal level, obviously within state systems, it's slightly different.
I don't recall that power sharing agreement.
We really are in a joint custody agreement right now.
And right now the country is living with dad. And it really does.
But the problem is the country is living with dad, John. Dad is offering the kids all sorts
of fake gifts. Maybe he'll never give them those gifts, but he's offering them.
Oh, sure.
Pretending to be the greatest dad of all.
They like living with dad.
They like living with dad. He may beat them a little, but they
like being beaten by dad. And I think the problem is, is mum, to use a British phrase or mum,
going to offer, what is she going to offer to get the kids back? And I think the problem is the
Democrats have had power, John. They may not have power right now, but they had power. They controlled
all three branches of government. They controlled, well, the three branches.
They had to join the Obama administration.
They had the House, the Senate, not the Supreme Court, but the House, the Senate, and the White
House. They had it during Obama. They had it to an extent under Biden. They just didn't use it in the
way they should have used it. The question is, can they promise the American people that next
time we get those gavels, next time we're in the Oval Office, we are going to fight A, on your behalf, but also B, against those corrupt fools.
And I think that is a fundamental problem.
The person I blame most for Donald Trump's existence in the White House right now is
not Stephen Miller, is not Steve Bannon, is not the fascist on Jubilee.
It is a man named Merrick Garland, who sat on his ass for three years.
Oh, thank God.
I thought you were going to say me.
No, I don't blame you.
Matty, I'm so pleased that you did.
I don't blame you.
So really, Merrick Garland, by his timidity, but don't you think it's deeper than, doesn't
that let too many Democrats off the hook?
Of course it's deeper than that.
It was a rhetorical flourish.
But my point is, if I'm going to identify a symbol, a symbol, a human symbol of the wider fecklessness,
caution, cowardice of the Democratic party, then it is Merrick Garland.
Yes, Merrick Garland is the tribune and symbol of that.
He's the guy who, don't forget, they didn't just make him attorney general when he was
manifestly not the right person in that moment, but they cheered him.
They were like, wow, this is a, this is a F you to MAGA. They wouldn't put him on the Supreme Court. We put him
in the DOJ. Maybe he wasn't appropriate for the DOJ, right? They should have put in someone,
an Elizabeth Warren figure, someone who would go into the DOJ and prosecute all these authority.
January 6th happened and he dragged his feet. Donald Trump never saw the inside of a courtroom
for January the 6th.
That is, I will never get over that.
I will never, to my dying days, I'll be on the deathbed.
I'll say, damn you Merrick Garland.
Donald Trump never saw the inside of a courtroom.
That is a scandal.
For that, they tried to capone him.
We can't get you on sedition and overthrowing the government.
But-
By the way, that wasn't Merrick Garland, right?
Even New York wasn't Merrick Garland.
It was local. Exactly, no, that's Letitia James and it's the government. But- By the way, that wasn't Merrick Garland, right? Even New York wasn't Merrick Garland, it was local.
Exactly, no, that's Letitia James and it's everybody else.
It wasn't the federal government.
Right, right, right.
It wasn't the federal government.
Federal government had to be dragged kicking and screaming.
The funny thing is I heard Republicans for four years say,
they're weaponizing the government against us.
I wish, I wish they'd weaponized the government against you.
They did the exact opposite.
Joe Biden said, I've got to stay above the fray
and not say anything about these cases.
Merrick Garland wouldn't say anything.
His deputy wouldn't say anything.
And the federal cases came from Jack Smith.
He outsourced that to a special counsel.
It was just insanity to see the past.
The next democratic administration has to run on a platform of we are going to prosecute
the people who did these crimes.
You know all those masked ICE agents committing crimes on our streets?
They need to be prosecuted by the next Democratic
administration, the next Democratic Congress.
But that's letting the leaders of it off the hook.
That's going after the rank and file.
Oh, of course, and the leaders.
I'm taking for granted the leaders.
I'm saying top to bottom.
Exactly.
We can't have a Barack Obama coming in in 2008 and saying,
hey, we tortured some folks, but I want to look forward,
not back.
That's a great point. But the other issue with that era of democratic politics was they ran on
the audacity of what was possible and they governed on the timidity of what they think
they might be able to get through with the checks and balances. And you can't have that dichotomy.
But isn't there an opportunity then, Medi, in the way that
Donald Trump showed the cracks in the democratic system and that he weaponized our own excesses
against us in terms of emergency powers and all the things that were possible?
Hasn't he also shown the Democrats, and here are the levers of power that you can use for
coercion?
Yes. are the levers of power that you can use for coercion.
That you can actually say, oh, do you really think Democrats are the only people that have
tax exemptions that can be threatened?
Are you fucking kidding me?
Do you really think there are no education, that you can't bend the will of corporations
who don't want friction to do your bidding?
So I'll just give you a couple of quick examples.
Please.
Number one, Elon Musk.
Right?
Donald Trump and Elon Musk went to war, most richest man in the world.
Donald Trump says, I'm going to cancel his contracts.
And immediately Musk deleted his tweet saying he was in the Epstein files and has gone pretty
quiet by Musk's standards.
That's right.
Why didn't Joe Biden do that?
In fact, the opposite.
Chuck Schumer hosted Elon Musk in his office in the Senate a couple of years ago. This guy declared war on the Democratic Party and the
Democratic Party said, would you like some more contracts, sir? That was an insane approach
to Elon Musk. Trump showed that you can actually take on the richest man in the world if you're
president of the United States. He did it. There is a template for it. Another example
for Senate Democrats, when they were trying to get the minimum wage rise through, the
parliamentarian said, you can't put it in the bill. I was on MSNBC at the time. We had multiple segments about the
freaking parliamentarian. No one knows who she is. She wasn't elected by anyone. Chuck Schumer said,
can't do it. Parliamentarian said, no. This time around, the parliamentarian said, well,
you can't do some stuff in this big, beautiful bill. The Republicans said, get lost. They wouldn't
even meet with the parliamentarian. So the template is there. If you want to get shit done, you can.
The problem is Democrats don't want to get shit done and they hide behind institutional excuses.
They say we can't do it because of parliamentarian, but really they don't want to.
No, that's interesting though, because that says something different.
So in your mind, they don't actually want it.
Because my feeling is-
Let's not make sweeping statements.
Some do, and some are beholden to their donors. But this is where we get into the like, Merrick Garland is at fault or the way that
Democrats govern. I still, you know, as much as the ACA got some more people some health insurance,
it never addressed the rot at the basis of our health care system that allowed, you know,
these insurance companies to make.
So basically what the Democrats said was,
we understand that one of the greatest threats
to liberty and freedom in this country
is poverty and not having healthcare
and it limits your choices and you can't leave jobs
and all these other things.
But instead of dealing with that,
here's what we think we can do,
convince insurance companies that if we guarantee you
billions of dollars in a fire hose of money, that you'll pretend to offer people a good
alternative. Not just insurance companies, the plan was to win over Republicans, right?
Barack Obama was bent on winning over Republicans. And that's why he borrowed a Mitt Romney plan.
Obamacare was fundamentally a version of Romneycare in Massachusetts.
And he thought this will win over moderate Republicans.
Instead, they spent the next 10 years obsessing over Obamacare.
It became a dirty word for Republicans.
They never gave him any credit for doing a very moderate conservative style proposal
for healthcare reform.
And this is the problem.
They will never give you credit.
Stop trying to appease them.
I think that any Democrat who in this current moment
says the word bipartisanship should be immediately primaried.
Right?
It just shows you're not prepared for this moment we're in.
This current modern Republican Party will never credit you for anything.
Joe Biden bent over backwards to his old friends in the Senate
who he hung out in the gym with for decades.
They all went against him.
No one gave him any credit.
All of them voted against his major legislation,
which was bipartisan legislation apart from the infrastructure one. So it was a fool's mission to do that. By the
way, you said something earlier about exposing the cracks. The fundamental thing Donald Trump
has shown us is that the rules of American politics don't have to apply if you don't want
them to apply. And therefore, you can be ambitious, over ambitious. Gro Khanna, who I know you know,
who is probably going to run for president as a lefty in 2028, he gave a speech recently. He said, look, our ambitions, Democrats, we always limit
our ambitions, as you just pointed out, ACA. We can't go there, we'll go here. Meanwhile,
Republicans are like, well, we're- They negotiate against themselves.
Negotiate against themselves. Meanwhile, Republicans are like, well, we're just going to annex
Greenland. Huh? Did you poll test that? Did you focus group it? Democrats are sitting there getting every focus group,
every policy consultant to check every policy
for like costings and how is it gonna be received?
And Donald Trump's like, I'm gonna invade Greenland.
And like that is the difference right now.
And I think the next Democratic presidential candidate,
and I say this only half seriously or only half jokingly,
depending on how you wanna view it.
The next Democratic candidate has to be able to stand up
and say, I'm gonna give you a $30 minimum wage. And when the press say, well, how you want to view it. The next Democratic candidate has to be able to stand up and say, I'm going to do,
I'm going to give you a $30 minimum wage.
And when the press say, well, how are you going to pay for
that? Oh, I fucking will believe me.
It's going to be amazing. I'll do it in day one, 24 hours.
You will have a $30 minimum wage.
Right. You have to be able to say that same rhetoric and
have to flip it on its head.
Yeah. I think, I think there's, there's no question now.
And I think because one of the things that it exposed
is that sort of the pace of democracy
is not keeping up with the pace of technology
and it's not keeping up with the pace of modern life.
And whatever we wanna say about Donald Trump,
even when he's going off the rails,
the people believe he's doing shit.
Yes.
And they want shit to be done.
And almost to the point where, and now we're stuck
with the remnants of these sort of sclerotic institutions that the Democrats have built,
not on principle, but on sort of what they thought might be possible.
Yes. And the inability to run on your record, which of course Joe Biden was a very poor messenger for his own record. I thought his domestic record was pretty good, relatively
speaking. I thought his foreign policy was horrific. Although even on foreign policy,
in 2021, Joe Biden ended America's longest war, the war in Afghanistan. It was a hugely
popular move. You wouldn't have believed it from the media coverage where it was only
sold as a disastrous departure and everything in the departure and the departure was not
non-chaotic,
I agree. But he ended the war in Afghanistan, something that Bush, Obama, Trump could not
do. It was a hugely popular move. Isn't it interesting that Democrats went into the last
year's election looking like the warmongering party while the Republicans sold themselves
as the anti-war party?
Sure.
Donald Trump went to Michigan and said, I'm the peace candidate. I am peace. I didn't
hear any Democrats say we ended America's longest war.
None of these wars would have started if I were here.
But the interesting thing is when that gets exposed, again, nothing damages, nothing permeates
it.
I've always said the Democrats are Wile E. Coyote and Donald Trump is Roadrunner.
And they keep thinking we got them now.
I want to push back, John.
Can I push back, mildly?
Please. I agree with you to a certain extent. and we'll see how this Epstein thing pans out.
But I don't think we should fall into the trap of just giving him the inevitability of immunity.
Right. No, he's not an X-Man. I don't mean that like he's, you know, a man-eater.
So one example I often give is immigration, right? That's the issue he's supposed to be
strong on. He came in, I'm going to cut the border and Americans apparently anti-immigration. Look at the polls. He's cratered
on immigration. New York Times, CNN poll a couple of months ago found that his most unpopular issue,
the single most unpopular issue for Trump in his first hundred days was his handling of Kilmer,
Abrego Garcia and the deportation to El Salvador. We were told by Republicans, that's an 80-20 issue.
Democrats are on the wrong side of it. Nobody wants to be on the side of MS-13. In fact, no, the American public said,
no, we don't want people being deported who haven't committed any crimes. We don't want judges being
ignored. We don't want people being sent to a gulag in El Salvador. We don't want our American
Latino citizens being picked up outside of a Home Depot just because they're brown. He's hugely
unpopular on the immigration issue. And Hakeem Jeffries, allegedly, he denies this, allegedly
told Democrats, stop talking about this. Stop going to El Salvador. Actually, Senator Chris Van Hollen and Congressman Maxwell
Frost and Democrats who went to El Salvador, they were on the right side of the issue and they did
politically hurt Trump. Yeah, I guess my point with that is you can politically hurt him. You
can drive down his numbers, but nothing changes. You can, you know, like you say, he can poll at
35% on immigration, but he doesn't give fuck.
He just goes out there and he continues to raid home depots. He's never been a particularly
popular president. Probably the peak of his popularity was during that second inauguration
where there was even some level of like, he might be above 50 or 51% in terms of pot. He's always been a low 40s, sometimes dips into 30s guy.
My point is, even with all that, there's nothing he hasn't been able to do that he wants to
ultimately do. And the Democrats have not figured out a way how to effectively manage that. And I
guess that was- Or replicate it, John.
Or replicate it. That's right.
Democrats remain scared of their own shadows and hop to their consultants. Well, Trump just does
what he's got to do and sometimes it works out for him, sometimes it doesn't. I mean,
Kamala Harris we know now from all the reporting of the election. She started off strong. She had
a lead. She said some popular stuff. She had a great convention.
And then thought, what if I hold hands with Liz Cheney and we just, we do, we walk across
the country?
Yeah.
What if I hold hands with Liz Cheney, what if I go on The View and say nothing will change,
there'll be no difference between me and Joe Biden?
What if I listen to my brother-in-law from Uber and stop talking about big corporations
and greedflation?
Yeah, that worked out well. I wonder too now, all the talk of I'm the peace candidate and I'm doing this and as
we watch the bombings in Ukraine, the horrific tragedy that's happening in Gaza, you know, all that stuff clearly was nonsensical.
But what institutions do we have now that have any viability to try and stop
these terrible, like the Israel Gaza situation to me to have, to have that go
on and the world seemingly shrug.
I mean, now you're seeing a little bit of like, Hey, are those people starving? Like starvation doesn't happen in a week. This is months and
years of a seed. Like, what mechanisms do we have in the world now?
Not many. And the few that we had have been undermined by Netanyahu, Trump, Biden, Stammer,
Sunak. I mean, for me, what's so astonishing is we spent decades building a post-war quote unquote
rules-based order, which as a lefty, I was far from happy with.
A deeply flawed system.
But we had some kind of system.
A UN Security Council, Geneva Conventions, International Court of Justice, an International
Criminal Court, which America didn't sign up to, but most of the world did. And all of that has been burned down in the interest of protecting one
nation, one government, one prime minister. And I think historians will look back and think,
what an astonishing sight to see all of it burned down. All of those institutions,
anytime they've spoken out, they have been accused of being Hamas, accused of being anti-Semitic,
accused of being anti-American. The United States government has sanctioned the International Criminal Court judges and
prosecutor.
They have threatened foreign governments for doing anything to help the Palestinians.
They've gone after South Africa for bringing that case to the International Court of Justice.
It is really, really problematic.
This is much wider than Gaza.
Gaza is a tragedy and a horror show, perhaps the worst of our lifetime.
But going forward, this is going to have ripple effects that will affect conflicts and peoples all
across the world. Good luck to any Western government ever lecturing another government
about human rights or it's just insane.
Oh, it sets a permission structure for any other bad actors to basically, that's what I said earlier about sort of this, you know,
big fuck small, but there is a- The law of the jungle.
The law of the jungle. That's right. And a permission structure. I guess my question even
in that part of the world is, you know, why hasn't there been, you know, Erdogan will say Israel can't do this, I'm going to attack
and then like nothing. And there's, there's never any sense that there is a coalition of the willing
for the world to step in and at least separate the combatants.
You know, do you remember your old enough, John, like I am to remember kind of the late 90s,
when we all talked about the responsibility to protect liberal interventionism, Kosovo, Clinton,
Blair, all of that.
It was all about peacekeeping forces.
It was all about the United Nations peacekeeping forces.
Yeah.
And that was going into national sovereign countries.
This is going into an occupied territory.
No, the inability...
Remember the first couple of years of Ukraine, I spent arguing on my show at MSNBC with people
like, should we have a no-fly zone? That was the big debate. Like should the US impose a no-fly zone
over Ukraine to protect the people of Ukraine? I mean, the people in Gaza have never had the
benefits of a no-fly zone. The people in Gaza have never had the benefits of peacekeepers.
And the people in America don't know what's going on. I mean, that's the other thing you have to
remember is we're seeing a very different, we don't see the images in the same way that the
rest of the world is watching a very different show we don't see the images in the same way that the rest of the world is watching a
very different show than we're watching. I think a lot of Americans thankfully are watching on
social media. And as much as I loathe Mark Zuckerberg, Instagram has been invaluable
for Palestinians getting their voices out. And I think people who have seen stuff on social media
different from people who haven't. And I think that's very clear. I think people aren't seeing
the scenes obviously that you see on Al Jazeera or anywhere else,
but most people by now do recognize what's going on.
I think the real problem, John, is not ignorance.
It is the inability to do anything about the knowledge that we have.
I think the real democratic...
I just talked earlier about the international repercussions of Gaza and what it's done to
international law and the Geneva Conventions and human rights groups, all of whom have
been discredited.
Every dictator in the world will say, I can bomb hospitals.
Israel did.
I can ignore human rights groups.
Israel did.
I can keep foreign journalists out.
Israel did.
All those precedents.
But worse than that, at home, democratically it has exposed the United States' democratic
dysfunction.
You have huge numbers, majorities of Americans, big majorities of Democrats saying cease fire
now, restrict arms
to Israel. That is not reflected in Congress at all. There's polling out this week about how
unpopular the war in Gaza is. I think it's only got a 32% approval rate amongst the American public.
In Congress, it's got a 90% approval rate. How do you explain that disconnect? That 90% of
legislators support something that only 30% of Americans do. At what
point does that become intolerable? At what point do people wake up and say,
we're just not represented here by the people in power? There's such a massive disconnect.
But that is in a weird way.
And that's on the Republican side too, by the way, John, you're seeing Republicans under the age of
50 rapidly turning on Israel. But the dynamic that you're talking about, about the consent of the government, is also
though, what drove these right wing populist movements.
The only difference is it's not Gaza, it's immigration or migration.
And as you're seeing that take over in the world, you know, these are the competing things.
We keep thinking about, well, you know, like I think all the time about 90% of the people
in this country believe sensible gun restrictions are a necessity to keep us from every time
you hear a pop running out of malls.
All of those things that people want, but it doesn't seem to hold the power that loss of national identity seems to be holding around the world.
There's no matter what issue you want to pick on and where the public sentiment is and where
the polling is, it all pales into the comparison to the feeling of we're going to lose our
American-ness. We're going to lose our, you know.
It is a very powerful trend.
And you saw it, not to wrap it back around to Jubilee, but that's what you faced down that day.
Well, I'm glad you brought it back to Jubilee because I was about to bring it back to Jubilee.
What was interesting was not just the power of that identity and the obsession. They didn't
want to debate anything about immigration. They didn't care about any of my other claims. They
only came to talk about immigration.
But what was interesting is I had a claim on Gaza. I said Trump's plan for Gaza is ethnic
cleansing. A lot of those white supremacists refused to come up and debate me on that.
Why? Because they're anti-Israel. And they're not anti-Israel because they care about the
Palestinian people. They're anti-Israel because of the people in Israel. Right? There's a
massive anti-Semitic streak on the right. And when you talk about loss of identity…
I have Twitter. I'm aware of the massive anti-Semitic streak on the right. And when you talk about loss of identity- I have Twitter. I'm aware of the massive anti-Semitic streak.
Yeah. So what's interesting is how it's being mainstreamed through Gaza. And this is why I say
to Jewish friends of mine who are supporters of Israel, be careful of the alliances you make.
The folks on the right, a lot of them are using the same MAGA, America First, national identity
argument to actually try and disconnect from Israel. And a lot of people are left like, great, isn't it great that Tucker Carlson and Marjou Taylor
Green and all these folks are on our side now? I'm like, I'm not sure. I want them on our side
because they're not on our side for the same reasons. We're on our side because we care about
Palestinian human rights and dignity and self-determination, not because we're
anti-Jewish or anti-Semitic. Unfortunately, a lot of these younger MAGA supporters are driven by this
idea of national identity, Christian national, and therefore Muslims and Jews have no role
in America. And I would say this, when the pro-Israel lobby is canceling people, getting
people fired, pressuring members of Congress, supporting people like Randy Fine from Florida,
who says, yeah, let them starve. Let's nuke Gaza. By the way, Randy Fine actually went too far even for AIPAC. AIPAC was like, hey.
You can't say that out loud.
Actually, that part I think we may have to.
That part you shouldn't say on Twitter. But my point being is a lot of these Trump
MAGA folks are like, well, we don't want Israel controlling our politics. We don't
want all these Jews telling us what to do. There's a dangerous trend there. There's so many different fallouts and threads from Gaza. I think that is one of
them that a lot of people aren't paying enough attention to. Maddie, where do you see the energy?
What is going to be the way that this idea that you're talking about on the left, how is that going to coalesce?
Do you think it's a function of,
if you look at the democratic autopsy, they're all like,
oh, I think the way the Democrats can do this is
that you just go on Theo von
and then that should take care of everything.
Which Pete Buttigieg is doing.
Pete Buttigieg is doing.
And you see them all sort of positioning now strategically
for all this, you know, the variety of things.
What I love about what you do is there's a tenacious moral principle to everything that
you put out there.
And you do it in a way that is, you know, when you argue with people, there has to be
a relentlessness
to it. I don't think that the Democrats have the foundational right now, moral and principled
stand to be able to be relentless in a, in a very directional way, because the only way
to battle these is you have to match their, you know,
the one thing that I always gave Ailes was like 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Like that dude was the great white shark of making his political identity the ruling identity
of this country.
I think you're a, first of all, thank you for your kind words. Second of all, I 100% agree with you on the 24 seven nature of this. The problem we have,
and I mentioned Buttigieg a moment ago, if Buttigieg went on a podcast, I saw a clip on my social
media where he said he was asked about Mamdani's or on Mamdani, who's doing a fantastic job of
actually doing everything Democrats need to be doing in New York right now, in terms of energy,
in terms of messaging, in terms of authenticity, in terms of winning over young men and all these
groups that Democrats struggle with. And he said, oh, well, you
know, we need to borrow, I'm paraphrasing, but Buttigieg has something along the lines
of we need to borrow his style, I don't necessarily agree with all his policies, which is kind
of missing the wood from the trees or the forest from the trees, I'm getting my British
American terms mixed up.
Right. You go back to the pitch, you'll find it.
The pitch, I'll find it on the pitch. And I think the key point there is, no, you need
the substance and the style.
You can't just pick and choose.
Mondani is not just doing well because he has slick, savvy social videos, which he does.
It's because he's also pushing authentic messages about affordability, about standing up for
the little guy.
He's the guy who went and screamed at Tom Homan.
People forget this.
Like he was there as an activist screaming at Tom Homan, the border chief, a few months
ago.
Like that authentic rage and anger and moral outrage has to be there on the part of the Democratic
Party.
You can't switch it on and off cynically, depending on where and when you are.
Cory Booker being a classic example from your great state of New Jersey.
This is a guy who stands for 24 hours, gives this amazing speech, gets us all pumped up.
Then he's like, next day he's voting for arms to Israel.
Day after that, he's voting to confirm Jared Kushner's dad as ambassador to France.
It cannot be on off switch when it comes to, I mean, it's not authentic by
definition if there's an on off switch. That's right. And it has to also, I think, be
smartly litigated. And that maybe gets us to our, and I'm cognizant of your time and I really
appreciate the conversation. But I think what's been lost here is, you know, the Fox News and the Republicans,
they've been, this is a 60 year plan that they have had to basically roll back the New
Deal and, and, you know, the naturalization acts and everything that they felt changed
the tenor of this country into something that they don't want anymore.
It's sort of a nostalgia for an America that never actually was.
And they're trying to rebuild that into an America that they think, you know, and I've
always said, you know, make America great again is a demotion.
We're supposed to be exceptional.
So if you just make us great, you're actually, you know, giving us a demotion. We're supposed to be exceptional. So if you just make us great, you're actually giving us a demotion. But what the Democrats have been unable to do
is to prosecute their case, is to litigate it. And in some ways, I think the news media has to take
a lesson in where is the one place MAGA really usually falls apart, forgetting about the Supreme Court. It's in court where there are evidentiary standards, where there is a process by which
you have to litigate the bonds of our shared reality.
The Democrats, that's, I think, what they don't understand, that this is about prosecuting and litigating a vision for the future that has evidentiary
standards and that people can find that find something to
hold on to. And are there people that you've seen out
there that that you think and it can't be fiefdoms. It has to
be there has to be a unity to it. And it has to work together with
your think tanks. You have to have a federalist society. You have to have groups that understand
that once you get into a position where you can actualize that vision,
you have to do it competently and you have to do it quickly.
I think I agree. I stand off on all of that, especially kind of the Federalist Society and the long-term
vision of the Republican Party.
Yeah, I mean, Democrats are not playing the same game.
They're not in the same league when it comes to kind of long-term planning, what they did
to the judiciary, et cetera, over decades to get the 6-3 majority.
What I would say though, the problem with, again, it goes back to the whole, is the MSNBC
the left-wing fox?
The same issue, the same reason why MSNBC the left wing Fox, the same issue, the same reason
why MSNBC can't be a left wing Fox. And the same reason why the Democrats can't behave like the
Republicans is money. Fundamentally comes back to money. MSNBC and all the CNN and all of these
outlets are corporate owned. And therefore they will always have a corporate agenda in terms of
profit maximization in terms of returns, in terms of making sure- But Fox is corporate owned.
Corporate owned but also has a particular ideological bent-
But purposeful. That is on steroids.
And it turns out their purpose is actually a moneymaker.
It's a moneymaker, yeah. They get fascism with the side benefit of actually making money off of it.
Profitable fascism, yeah.
Profitable white supremacy.
That's right.
And the same applies to the Democrats. I could come up with a wonderful plan of action, a project
2029, all sorts of things. But the problem is that as long as they are beholden to corporate donors,
they're not going to take that step forward. You can get rid of the Senate Parliamentarian tomorrow,
you can get rid of the filibuster, you can give Democrats an open playing field slash pitch to do
what they want to do and they still
won't do it because they don't want to piss off their donors.
A lot of them, not all of them, but a lot of them.
Until we deal with money in politics, we're simply not going to have a proper opposition.
We are going to have Coke and Diet Coke.
We are going to have fascists and dare I say in some Democrats fascist light.
I think that is a fundamental problem in our system right now.
It does all go back to money and politics.
It does go back to Citizens United.
It does go back to the ability of Rupert Murdoch
and Roger Ailes and Elon Musk and Bill Ackman
and all of these people to influence our politics,
our media, our culture.
And that fundamentally, sorry to sound all biblical,
but money is the root of all American evil right now.
And it is, and it has empowered this hostile takeover
of we the people.
And again, rolling back around to that idea
of fetishizing the little guy and we the people,
when in fact the opposite has occurred
and the Supreme Court has empowered really this kind of
much more authoritative processing of all those avenues. And in some
respects then it comes down to is the answer the Democratic party is ripe for a takeover
and they just need to find the right reality host that can get in there and start lining
up all of those interests.
Please, please no reality hosts. I beg of you. Unless, unless John, you're thinking
of throwing your hat in the ring, which I know- Jeff Probst. Maybe Jeff Probst, survivor.
I know many people want you to throw your hat in the ring. If that's what you're suggesting,
we can talk about that. But please, otherwise, no TV show hosts. But look, I think New York in November
will be a very, very interesting result. No question.
If Zahram Mamdani wins, it will be earth shattering on so many
levels, on multiple levels.
And I think he has a very, very, I think he's got the energy is there. What I would say
that Zoran has that's really remarkable in this moment, he has an opportunity to credit the entire sort of progressive agenda.
But I think the way that it has to be done is he's got to do the boring shit.
Well, if he can make, his vision, I think is really smart, focusing on affordability
and a much more, uh, equality of economic opportunity,
all those things, if he can make the city competent,
if that can be his focus,
if he can bring that feeling of,
and I think progressives actually forget this sometimes,
everybody deserves the kind of safety and security
that the rich Manhattan neighborhoods get.
Everybody deserves that.
If that's his focus, holy shit, could this be a rebirth of a much more, I think, fair-minded
society that people feel confident will not—the big fear in New York is chaos, always.
If he can do both, holy shit, does
that guy have an opportunity.
I agree. And I think it's much bigger than New York. I think it's going to be national
and global. I think the impact of that election in November, if he wins, will be national
and international. It will be the biggest boost the left has had. I'm trying to think
in my lifetime, I'm trying to think in my lifetime. I'm trying
to think of when was the last time something this earth shattering occurred. I mean, AOC
winning that primary was big.
Well, I think people thought Obama was the boost. I think-
They wrongly thought that, but yes, 2008.
I think what they didn't realize is what an institutionalist he turned out to be and how
that damaged the prospects of getting to the finish line.
But bigger than that, it will also be, to go back to your point about Wiley Coyote,
the Republican media machine is going to throw everything, already is, at Mamdani.
By the way, so is the Democratic machine.
Exactly.
They're going after him too.
Let's not give Gillibrand a pass on the horrifically Islamophobic comments about Mnandini.
But my point is the right-wing machine, including some right-wing Democrats, are throwing everything
at Mnandini.
If he wins, it will also be a reminder that you don't have to compromise.
You don't have to bend the knee.
You don't have to roll over.
You don't have to triangulate to win.
You can win authentically.
And I think that will be a very scary message for the ride.
Uh, Medi, just a pleasure talking to you.
Uh, I really appreciate it. Medihausen founder and editor in chief of Zateo now with, and I hate to throw this
out there, a million YouTube subscribers, which is, I think you get some, I don't
know if they give you a platinum.
I want a plaque.
I definitely want a plaque.
YouTube, send me a plaque.
All right.
We'll do, we'll do everything we can.
Mehdi, it's great to talk to you.
Thank you, John. Appreciate it.
Why do you get rid of a guy like that on MSNBC?
What are they thinking?
He's so good.
I was saying during, like,
I need whatever coffee he's drinking.
I've never been that awake and alert in my life.
And his specificity and his ability of recall I need whatever coffee he's drinking. I've never been that awake and alert in my life.
And his specificity and his ability of recall
and the way that he is able to be present,
seeing him surrounded by that odd group
of sort of right-wing influencers
and just like a turret, just spinning and firing back at
each one until he ultimately decided like, Oh, this isn't a debate.
Why am I even talking to you?
It is.
It was the one man fighting 100 gorillas.
Uh, yes, I would love to know the process Jubilee went through to find those people.
Like what forum did they just like chat?
My feeling is you don't have to do much of a deep dive.
That's not one of those.
If you skim any pond in any of the recesses on the internet,
you will scoop up hundreds of those tadpoles
because they're everywhere.
It really is like, it's not an unusual,
they're feeling their alt-right joy.
It's Discord chats come to life.
Absolutely.
And it's encouraged.
Incentivized, algorithmically incentivized.
I'm not even sure it would exist if it wasn't, you know,
at a certain point, getting attention for that
on social media becomes, no, I really believe this.
They get podcasts.
I see Ouroboros.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
But I do think that idea of tenacity and relentlessness
built upon a foundation of moral principle
is kind of the only way out of this.
And I think that the authenticity he comes in with
is why his independent media is doing well,
is because not just with politicians,
I think across the board,
people are looking for truth and authenticity
and challenge to the establishment.
And I do think his point about corporate media,
I think is certainly well taken.
And I also think the point of, media, I think is certainly well taken. And I also think the point of,
is it even right and left anymore,
or is it just good faith, bad faith?
And I think there is an opportunity within media
to create a relentless 24 seven good faith machine
that could still be entertaining.
God, I hope so.
Yeah, but we shall see.
Brittany, what do the people want
as the summer is going into its last month?
Oh, boy.
Do you think the FCC will also be going after shows
with a conservative bias?
Right now?
Yeah.
No.
But wait, what? Who right now? Yeah. No.
But wait, what?
Who wrote that?
No.
Have you met the chairman of the FCC?
He's like shitposting.
Colbert, there's no way.
No, he is not going to be.
He is probably right now on a search for more right-wing billionaires that can buy up some
more of these properties because there's going to be an acquisition and merger spree for
these kinds of things.
He wants to add more go after conservative bias.
Yeah.
What?
I also noticed Fox News is getting in on the party now by counting how many conservative
guests are on shows versus how many liberal guests are on shows.
The entire bullshit of the, again, this is them trying to police and create rules that they would never follow.
The idea that by having what may be a more left leaning or progressive bent or just bringing in. That's how Fox is popular.
That's how any of these people,
they all talk about Gutfeld's the most popular,
yet he's not popular because he's a both sides guy.
He's not a fair use like,
the fairness doctrine says, he's relentless.
And after a day of watching Fox News
and being bathed in their very purposeful propaganda,
it's a great way to top off the night.
But it's not the Jay Leno like,
I don't understand, why you wanna offend your audience?
Why not just do a show about, you know,
why do you have to talk about things you believe?
Why would you, why do you have to make jokes about things
you actually think?
And you think, I'm just gonna go throw myself down a hill.
Let's see if I can get a concussion.
I mean, the whole thing is fucking ridiculous.
And if you look at the social media profile,
all the people that complain about the left-wing bias,
they're all right-wing
influencers. They all make their money. Their entire economy is based on how willing they
are to attack and defame and to crush liberals. The whole thing is bullshit. Anyway, what's
next?
Pivoting from that.
Pivoting from that. Pivoting from that.
This one is a follow up from last week's podcast.
Oh.
John, do you think Democrats are capable of electing a vindictive prick?
I do.
I absolutely think they're capable.
But when will a vindictive prick rise?
A vindictive prick must rise from the East.
I think for the Democrats, the vindictive prick must die
and then the new one is reincarnated
and then we have to wait 35 years.
It's like a Dalai Lama situation.
The vindictive dick is just a little baby right now.
It's not even about what, what they're incapable of is using that
idea of friction to get real concessions. I always go back to, you know, Donald Trump is like,
if I catch you transferring the money you're paying for tariffs onto customers.
Like I'll shut your business down.
And the Democrats are like, great news.
We can negotiate the price of five drugs now.
It's not the five that you use, but we got five of them and we've got a whole
plan that over the next 25 years, we're going to add 12 more.
I'll be dead in 25 years.
Right.
And then Trump said he's going to lower the cost of drugs by a thousand percent.
Trump's not even following the basic laws of math.
Yeah, they're going to give you money along with your drugs.
Sounds good though.
Pizza for everyone.
But the Democrats are like, what does the parliamentarian think?
And Donald Trump is like, drug companies are going to pay you a thousand dollars to take
those.
Congrats.
What are we going to do?
How do they keep sending those questions in there?
Twitter, 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.
Boom.
Thanks guys.
As always, in the dog days of summer,
you guys continue to kick crazy ass.
Lead producer, Lauren Walker, producer, Brittany Medevec,
video editor and engineer, Rob Vitola,
audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce,
researcher and associate producer, Gill editor and engineer, Rob Vitola, audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce, researcher and associate producer,
Gillian Spear, executive producers,
Chris McShane, Katie Gray.
We'll see you next week.
["The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart"]
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
is a Comedy Central podcast.
It's produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.
["The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart"] podcast is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.