The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - One Big Beautiful Econ Con?
Episode Date: July 17, 2025In the wake of Trump's sweeping economic legislation, Jon is joined by Clara Mattei, Professor of Economics at The University of Tulsa and author of "The Capital Order," and James Robinson, Professor ...at the Harris School for Public Policy at the University of Chicago. Together, they explore how the myth of free markets masks government interventions for corporate interests, investigate the limits of economic solutions to political problems, and consider what a worker-focused economy could look like. Plus, Jon reacts to Elmo’s meltdown & answers some listener questions! This podcast episode is brought to you by: GROUND NEWS - Go to https://groundnews.com/stewart to see how any news story is being framed by news outlets around the world and across the political spectrum. Use my link to get 40% off unlimited access with the Vantage Subscription. INDEED - Speed up your hiring with Indeed. Go to https://indeed.com/weekly to get a $75 sponsored job credit. 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
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Weekly Show Podcast. My name is Jon Stewart and I am the host of the Weekly Show Podcast. It is Wednesday, July 16th. We're probably gonna air
Thursday, July 17th. And there's, I don't even know what to say about the speed by which if it's the summer man
Isn't the world just supposed to fucking kick back and go tubing or something
And it's flying fast furious
From wherever we go. We've even got the Senate accomplishing things that they approved a rescission package. I don't know they
NPR how what what bad timing as NPR is struggling for their funding for Elmo to lose his fucking mind and just go off on everything Elmo's been feeling all these years. This
is what happens when you infantilize a person for the 30 years.
They just develop these very strange thoughts and things, but not great timing in terms
of making the case for his funding.
But Elmo has apologized.
That was my favorite.
My favorite part of the Elmo thing was the Sesame Street apology.
Elmo famously kind of went off on Fuck the Jews
and Trump's a child fucker.
A variety of comments that,
you know, generally you don't hear on Elmo's show.
You know, his shows a lot of Mr. Noodle,
getting angry at a rock, that sort of thing.
So to hear him go off like that.
But my favorite thing is Sesame Street,
I had to put an apology out saying that the statements
that were expressed on Elmo's,
I don't know if it was Instagram or his ex account,
or whatever socials Elmo's on,
I don't know what socials he's on, his hinge.
I don't know if Elmo is dating,
but they had to say that those sentiments do not reflect.
They do not reflect the sentiments of a sexist.
And by the way, if you've been to the street,
they are right.
It's relatively orderly.
I mean, things happen. Obviously new people get introduced
they have to learn how to deal with death or food shortages that sort of thing, but
Division numbers, but generally they don't have to deal with like full-on
Kind of Nazi shit, so
But I take them at their word Sesame Street you are forgiven I I
And and well done. Meanwhile, the world continues to utterly spin out of control
Israel's I think apparently bombing Damascus today because why not?
It's it's like they do that in the same way that like when you take a summer vacation,
you think to yourself, you know, I really want to see Croatia. So I think they're just,
that was just on their bucket list of Mideast capitals to bomb continuing
their ongoing bingo card of cratering.
Today we're gonna talk about the economy. I really wanna get into, you know,
I've been thinking so much about this tax and spending bill
and its priorities and why they are the way that they are
and why we accept those priorities
as though those are the kinds of economic priorities
that ensure our collective prosperity.
And so we have two really just expert economists
that are going to talk about that.
And we're going to, we'll step back, talk a little bit
of a historical perspective, but I want to get into them now.
And hopefully Elmo will hear this
and find a way to calm and stabilize himself.
All right, so let's get into it.
We are delighted today to have as our guest.
This is as erudite a panel as I can pull off,
ladies and gentlemen, you've listened to the show.
We do very well with the guests.
Generally I play the part of Dunderhead Jones,
but we have ourselves a panel today, ladies and gentlemen.
Clara Matei, Professor of Economics at the University of Tulsa, Executive Director of
Free, the Forum for Real Economic Emancipation, author of The Capital Order, and James Robinson,
University Professor at the Harris School for Public Policy and the Department of Political
Science at the University of Chicago.
Yeah, I tried to get in there, but apparently there's like a test
that you have to take to get in.
But James Robinson, Nobel Prize awardee
in 2024 for economic sciences.
Welcome to both of you.
And so pleased that you can join us today.
I would like to start if we could,
I wanna step back for a moment.
We'll get into the tax and spending bill that we've got
and the priorities that the United States budget
is going to be pursuing.
But I want to step back for a moment to ask the question.
I think in this country, we have the idea
that we live in a free market economy, that
it's, you know, the mythology is it's an Adam Smith laissez faire, invisible hand.
If government just gets out of the way and it does, the market takes care of itself.
So if I could, I just want you to address the realities of whether or not we live in
a centrally planned or a free market, where are we at on the capitalism socialism continuum?
Clara, I'll start with you.
Thank you so much, John, for having me on.
Please.
It's a real pleasure.
So the free market is a myth in the approach I take to economics in the sense that there is nothing spontaneous or natural that pops up out of the essence of who we are.
This is how we just tend to think of the market because it's the way in which we tend then to accept the market.
But really, the market, as I show, has to be constantly protected by the state in order
to secure what is at the foundation of it, which is not just about exchange.
It's really about people having no alternative but to sell their capacity to work for a wage.
So the labor market is the foundation of what we usually call market.
But this labor market entails a certain coercion, a certain constraint, a limit of
possibilities, the sense that people have really no alternative but to go work for a wage and usually
a very low one. And so in this way, the state has to protect this so-called market, which is not at
all a world of freedom, but I would say a world of unfreedom because it presupposes this ultimate
coercion that we can call exploitation.
James?
Yes.
Thank you for having me on.
I mean, my perspective, I suppose, is a bit different in that I think there's lots of
imperfections in the market.
I would say what you've got in the United States is something like a mixed economy that
you have government, the government does lots of important things.
It does significant things.
You have imperfections in the market.
You have monopolies, you have barriers to entry, but, but there is competition.
You know, there is competition.
There is, you know, you like Tesla cars, you buy a Tesla car.
That's bad for General Motors.
It's bad for Toyota, you know?
So I, you know, I think competition
and choice, it's imperfect, but it is there.
I guess the question then becomes,
so what generally my position on this has always been
that when the government intervenes
on behalf of corporate interest,
that is seen as a natural extension of capitalism. That subsidizing
a corporation or corporate tax cut or creating a zero interest window at the Fed, those are all
interventions on behalf of corporations. But if the government intervenes on behalf of
workers or individuals, whether it be so-called entitlements or whether it be setting wage
standards or those things, that's considered antithetical. It's still government intervention,
but it's somehow anti-capitalist. And so that's kind of where
I want to start in our discussion. Why do you think that is? Why are those interventions different?
Clara? Well, I think you really point, John, to your finger to the essence of it all, which is we
live in a capitalist economy that by definition works according to two pillars,
wage labor and private command over investment.
So what the governments are meant to do.
Would that be considered capital and labor?
Is that sort of what we're talking about?
Yes, exactly, exactly, exactly.
Capital and labor, right?
The fact that people go work for a wage
and others instead command investment
in the sense of decide for all of us
how to invest and where according to the logical profit.
So this by definition requires the governments to kind of maintain these pillars alive for
the system to be able to accumulate as it should, right?
The capital accumulation, which is economic growth, we tend to call it economic growth
because it sounds less political, it sounds more kind of neutral. But actually, economic growth presupposes these pillars,
which mean that the natural doing of the government is very interventionist, but only
in a way that protects the two pillars, which means you can't give too much rights to workers
because they might decide not to go work for a wage, while you should always incentivize
private investment and subsidize and de-risk because we kind of all depend on the decisions.
Makers and takers.
Yes.
If government steps in on behalf of makers,
that's acceptable because that has virtue.
But if you step in on behalf of labor or, you know,
able-bodied non-labor, the takers,
that would be moral hazard and those kinds of things.
James, do you think that's a fair sort of as we're setting our tentpost for the discussion?
I think it's right that that's the direction that American capitalism has evolved in,
you know, but you know, it's not true historically. If you went back to the 1930s and thought about
the New Deal or the Wagner Act or the Roosevelt government, there was plenty of intervention trying to strengthen
unions and strengthen collective bargaining. I think it's just really the way things have
gone here since Ronald Reagan, you know, and that whole kind of embrace of this anti-status
model of capitalism. So I don't think it's inevitable. Look at Scandinavia, you know,
they have capitalism in Sweden, but they have a very different attitude towards collective
bargaining and labor. But James also, you know, you bring up a really interesting point because
when we talk about Scandinavian countries or social democracies in America, there is a patina
of disdain. There is always that, you know, go live in Denmark. You know, there's a sense that that is not the proper use of government and capital.
I'm talking about the sort of the vibe from American capitalists.
Yes.
And if I may, ultimately what's important to note is that even during the Keynesian period,
the governments had very- Keynesian period being the 30s when they were stimulating- Keynesian period being the 30s and the immediate post-second world war. So the moment in which
supposedly the state was doing what James is saying, which is more kind of pro-labor policies,
we need to remind ourselves that, and I'm studying this period at the moment,
there are clear political limits to what the state can do.
Because exactly if the state gives too much to people, it risks curtailing that market
dependence that secures wage labor.
So again, those pillars, of course, there's ways in which you can try to be less pro-capital
only and try to secure more of a a sense of, um, of, of, of neutrality and global
interest. But at the same time, those pillars need to be maintained.
And I'm, I was invited actually in Sweden and Iceland to talk about austerity because
we don't talk about it, but in those countries too, in the suppose of Skating
Navy and countries, they're affected by the same type of policies that we've been
affected in, in the United States.
So we tend to idealize those countries
as being like a fair version of capitalism.
If you hear what they have to say,
if I was actually invited by the unions themselves there,
they have a very different understanding
of what's happening to them.
What is their understanding then, Claire?
Would they look at it as it's still not fair enough
to workers?
What is their position?
Well, they feel the constant attack
of social rights being taken away from them.
And they understand, for example, deflation,
so the increase of interest rate that we saw
in the last years, affected those countries as well.
And the whole conversation was about how
there should be more wage moderation
in order to allow for price stability.
So this whole thing about wages having to kind of be decreased in favor of price stability,
this is a typically capitalist compromise that they can't escape.
So this brings us to our discussion.
I think we've sort of framed it out, which is this, because I think Clara, you put it very well,
that ultimately the stimulus that generally comes under attack
is stimulus that occurs on the demand side as being too generous, whether it be SNAP benefits
or Medicare or Medicaid. James, you brought up the New Deal and intervening there. Well,
that was in a global economic depression.
And in some ways, might have staved off a larger socialist
or communist revolution in this country.
So, James, why do you think it is that when we're faced
with this idea of fiscal responsibility,
the thing we turn to generally first
is those that have the least.
What is it about that politically
that makes that the first target
as opposed to offshore profits
that aren't brought back to the United States?
Well, because they're the least powerful
and they're the least organized.
Wait, it's that simple?
That's not rocket science, is it?
Son of a bitch!
That's simply it.
Like, they're the easiest to go after.
I think so, yeah.
So is there, you're somebody, James,
who I think your work is very much
on evidence-based
economic theory and using that evidence to design healthier economies, right?
What is that the healthiest option?
Is there a different design other than austerity that we can think about for central government
intervention?
Because we know they intervene.
We've already established they intervene.
What's a healthier intervention than just austerity?
Or is that the best move?
I think there's just lots of complicated trade-offs there.
I think if you think about the history of economics,
economics arose in the late 18th century to try to
understand what the heck was going on with the Industrial Revolution and Adam Smith and all of
that. Economics has always gone backwards and forwards between trying to justify this as the
best possible thing and struggling to think of alternatives and what might alternatives look like.
You could say a very limited number of alternatives have really been experimented with.
You can think of communism or Cuba or whatever it is, but obviously that's a very specific
sort of alternative. I think economists are just very bad at thinking about alternatives.
Definitely.
very bad at thinking about alternatives.
Definitely.
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Claire, you're you're you're nodding your head vigorously on
economists not because it does seem like we are stuck in this idea of it's either capitalism
or it's socialism or it's communism. And there's no sense that in the words of Spinal Tap, you
can turn the dial, you can turn it to 11. What are the, Claire, does that ring true to you?
Well, absolutely. I think it is very true that the economic profession, the mainstream
economic profession has avoided even problematizing capitalism. If you open a text book in economics,
you don't even read the word capitalism. So you can't even understand the specificities
of our system. You just talk about markets again as something that just happened to exist
for human beings to go along with. So I think this is the issue is that if we don't
problematize what's specific about our system, that we end up not really having any possibility
of really comparing with other possibilities. And I think the main thing here is to understand that
if we do take it that our system is based on coercion, we as human beings can do better
in terms of finding out a way in which we could run
production distribution actually more democratically.
In my work, I really show how austerity,
and I think we should define it at a certain point.
Right.
Austerity is ultimately all about
de-democratizing the economic space.
And again, this is not something that is because
there's bad people in government.
It would be too easy to say,
oh, it's just because it's evil people
or corrupt or irrational. It's because- Oh, I see you've watched my show.
It's because there are certain tendencies. Again, I think this is what is important about
more systemic analysis that tells you there are certain tendencies that are kind of congenial to
the system. And this is why ultimately,
I would say austerity isn't the DNA of capitalism.
Then there's, depending on the moment,
labor might have a little bit more power
to strike against it.
But the reality is that we have certain clear
coercive mechanisms.
And so I think we could do better than this,
but the point is that it's very dangerous
to explore alternatives.
As I show in my own book, when alternatives do emerge,
this is something that need to be actually,
they need to be bugged down and killed very quickly
because they are terrifying for the establishment,
those who ultimately gain.
And we need to remember that in this country,
just one data point out of many,
the top 0.1% owns five times
what the bottom 50% of the United States American owns. Three people own more than 150 million
Americans. This is what capitalism looks like at this stage. And clearly you need to protect it
very well because it's very unjust for the majority. So James, that's so, so that's what we're talking about.
We're talking about a system that is, you know, look, you mentioned the 30s.
That is the last time or maybe even prior to that more, the Gilded Age,
when we sort of lived in that laissez faire era of, you know, robber barons.
And I think the determination there was that society is not stable at that point that there is. How do
economists get out of that that perspective of focusing on
supply and demand and pull back to a more macro of what is a
stabler version? What is a more stable version of a progressive capitalism look like?
Yeah.
I mean, but they don't, economists never really think about that actually, because economists
don't see...
Wouldn't that be the whole game?
No, but you wouldn't, you know, you can't believe it.
Like economists just see the economy as being this sort of free-floating thing.
They don't see it as being embedded in politics and society. They see it as separate from politics.
Yes.
Is it separate? No, absolutely not. But that's the way people think about it. If you picked up an
economics textbook, the word politics never appears in it. It's completely unconnected to
the political and social system, which is obviously ludicrous, but that's how it is. So very few,
you'd have to talk to political scientists if you wanted to think more about the topic that you're interested
in, which was, you know, how the political system kind of responded to the crisis of
capitalism in the 1930s by trying to ameliorate, you know, some of the costs and reduce some
of the inequalities. And, you know, and that ushered in a period after the Second World
War of terrific prosperity with falling
inequality, rising living standards across the board.
And that unraveled in the 1970s in some sense, that consensus unraveled.
And then we launched off in this other direction.
Why did the consensus intercept?
So we'll take a step back in history here. I think I understand why intervening on behalf of workers arose.
I think if you think about World War I,
and Claire, you've written about this.
When people saw that in a time of crisis,
the government took over a lot of
the so-called laissez-faire
functionings of capitalism whether it was for making armaments or
Food or all that they saw. Oh, wait a second. Our government does have the ability
to step in and
Change the dynamics that this isn't a fait accompli. We can actually change this. I see. Is that where that, where workers started to look at demanding more, Clara, or a fairer system?
Yes, I would say that before the First World War, austerity was kind of taken for granted because there was a sense by which...
Austerity meaning like poor people, that's fine.
Should I define it very quickly?
Please, if you could, yeah.
Sure.
So I think, again, there is a mainstream way of understanding austerity, which is all about
how the state is stepping back and kind of there is a cut in public expenditures and
an increase in taxes.
So this is the definition.
I would say this definition is already kind of blinding us
from what really matters.
Going back to the theme, John, that you're bringing up today,
which is the state never really steps back.
What happens is that the state just decides
to shift resources from some, the majority, to the few.
And the same for taxation. It's not about just taxing people more, it's about who you're taxing more.
And what you find out is that a state is all about regressive taxation, which means that capital is taxed structurally less than labor.
And this is, of course, the current policies have just escalated this tendency. That's right.
And what is meant by that is sort of,
if you've got a capital gain or if you want to, you know,
put machinery on your taxes and get those removed
from your taxes or things like that,
or capital gains taxes or carried interest taxes,
that those are eased, but poor people still face
point of sale taxes that
are very regressive. And so they pay a higher percentage. Is that sort of generally what
we're definitely.
So sale taxes are very regressive because everyone pays them alike, but it gets worse.
You know, the income brackets have majorly shrunk so that the very wealthy pay less and
less of their income in taxes, taxes, income in taxes. but really also it's about detaxing corporate profits,
capital gains, dividends, interest.
So people who make their living off of capital
are detaxed, not to think about inheritance tax
that basically doesn't exist in this country.
And labor is overly taxed.
And labor is overtaxed.
So that in the United States,
a lot of people are poor because they're overly taxed.
So this is taxation.
Then in terms of how the state spends,
what we see today is exactly what austerity is about.
You take away from social expenditures, right?
And the big, beautiful bill is all about this.
You're like, two million people are gonna go hungry
because they're gonna lose access to food stamps.
And there's over 17 million people are going to go hungry because they're going to lose access to food stamps. And there's over 70 million people who will lose their health coverage. These cuts in
these domains, education, healthcare, public transport, don't mean that this money is not
spent elsewhere. And guess where it is spent? I'm going to go with bombs. I'm going to go
with bombs. Exactly. Military industrial complex. Newest bombs. Son of a bitch. I mean we're one trillion a year. That
is an insane amount. And another 150 billion to create a whole new enforcement. Exactly. So border
patrol. Yes. Right. James, let me ask you this because so how would an economist then, who is looking at the evidence, how do we justify that?
Is it purely based on, well, that's a stronger growth model?
What's the justification?
Could I put this in a little bit of perspective?
Please.
Since, you know, what I mostly study is poor countries.
You know, I've been working in Columbia for 33 years.
I work in Nigeria.
I work in Democratic Republic of Congo. I work in Nigeria. I work in Democratic
Republic of Congo. I'm not denying anything that Clara says, but I think if you think about the big
picture, the United States has actually been better at solving those sort of problems than Nigeria or
Colombia or any poor country in the world has been. Of course. Right. Any country in the world has elites that want to rig the game in their favor.
And boy, have they been more successful in Columbia, you know, than they
have in the United States.
I think that's the big picture.
You know, and in fact, you know, there are all these problems.
I agree, you know, but if you look at the last hundred, 150 years,
yeah, you have to fight.
You have to fight for your rights.
You have to fight for wages.
You have to fight to get the government to pay attention to you. But that fight has
been much more successful for ordinary people in the United States than it has in Colombia.
James, do you think that's because, you know, if we look at the political systems, you know,
that the places that you're talking about were in some respects on the receiving end
of these extractive economic policies.
You're talking about places that don't have the benefit
of the kind of civic society that grew up
because they were on the receiving end of our,
whether it be mercantilism or colonialism
or those kinds of things.
I don't want to get into
this idea that we drained everybody to our benefit, but to some extent, doesn't that explain a little
bit of why those countries have been more volatile in their economic? Yes, absolutely. I mean, they've been organized. They've been organized for the benefit of the elites.
I think the United States, United States.
I mean, we were the beneficiaries
of a lot of that organization, is my point.
I think the Colombians had more to do with it, honestly.
Right.
So did that type of system empower those corrupt elites,
is I guess my point.
Yes, absolutely. Yes, it's reproduced hideous levels of inequality and social exclusion,
you know, and of a sort that you don't see in the United States, you know, thankfully,
but you know, of course, you know, I'm not denying any of these problems that you're
talking about.
No, no, no, I understand. So James, it actually brings up a great point, which is, you know,
maybe the United States then, as
an avatar of what a more successful system could look like. So let's say we look at Nigeria
and Columbia and those things, and it's much more volatile and the elites are more corrupt.
But that certainly doesn't excuse the United States creating a system, as you said, since Reagan, that increased our inequality to the
extent that it did. So what can we, let's look at it as a system that's functioning better than
others, what is it that we could do within the way that we balance capital and labor? What could we
do differently that would help save us from
turning into those other places?
Well, I think that's about politics. It's about defining a kind of agenda, a practical
agenda of taxing extreme levels of wealth inequality. And I think looking at the history
and showing you can combine a much more equal society with very rapid rates
of economic growth, with successful capitalism, with innovation. That's exactly what happened
in the post-war period. And so why did that fall apart, Clara? I don't think this ever happened.
We have a very different reading of reality here, I think. The point is that I really do think we need to understand what are some key feature of
our economic system, which is capitalism.
And we can't reduce it all.
In America?
Yes, everywhere.
It's global capitalism and we can't reduce it again all to, oh, they're elites who are
corrupt.
That is not how it operates.
And it's really important to notice that the global south has been structurally dependent
on the global north so that really you would not have development without the act of creation of
poverty. So again, this is also a very different reading of development. And I know James has a
different reading. Dependency theory tells you that the global south is poor because the global
north is rich. So the fact that the global south is hit stronger by austerity.
The IMF has been imposing austerity measures in the global south
for much longer than the neoliberal period.
So this is for me very important.
We should stop just thinking that the problem is neoliberalism.
Neoliberalism is an escalation of certain key feature of our system
that we need to understand.
And I'm sorry, the United States is a very terrible
dehumanizing model that nobody should follow.
Half of the American homeless people work, okay?
People are homeless because they can't afford a house
because their wages are too low
or their work is too precarious.
We have one out of six children in dire poverty in the
United States and these numbers keep going up by the way. Okay, the fact that actually under the
Biden administration, the child credits have been taken away. This actually doubled the number of
children in poverty. In New York, the richest city in the world, we have one out of eight children in public education that experience
homelessness. This is not a healthy society. This is a society that has issues and we need to
understand it's long history. I'm actually working on the golden age. It was not as golden as people
like to depict it. It's easy to say, look, our system is eternally flexible. We can have human
capitalism. But if we really want to be honest, historically, this is a lie.
And this is why we need to figure out the real reason why austerity operates.
And it's not just Trump.
It's Trump is ultimately the very obvious face of the violence of our economy that
we need right now to take courageously because with the genocide happening,
with the climate collapse,
with future generations having no future,
we have no time to keep excusing our system
as possible of renovation.
It really needs to have more courageous.
And last thing I wanna say is in Tulsa, for example,
we are trying to do something different with free,
the Forum for Real Economic Emancipation. The idea is to bring people back in the picture in thinking about the economy. I agree,
mainstream economics is all about excluding people from economic topics so that we feel
we're too stupid to even care because we can't understand. This is already part of the problem.
We need to participate in realizing that economics in the real sense is not neoclassical economics.
That's an excuse.
It's all about actually connecting the theory
with the social struggles.
And this is what we're trying to do in Tulsa
and we hope we can do this elsewhere as well.
["The Daily Show"]
Folks, you've heard me talk about this before
and I'm gonna talk about it again.
And I'm not gonna stop talking about it until you people get on this damn thing.
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It helps you better understand why you're seeing what you're seeing
and who's behind it. Ground News is a response to that fear anger based media. They don't dictate
how readers should think or feel. They aggregate and they organize the information and they help
readers make their own informed decisions. Ground News can help you sort through the
noise and get to the heart of the news. Go to groundnews.com slash Stuart, subscribe for 40% I find what Claire is saying very compelling.
It's very difficult for me to look at the inequalities that she just sketched out,
which is the problem in this country is not the able-bodied young men that don't work,
but somehow have access to health insurance as the reason why, you know, our country is falling apart.
It's this idea that you can work your ass off and still need food support.
Look, we've got a food bank here locally.
You cannot believe the business that it is doing in the richest country in the world.
So my position is always America doesn't have a wealth
growth production problem. It has a distribution problem that
the people who create that wealth, of course, do not
benefit commensurately in the way that that they should. It's
not about entitlement. It's about investment and
distribution.
James, does that resonate with you at all?
Yeah, I mean, I could, I think this argument about why poor countries are poor,
why Colombia poor is completely misconceived and it's nothing to do with the International
Environmental Fund or the United States or the United Fruit Company.
Let me talk about what you're saying. I agree there is a
distributional problem. I mean, why is that? You know, I think if you thought about the history
of the United States, there's such a history of kind of marginalization. If you think about the
way black people were treated, discriminated against, kept on the side, wages repressed,
politically excluded until the 1960s. But there's also this just this kind of culture in the United States,
you know, of kind of self-reliance of,
I mean, I would say it goes back into the 19th century.
There's actually a lot of evidence on this about linking the kind of
regional cultures within the United States towards attitudes,
towards redistribution.
And there's just this idea that you have to make it on your own in the United States
and you don't want handouts and things like that. And that, that, that, that creates all sorts of
problems. So I agree with you that there is a distributional problem.
And it is an idea that somehow if you are poor,
that is a function of vice. And then if you are rich,
it is a, it is a function of a virtue.
But I think to Claire's point that I wanted to get to is that is it by, does our system require a permanent underclass? Is that baked into what we're doing? And how could we, you know, when you talk about distribution, as someone who studies the mechanisms, how can we alleviate that? Forget about, let's remove politics from it.
So we're sort of, we're gonna operate in a space where it's not about what we can
get through a Republican Congress, because I think if we stick to that,
we're never gonna think about anything.
So thinking about it on a more idealized plane,
what would you say if we have a distribution problem?
What are the mechanisms that we might choose that could help alleviate that issue?
I think that's about labor market institutions. It's about strengthening trade unions and
the bargaining power of workers. And I think, you know, if you look at countries
that have successfully developed with much more equal distribution of resources,
that's the key to that. But why is it on like, I always wonder why it's on. So,
let's take corporate boards, for an example, and I'm talking about larger corporations,
obviously not the small businesses or consumer spending or anything like that.
the small businesses or consumer spending or anything like that. When you look at how corporate boards distribute profit, they do buybacks, they do profit sharing, they find ways to carve up
whatever that profit is so that everybody gets a slice of that pie. Workers can only benefit
through wages. Every now and again, they'll get shares in a company
or they'll get certain things.
Why is it that for workers, it's required
that it's incumbent upon themselves to create a movement,
to then go into the, why isn't it the status quo
that they sit on those boards and that they share in the same way that somebody
who's on the board would share or somebody who's a stockholder. Why do we have stockholder
and shareholder capitalism, but not why aren't the workers included in that? Do you know?
That's the way the law is organized. That's the way corporate law is organized. If you
incorporate, you start a business, you know, like
that's about the legal system in some sense. And you could say, well, where did the legal system
come from? Well, the legal system was written by economic elites or people who could influence
policymakers. So that can be changed. And it wouldn't be disastrous. Clara is about to jump
out of her library. So she's about to pull hair and books off and do that.
Clara, do you want to answer that?
I just want to say that the legal system is not separable
from the political economy we're discussing, right?
And so I think this is really the difference in method here
is that I'm trying to say that actually capitalism is
an animal that has all of these elements to it, the political, the legal, they're part of the economic.
And to understand the economic, you can't separate, right?
So this separation is already for me very ideological because it tends to say, okay,
so the problem is not the economy, it's the problem is the law, the problem is this other
thing.
Well, the point is that, you know, the laws-
They work together to suppress.
Of course.
And historically, you know,
how did capitalism come into being?
With the enclosure of the commons, right?
And the enclosure in the commons is all about
taking away subsistence means of people
and transforming land into a commodity
that then was appropriated by the elite, right?
So in the way, without the law, this first step that you're talking about, transforming land into a commodity that then was appropriated by the elite.
Without the law, this first step that you're talking about, which is the fact that very
few control the means of production and actually get to make decisions about how something
is produced and how it's distributed, this requires a certain legal backing.
There would be no capitalism without a specific law.
Again, the law comes from the state.
And we go back to the point of saying
the state is constantly intervening to protect the market.
So also one other point is of course,
that that's what we mean by exploitation,
is the fact that exploitation is not just about having
a very low wage.
You are exploited also when you don't have a say
on what you are working for.
Software engineers right now working for Microsoft and Google and knowing that what they're doing is going to basically boost the AI that is killing the Palestinians and ludicrous profits.
We know Francesca Albanese just released a very powerful report about all of the corporate gains off of what is happening right now in Gaza.
Well, this Microsoft engineer has very little choice, but either to fire himself
or to get fired. Because if he goes to work, that's what he's going to have to work to lose
his job. He has to work for it, right? But I think if you were to, I mean, if you were to look at,
and I absolutely understand where you're going there,
but if you were to look at what people work on,
and everybody had to look at the downstream effects
of what they work on,
and whether or not it would be destructive or not,
I, very few people would work.
So much of what, I mean, anybody that makes anything
would find themselves downstream of progress
or human things. Yes.
I think, you know, while I definitely appreciate all the aspects that you're saying, my question is,
you know, the system that maybe you might be advocating for, and I don't want to put words
in your mouth, but I haven't seen the success of purely socialist where workers have, you know, is there a system where you can protect
private property and individual rights, but still create an engine of progress
that, that brings people, uh, the more modern types of conveniences, or is that
pie in the sky, but I get, I get uncomfortable when I start getting into,
I get uncomfortable when I start getting into, so there's nothing within the system that can be salvaged other than a worker's utopia, which I have not seen work anywhere.
Well, I think it's also interesting to note that capitalism is very young, so it's only
0.1%.
No, this is really important. It's just interesting to note that capitalism is very young, so it's only 0.1%. No, this is really important.
It's just a boy.
It's really, it's only 0.1% of the time humans as homo sapiens has been on earth that we
are under.
But the other systems have been feudal systems and empire, like they've been pretty shitty.
There are a multiplicity, but also a lot of, for example, native horizontal relations,
right? So it's not necessarily that you need to organize production vertically.
And this doesn't mean, by the way, again, I think we use the word socialism and everyone gets scared
because of course it's used, especially in the United States,
as something that is considered taboo even to talk about.
But we can even use, we can get creative of how we want to talk about it,
but the point is that we need democracy in the workplace and cooperatives, for example,
are this democratic space.
And it's not easy, of course, because actually to organize production
democratically requires a lot of work.
Sure. And I don't know that they have the scale or the the ease.
I understand it, but I haven't.
And, James, maybe you can speak to, because I think,
you know, while I probably lean towards Clara and a lot of these spaces,
going back to like cooperatives feels like at scale with the amount of people we have in this
world and the way that people, human behavior, feels like it's artisanal and not
practical. But James, I'll ask you that.
Yeah. I mean, I think a bit of utopianism is a good thing. I think in the United States,
you need ideas, you need creativity, you need to figure out how to create a kind of coalition,
a political coalition to put the society on a different track.
But I do think, as you say, John,
that if you look at these experiences
of successful economic development,
look at what's happened in South Korea in the last 50 years.
South Korea went from a poor
to an incredibly interesting, exciting,
and I don't just mean economically, I mean culturally,
I mean K-pop, gang-gang style, you know, you name it.
You know, and what was that?
You know, it was capitalism, basically.
It was Shundei, it was Daewoo, it was Samsung, it was just an amazing amount of innovation
and creativity.
You know, what took tens of millions of Chinese people out of poverty since 1978?
The Communist Party giving up trying to control every little bit of people's lives and
just allowing people to do their thing. And so could I imagine another world and should we? Yes,
absolutely we should. But I think economists would be sort of practical in the way I'm suggesting
and say, okay, let's just look at these places. All right. So this maybe coalesalesces this for me and I'm going to throw this out there and you guys
can both yell at me about this.
The way I view it is capitalism is the operating system that we have chosen to create innovation
and progress in this country.
But inevitably it is a destructive operating system
that it is almost by definition, as Clara said,
exploitative.
So my, what I'm saying is I think Clara is far more
creative and innovative in the way that she's thinking about.
We can reorganize this in a very different way
through a more cooperative,
democratic, worker-based system. I guess I still look at it, and maybe this is, again,
it's sclerotic thinking, but I look at it as government's job is to ameliorate and mitigate
is to ameliorate and mitigate the natural tendencies of capital as destructive. How can government channel the good things of innovation and production
while mitigating the disastrous effects of the poverty that it creates,
the inequality that it creates, and all those other things.
So that's, does that resonate at all with you,
Clara and James?
And I'll ask Clara first and then James.
Yeah, I mean, we are in an economy
in which half of the world population is in poverty.
So it's very important to understand
this is not exactly a success story.
I'm talking more about the United States and I think I'm not talking about.
And in the United States, we have 11% of the population in poverty.
So again, it's not a success story.
So we do need to think creatively.
I absolutely think so.
And two points is that I think the issue here is also that it's not just about private investment.
It's also that private investment follows the logic of profit. And again, it's not just about individuals, is that everyone is all, even the businesses are stuck in what political
economy calls real competition in the sense that if they don't exploit more, they don't survive
and they get eaten up by bigger fishes. Right. They're just chasing growth.
Exactly. But I'm asking what, so what is a government role when you talk about 11% in poverty,
which for us is actually probably better than I thought it was to be perfectly honest.
But so what does a government, what does a distribution system and a government look
like that is helping to mitigate those issues without creating more poverty?
Right, exactly.
Okay.
Because the thing I just wanted to say was that this progress that you talked
about is ultimately the result of this technological innovation that needs to
happen because otherwise people get kicked out of the game.
So that's also important to keep in mind.
It's not like the progress is not the goal in itself.
The pro the goal is profit.
Progress is the outcome of competition.
If we want to call it progress.
So going to your question, I do think that governments can don't operate as technocratic
kind of do-gooders. We need to pressure from below. And this is the whole conversation also
that we're having with the free form for real economic emancipation is to say,
the only way in which governments will change
how they operate, not through austerity, right?
Because we were just saying how governments
are ultimately imposing austerity.
I remember your first words in this conversation
were all about how it's normal to think
that anything in favor of labor is considered bad.
Anything that is ultimately about de-risk and subsidizing private shareholders, that's just the norm. So this is considered bad. Anything that is ultimately about de-risk
and subsidizing private shareholders, that's just the norm.
So this is the norm.
So austerity is the norm.
So how do we do not austerity under capitalism?
I would say it's a tricky political balance
because again, I think the tendency for the system
is to go there exactly because you need
to increase market dependence.
And this is the very important point that I did not make
is that how do you keep people under conditions
of wage labor?
You have to increase market dependence.
You have to, which means that in order to survive,
you have to buy your own health insurance,
buy your food, pay your rent,
so that people become more precarious and more vulnerable.
So in this case, what happens?
If the only thing, I think the only possibility here
is for people to actually gain an awareness
of how the system operates, to stop just, you know,
blaming the one person in government
and realize that it's a bigger issue.
There's a bigger tendency under the system.
And thus in a way, cultivate their critical consciousness,
what we're trying to do with free.
And by the way, what we have is also available online
so anyone can follow. If this consciousness
is cultivated, this is when we can start putting pressure on our governments.
Governments will not act without the pressure. So you can start pressuring at
the local level to increase access to basically what breaches the market
dependence. This is what I think is important, is that the only way in which
workers will gain back some power is if they're able to create spaces in which they can breach
market dependence and have more sustainable. So basically, anti-austerity operations is
what can create more democratic space.
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["The Daily Show Theme"] James, you talked about that a little bit. What Claire is talking about is sort of,
if people feel like the floor is stronger,
they have more autonomy.
Oddly enough, it's almost,
when you think about the libertarian perspective,
which is we should do what's the most
for individual freedom,
it seems to me, in some ways,
that's compatible with a more libertarian view,
which is if you build a strong, you know, you know, is we should do what's the most for individual freedom. It seems to me, in some ways, that's
compatible with a more libertarian view, which
is if you build a stronger floor, people have more liberty.
In other words, you don't have to stay in a job
because that's your health care.
You don't have to stay in a job because it's the only,
it's a company town and you've got to do the thing.
Is a stronger floor part of more liberty, James? Well, liberty is a kind of complicated
word. Always. I try not to use the word liberty because in the United States, if you use the word liberty, people think you're a kind of conservative nut. In England, they wouldn't think
that. But I think the image that you lay out, John, is exactly the right one. A famous account
of the rise of the modern state is that the modern state kind of exactly arose because of capitalism.
Capitalism freed people from social structures. It freed people from kinship. It set people loose.
social structures, it freed people from kinship, it set people loose, you know. And that was fantastic at some level, you know, for innovation and individualism and all sorts of things,
but it created all these massive consequences, these negative consequences, poverty, you know,
which we don't reckon with for some reason. Government had to come to make that stable.
You know, this is the vision of kind of Karl Polanyi's book, Great Transformation.
So I think you said that, and I think that's sort of right, but it's an endless battle.
It's an endless battle to keep that on track because everyone wants to kind of shade a bit.
Everyone wants to play the game a bit in their favor and stack the rules a bit in their favor
and get the government not really doing that because, yeah,
that keeps wages low or it allows us to make more profits. That's a never-ending struggle,
that kind of dialectical contest in some sense between people to get the state to control
capitalism. But I guess my view of capitalism is different from Clara's though, because I think, you know, you may disagree with Elon Musk and Peter Thiel's vision of progress.
You know, I certainly do. But they definitely have one, you know, like, I think if you think about
progress for one person, what was it? What was it that drove him to take over this whole doge?
He was not trying to make money. He actually
lost enormous amounts of money. He was doing it because he's a libertarian,
because he's ideologically driven to oppose anything the government does, I think.
Right. And it's such a strange, I guess that gets back to the original contradiction and everything
that we talk about is you have these folks who are anti-collectivist,
but collectivism formed for a reason that together people were able to overcome
the adversities of a dangerous natural world or other things. There's a reason why this all happened.
But somehow once we came together, that instinct of strength through a stronger floor and through
keeping us all together has now been viewed as a weakness, which I find fascinating. Like,
it's such a strange turn of events. And I would love to understand a little bit,
And I would love to understand a little bit, and maybe James, you could do this,
what are the tools that economists have
that can help the political and the legal?
Because I think this gets us to how we change it.
Clara talked about this, of people rising up,
but they need the tools to be able to
do that.
My fear is these systems only change in catastrophe or cataclysm.
What are the tools that maybe we can look to from economists that can help provide us
the ability to prosecute a better case for a fairer economy, James?
Well, I think economists have to think more
about the negative consequences for society
and for the stability of society
of organizing the economy in this way.
I mean, as I was saying earlier,
the problem with mainstream economics
is it completely ignores sort of society and politics.
So it doesn't think about, what's the feedback onto politics
of having this enormous increase in income and wealth
inequality?
That feeds back onto politics.
It feeds back onto tens of millions of dollars being
thrown into political contests.
Of course, but that's not
a feedback that an economist would think about.
Economists do think about inequality and
they're very interested in studying inequality,
but you have to see the whole picture.
Why is it that economists don't see the whole picture?
I don't know. I've spent my entire career struggling with that.
I still don't really,
it's something kind of baked into the way
economists are sort of taught to think about the world.
You know, I'm sure Clara would say
she has a kind of conspiracy theory about this.
No, it's not conspiracy.
I think it is, it's more complicated.
Now, now.
It's more complicated.
It's more complicated than that.
I don't think academic.
I mean, I also think that economists play a role in society.
It's not about conspiracy.
It's about realizing that all knowledge is embedded and that people like us, we create
knowledge but we're very privileged as professors with tenure.
And we tend to not see a lot of the time what are the difficulties that people actually
are living through.
This is why I think economics needs to not just be based in academia and the high
ivory towers. We need to bring back economics so that becomes more humane.
We need the experience of the lived experience of the social struggles of people.
And this is what we're trying to do at free. We can't renounce economics.
We need just a different type of economics that raises awareness.
And honestly, in my own historical
work and in my book, The Capital Order, this is all I've been doing is looking at the origins of
neoclassical economics, mainstream economics, to understand how it came into being in the moment
in which people were saying, you know, value comes from us. We are producing the values. It's not the
entrepreneur, it's the worker. And guess what? Neoclassical economics tells you the opposite.
Workers don't count. They're just, you know, it's a rebalancing entrepreneur. So of course,
the lens through which we look at the world is very political and economics is very political
because it gives us a lens that structurally disempowers. I think we do need a more empowering
lens. And we also do need to be able to look at capitalism and understand its problems. I think
this is the only way we will have imagination that actually will be able to bring us to confront the
challenges of our future. I think many economists are studying the world. Many economists are doing
fieldwork in Latin America, in Africa, in India. What am I doing in Rwanda? I'm trying to understand
the logic of society, of the economics of polity in Rwanda. I think many economists are doing that all ready, to be
honest with you. Is it possible, you know, and again, this is to, because I think, you know,
while you guys might disagree on certain aspects of it, is it possible too, that economics is just
It's possible too that economics is just one other commodity
that can be utilized by the elites to promote the outcomes that they're looking for politically.
In other words, it's just one more tool
that can in some ways be exploited.
I think to James's point, I think you're right.
There's a lot of really interested, fascinating economists who are out
there in the communities, but ultimately how that knowledge is applied in societies, it can be
perverted. Any knowledge can. And I think getting back to what Claire is talking about,
Clara is talking about, you know, your history of sort of how the workers consciousness of the 20s coming off of World War I and how Mussolini and even in England with the trade unions, how they
used their resentments, right, to actually work against those folks is fascinating to me.
And that I think speaks to what James is saying,
which is there's a lot of people doing this great work,
but without the political mechanism to not pervert that,
how do we prevent that?
Yes.
And we need to understand that any knowledge has a method.
And again, this method is not neutral
because there's different ways in which you can do economics.
And again, you can do it in the mainstream way
or you can do it as we're trying to do at free
in other places.
And I think this is the whole point is that economics
is just a field that we need to then, I think,
build with lenses that also can help have future imagination.
And I do think though,
that this imagination is not up to the academic,
it's up to actual experiments on the ground.
In many places in the United States,
people try to operate through solidarity economies,
through ways in which again,
you do try to breach market dependence.
And this is the beginning, but we don't have, you know,
we can't see the future now as academics,
but we can definitely help build
something different.
And I think this is the only thing that keeps me
not depressed about the dehumanization of this world.
So what Clara's talking about is a more disruptive model,
you know, using, you know, James, in your model,
which may, you know, want a little bit more structure,
how do you see your work being utilized?
How would you like it to be utilized?
And what would you like to see as the sort of
optimistic outlook for that?
No, I mean, I agree with, you know,
I agree that ideas are very powerful in this debate.
You know, that's why I was saying, you know,
we need new ideas.
We need to be able to kind of reimagine our social system.
And you know, think about the influence of Milton Friedman.
I think Milton Friedman pushed this very simplistic model of what market economies were about.
That was an enormous powerful tool in the hands of Mrs. Thatcher or Ronald Reagan.
That was the beginning of it, the austerity.
Those ideas are powerful.
I studied Africa or whatever, and the way Africans organize their economy is completely different
historically and in many ways today than the way people organize. I'm somewhat reluctant to start
talking about it since we're talking about the kind of Western world.
No, but it's interesting, James, to look at it from that perspective because if they're more nascent,
you have an ability to build something that maybe is the system we're talking about.
Yeah. Well, I think there's many things.
You know, one of the reasons, you know, I study the rest of the world is I think there's many.
I mean, I agree. There's lots of problems.
There's no society is perfect.
There's always, you know, lots of lots of problems.
You don't have to go very far from my office in the University of Chicago to see that, you know.
So, so, so I think one can always learn from other
societies the way they experimented, the way they tried different things. I agree, like socialism
didn't work out very well, so what? It was hijacked by whoever, by Stalin, by Fidel Castro, so what?
So let's think about alternatives and let's learn from the world. And I agree with that impulse.
That's exactly, I agree with that.
Let's dream.
I mean, I'm not sure I'm the person to tell you about that,
because I'm just a British empiricist.
British people have a particular mindset.
I think French people, maybe Italians,
are much better at this.
But the empiricism is the point,
is being able to take empiricism
and not have it be perverted and to apply
it in these areas.
We talked about Friedman earlier and all that, and I'll end with maybe this and about the
value of how these empiricists work.
Alan Greenspan, famously the Fed chairman from,
you know, for so long, was on my program, The Daily Show.
This was post the 2008 financial crisis.
And so this is, as we talk about,
one of the popes of economic vision, you know,
studied at the foot of Friedman and all those guys.
And I asked him what went wrong.
And he said to me, I guess at the end of the day,
we made a mistake in thinking
the banks could regulate themselves.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Oops.
So that's kind of the point.
But listen, I love both of your perspectives.
I find it really interesting.
I think it's the question of our times,
which is to stand back and reimagine systems
that can be in healthier balance.
And so I really appreciate you guys.
You've put so many wonderful ideas out to think about.
So I really appreciate you both being here.
Claire Mate, professor of economics,
University of Tulsa, the executive director of Free,
The Forum for Real Economic Emancipation,
author of The Capital Order, it's a great book,
James Robertson, university professor
at the Harris School for Public Policy,
and the Department of Political Science
at the University of Chicago Nobel Prize,
awardee in 2024, and out and about right now in Africa, checking out economic systems on the ground.
I so appreciate you both taking the time to be with us. Thank you again.
My pleasure. Thank you.
Thank you so much. It was a pleasure.
Economist fight.
On our show? Never.
You were a really good referee.
I was, I didn't even know that was gonna go down.
No.
You never expected.
But what does it say about us
that like our economy episodes are the most fiery?
You know?
It is the most, it gets in there.
Can I say this though, that I so appreciated?
The lack of condescension and smug eye rolling
from both economists was such a refreshing for me.
Like whenever I'm talking to economists, I always feel like it's like, you know,
that you get a fortune cookie and you read in bed after every fortune.
That's the game with economists.
I think the game is after everything they say, you just add you asshole.
Like, because it's like, no, demand goes up when you,
when money policy is less restrictive, you asshole.
And they love to say that's econ 101.
Right.
Ooh, zing.
None of that from these guys.
Just flat out fucking economic passion.
You know what I really appreciated though?
I appreciated the reminder that economics isn't a science
and I really liked the point that we were touching on
with Clara about, you know, austerity is a choice
and it is a tool.
And all I could think about was the big, beautiful bill
which we also touched on and how the healthcare provisions,
the taking away of Medicaid doesn't happen
until after the midterms.
That is a choice.
That is a tool.
It's exactly right.
Right.
Austerity isn't inevitable.
It's a choice that serves specific interests.
And I think the one thing that they would definitely agree on is that nothing about
the way that people interpret the economy is neutral and nothing about the medicine
that they prescribe to the economy is neutral and nothing about the medicine that they prescribe to the economy is neutral.
And it's not just because of politics,
it's because in the field itself,
it requires the cherry picking of certain data.
Right.
I thought it was interesting too when they talked about,
you cannot remove the legal system
and the political system from economics,
but so often the field narrows its focus to do that.
And I think to your point, Lauren, that the idea that the things that people
might be upset about won't kick in until after it won't matter to them for the
elections.
But I think also the broader thing of we get so wrapped up in like, Oh, there
might be some cuts to Medicaid and things like that without stepping back and realizing, right,
relying on work or subsidies to get health insurance
is fucked in the first place.
Absolutely.
That these are the things,
and this is not the way the system has to be designed,
this is the way we've designed it.
And something else that stood out to me is just that it's so unfortunate that World War I and COVID are the moments that people realize that the government can actually work for them.
These absolute miserable times.
Well, even when he said after World War II, we had that more demand and we had great prosperity.
But then, you know, there was a little bit of stagflation in the 70s.
And so Reagan and Thatcher came in and said, kick people off a little too comfortable.
We should be fine here. That'll be fine. I guess. Also, the other thing I was thinking
about was just how the big, beautiful bill came about in order to address the deficit,
but actually increases it and will just raise the debt ceiling as the solution,
which is addressing the deficit
in its way.
You know what, if you do, you know what,
Jillian, that's a good point.
If you trash the economy, I guess that could,
deficit would go up more slowly.
Fantastic.
Brittany, what do we got?
What do the listeners want to know this week?
First up, John, do you think that Skydance
would get rid of the Daily Show after the merger goes?
Skydance, the company that's coming in?
Boy, that's a good question.
I have, you know, unfortunately,
we haven't heard anything from them.
They haven't called me and said like,
don't get too comfortable in that office, Stewart.
But let me tell you something.
I've been kicked out of shittier establishments than that.
We'll land on our feet.
No, I honestly don't know.
I mean, I think I'd like to believe that,
like without The Daily Show,
I don't know Comedy Central's kind of like Musac
at this point without,
I think we're the only sort of like life
that exists on a current basis other than like
South Park.
But it's the only thing on there.
I'd like to think we bring enough value to the property.
Like if they're looking at it as purely a real estate transaction, I think we bring
a lot of value, but that may not be their consideration.
I don't know. They may sell the whole fucking place for parts. I just don't know. Um, and,
and we'll, we'll deal with it when we do, but, uh, I'm so happy and proud of everybody
that works over there. Like they want to do that, knock themselves out. Well, you know,
as, as Jay Leno would say about Doritos,
go ahead, crunch all you want, we'll make more.
So we'll figure that out when the time comes.
And where we have to do it.
But like I say, that is without, I have no knowledge.
You know, we've all got a surmise about like
who actually is owning it and what his ideology is, but
ideology may not play a part. I don't, I just don't know.
One could hope.
One could hope. Yes. What else we got?
Trump now claims the Epstein files were actually written by Obama, Biden and-
Sure. No, that makes total sense.
Yeah. Is this the biggest cover-up in American history or just another Tuesday Trump's done?
Oh God, I don't fucking know.
The whole thing is so abjectly ridiculous.
Look, it's, you, we talked about it
on The Daily Show last night, Occam's Razor.
Like the dude, like there's not that many people
who are on video dancing with Jeffrey Epstein
and with his arm around him and on the plane
as the president of the United States.
So the idea that, you know, I understand what he's doing.
He's doing the whole like, it's just like Hunter's laptop.
And you're like, okay.
Yeah.
The lady doth protest too much.
I mean, the whole thing is fucking insane.
And the idea that he's like,
why are we still talking about that?
Anyway, about the 2020 election, that was stolen.
You know, all right.
Listen man.
And Rosie O'Donnell.
And Rosie O'Donnell and then Alan Dershowitz
suddenly all over TV going, I know everybody on the list.
I'm not.
I was there.
Everybody's on the list, I was there, but I'm not allowed to tell anybody.
I'm under confidentiality. And you're like, what were you Epstein's lawyer? Like what,
what do you mean confidentiality? And you got this other, I'm sure
Elaine Maxwell is in jail going like, so what am I in jail for again? Like what, what? This is like,
it's the opposite of a nothing burger,
but I just don't understand why they can't
or just like fucking prosecute the people
that are prosecutable and let's be done with this.
It's a great conspiracy, huh?
Man, man, man.
But hell of a, once again, hell of a week.
How do they get in touch with us, Brittany?
Twitter, We Are Weekly Show pod,
Instagram threads, TikTok, blue sky, We Are Weekly Show podcast, 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.
There you go, nicely done.
Guys, thank you guys so much.
Excellent as always.
Lead producer, Lauren Walker,
producer, Brittany Mamedovic,
video editor and engineer, Rob Vitolo,
who saved the show today.
I just want to point out that people don't understand video editing, sound editing,
audio editor and engineer Nicole Boyce.
I was on, we had a guy calling in from Africa.
We had someone calling in from, I don't know where, uh, she was in Tulsa.
And yet I was the one who like, every time I talked, it just went, ang, wang, wang, wang, wang, wang, wang, wang.
Rob fixed it up, pressed a couple of buttons,
had me throw the computer out the window
and then pull it back into the window and all fixed up.
Researcher and associate producer,
Gillian Spear, as always, executive producers,
Chris McShane and Katie Gray.
We will see you guys next week.
Enjoy this beautiful July thunderstorm.
All right, bye.
["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"]
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