What A Day - MAGA Threats Made Him Leave The Country
Episode Date: November 24, 2025A lot happened while we were off this weekend, from President Donald Trump's overly friendly meeting with New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani to Georgia Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor G...reene's resignation announcement. That was a doozy. In a 10-minute-long video on Friday, Greene announced that she's leaving Congress, and explained that she felt betrayed by the party – and the President – she'd spent years fighting for. MTG has detailed the numerous death threats she and her family have received because of her recent opposition to Trump's policies. But she is hardly the first to face threats of violence for saying or doing something that MAGA decides it doesn't like. On today's show, we speak with Mark Bray, a college professor who wrote a book about Antifa. And after the murder of conservative pundit Charlie Kirk earlier this year, Bray became the subject of a conservative media storm, fomented in part by the organization Kirk founded, Turning Point USA. So Bray decided to leave the United States to protect himself and his family. He explains what Antifa even is and how writing a book eight years ago cost him his American home.And in headlines, the U.S. Coast Guard makes clear swastikas and nooses are still considered hate symbols, the U.S. continues to work with Ukraine and Russia on an end to the war, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posts anti-vaccine language to its site.Show Notes:Check out Mark's book – https://tinyurl.com/mw9ys4jkCall Congress – 202-224-3121Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Monday, November 24th. I'm Jane Koston, and this is what a day.
The show wondering where Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is going to end up on his tour day explaining why tariffs are good
even when President Donald Trump cancels them.
Isn't the fact that you're rolling back tariffs in admission that ultimately they do drive up prices for consumers?
Kristen, how much does your arm weigh?
And because you have to know where that plane landed.
That I do not know.
Exactly. But you know how much you weigh and you get on the scale every morning.
Inflation is a composite number, and we look at everything.
So we are trying, we try to push down the things we can control.
I'm so sorry, that plane crashed.
On today's show, New York City Mayor-elect Zeran Mamdani charms President Trump during a meeting at the Oval Office.
And U.S. and Ukrainian officials say they're making progress in bringing
an end to Russia's war in Ukraine. But let's start with MAGA. Georgia Republican Representative
Marjorie Taylor Green made a big announcement on Friday. She's leaving Congress. In a video,
Representative Green explained that she felt betrayed by the party and the president she'd spent
years fighting for. I have too much self-respect and dignity. I love my family way too much,
and I do not want my sweet district to have to endure a hurtful and hateful primary against me
by the president that we all fought for, only to fight and win my election while Republicans
will likely lose the midterms. And in turn, be expected to defend the president against impeachment
after he hatefully dumped tens of millions of dollars against me and tried to destroy me.
It's all so absurd and completely unsurious. I refuse to be a battered wife, hoping it all goes
away and gets better. Marjorie Taylor Green was elected to Congress on the back of MAGA.
and conspiracy theories spread by some of Maga's loudest voices.
Entering Congress in 2021, she was already famous or infamous for arguing that the September 11th attacks were a hoax,
and that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton murdered John F. Kennedy Jr.
On the day she was sworn into office, she wore a face mask that said, quote,
Trump won, a reference to the 2020 presidential election, which he did not win.
In a funny way, it seems like Green wound up being more Maga than Trump.
She broke with the president on AI policies, America's role in the war in Gaza, health care policy, and the release of files centering on the crimes of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
And while her views get a lot of support from right-wing populists like Steve Bannon, President Trump called her a, quote, traitor.
She responded to his claim in her resignation video.
Standing up for American women who were raped at 14 years old, trafficked in use by rich, powerful men should not result in me being called a.
traitor and threatened by the president of the United States whom I fought for.
MTG has detailed the numerous death threats she and her family have received because of her
recent opposition to Trump's policies. But she is hardly the first to face threats of
violence for saying or doing something that MAGA decides it doesn't like. From congressmen
to poll workers to random people who post on the internet, so many people have experienced
violent threats because MAGA thinks that they need to be put back in line or pushed out of the
conversation entirely. Mark Bray was never a congressman and definitely was never MAGA.
He was a college professor who wrote a book called Antifa, the anti-fascist handbook, back in 2017.
But after the murder of conservative pundit Charlie Kirk earlier this year, Bray became the subject
of a conservative media storm, fomented in part by the organization Kirk founded, Churning Point
USA. So Bray made the decision to leave the United States to protect himself and his family.
I spoke to him about what Antifa even is
and how writing a book eight years ago
cost him his American home.
Mark Bray, welcome to Wadaday.
Thanks for having me.
So let's start with the basics.
There seems to be a lot of confusion
about what Antifa even means.
You wrote the book on Antifa.
I did.
So what is it or who are they or what are we even talking about?
Important question.
So Antifa is,
is short for anti-fascist in a variety of different languages. Antifa is a term for a specific
tradition of resistance to oppose the far right that's not a specific group. I sometimes liken it
maybe to socialism. There are socialist groups, but socialism itself is not a group. There are
Antifa groups, but Antifa itself is not a group. There's no headquarters. There's no CEO.
It's a politics that goes back, depending on how you want to date it at least 75 years, if not
a hundred years. And Trump has erroneously called it one solitary singular movement with an alleged
leadership, which he can never quite name, and an alleged massive funding structure, George Soros
and company, which doesn't exist. It's a politics of anti-fascism. Can you tell me a little bit about
that history and the historical effectiveness of militant anti-fascism? Because I think, you know,
there's this meme you see online that shows troops, American troops landing at Normandy. World War II.
World War II and being like, this is the original Antifa.
And I'm like, I don't think that's exactly.
I get that response of being like, okay, you know, if we've got fascists, we want to be
against fascism.
So obviously everybody's Antifa.
But like, who are we talking about?
Right.
Well, before I answer your specific question, the ambiguity around the word is common in a lot
of countries, that sometimes it is just used as shorthand for anti-fascists.
And that's what's so dangerous about what's going on.
But to be more specific, the term antififference.
was originally a German term. It was used by some of the anti-fascist groups that
resisted Hitler. There was a group called anti-fascist action in the early 1930s in Germany.
The specific tradition that came to be known in English as militant anti-fascism really
crystallizes itself after World War II when you ask the question, how do we make sure this
doesn't happen again? And their answer is to deny a platform to fascists, not allow them to
organize in society, to have their speakers. When you are
for basically treating small and medium-sized fascist and Nazi groups as if they could
become the nucleus of another Nazi regime, even though, of course, in most circumstances,
they wouldn't. So that, of course, shows that we are, I believe, in a different situation in the
U.S. now than those groups are responding to, but that's the trajectory. And the irony when we want
to assess the success of those groups is the more successful those groups are, the more they
stop fascist and Nazi groups before they're big enough for anyone to care that they were stopped.
Nothing works all the time, but it was a successful politics for a number of decades.
What does it mean to designate anyone who holds certain political beliefs as a terrorist?
What is this going to look like?
Well, we don't know exactly what it'll look like, right?
And there's a lot of ambiguity because on the one hand, designating a domestic entity,
a terrorist organization in an executive order carries no legal power.
So right now, calling yourself Antifa is legal in the United States.
Now, from what I understand being declared a foreign terrorist organization,
that does carry legal power.
And so the State Department declaring four supposed organizations in Europe to be terrorist
organizations legally.
Only one of the four has anything to do with anti-fascism in an explicit sense seems to
me to be a stepping stone towards then declaring American groups to be affiliated with these
foreign terrorist groups and therefore foreign terrorist groups themselves.
But obviously the goal here is to be able to stigmatize, criminalize, and demonize,
protest, leftism, anything that the Trump administration doesn't like. This is really textbook
authoritarian stuff. It's very transparent. Well, I want to speak to your personal experience.
You wrote the book on Antifa eight years ago. You had to leave the country this year. What
happened? Yeah. So I published the book in 2017. I spoke about it incessantly for a few years.
And then I moved on to other research. I've been living in suburban New Jersey,
at Rutgers. I'm a dad. I've been researching a book about scams. Then Charlie Kirk got
killed. And it's clear in the aftermath that Trump wanted to blame the left. Then you get the
executive order on Antifa. And that's when the death threats started coming in after some far-right
influencers on X started calling me a domestic terrorist professor. And then Turning Point USA,
organized a petition, having me fired for, you know, allegedly being a terrorist. I was not fired
for those listening and are unfamiliar with this story.
Fox News picked it up, more death threats.
My address was published on X, along with information about my family.
At that point, it was pretty clear that my family didn't feel safe, staying in our home.
We considered spending time somewhere else in the U.S.,
but as time went along, I felt increasingly concerned about the political climate.
And, you know, if we get to the making lists of dissidents stage in authoritarianism,
it's pretty clear I would be on that list.
And so I felt like I needed some distance from what was going.
on to assess the political climate. The other thing is that my children have spent time with me
in Spain. And so for them saying, hey, mommy and daddy have another research trip is much more
intelligible than just moving a town over and trying to explain to them while we couldn't go home.
And then things got worse when our flight was mysteriously canceled at the gate. And then the next
day, when I tried to leave, I was searched and interrogated by federal agents for an hour,
despite being accused of no crimes by any law enforcement. What has it been like since you left
the United States since you've been in Spain, have that death threats lessened? Because I think
that one of the hardest parts about experiences like yours is that, like, they move on. You don't.
Like, you're still in these moments. So I wanted to ask you, how are you doing? What has this been
like over the last couple of months? Have things died down a little bit? What's been happening?
Well, I really appreciate you phrasing that way in terms of they move on and you don't, because I've felt that, and you're
the first person to articulate that to me, maybe at all. So thank you for that, because that is
at what's felt sometimes I'm in the process of selling my house. I have struggles getting my kids
acclimated to a new school and a new country. There's all sorts of bureaucratic nightmares.
And things that moved on, which is good. I still do get an occasional threat, but there are many
fewer than I used to. I haven't really quite come to terms with everything that's happened.
I still am sort of struggling with how to process everything. So the grass is not always greener,
But at least for me, it's a change of pace.
So speaking to the United States, this feels kind of like the war on terror, but somehow
stupider, where it's like anyone we don't like who didn't support the invasion of Iraq
or the war in Afghanistan was obviously super pro-Taliban or loved terrorism.
Is there anything people can do about this?
And if not, how do you think people can protect themselves?
Like, clearly, this administration thinks that basically all Democrats,
are Antifa, essentially.
Right.
So you're either with us or against us, right?
That framework is old, and it's very obvious to intelligent observers.
I think that what it's important to say is that we can all resist Trump in our own different ways.
There's no one way to do it.
He's attacking people's lives in so many different venues that standing up, getting out in your
community, organizing mutual aid, anti-ice action.
educational events, resisting efforts to change local curricula, school board elections, whatever
have you.
I think that the effort by Trump is to normalize the fear and normalize the dichotomy
and normalize the growing authoritarianism, make it normal for there to be National Guard
soldiers in our streets when that is far from normal.
Make it normal for ICE to hunt down Latinx people, citizens, non-citizens without any kind
of civilian oversight as to what they're actually doing.
resist that normalization. And I think ideally we need to push towards stepping outside of simply
voting or simply marching towards more creative forms of resistance. And that don't look different in
different places and I don't have a magic solution to that. But when you look at historical examples
of mass resistance, it's taken a lot of people, it's taken a variety of different forms of
resistance and has taken creativity. Mark, thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it.
Thank you.
That was my conversation with historian and professor Mark Bray, author of Antifa, the anti-fascist
handbook. We'll get to more of the news in the moment, but if you like the show, make sure to
subscribe, leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, watch us on YouTube, and share with your
friends. More to come after some ads.
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Here's what else we're following today.
Headalines.
I think working for the
people of New York City demands that you work with everyone and anyone and that you always look
to find those areas of agreement while not overlooking the places of disagreement. And I think
this was something that came up in our meeting. On Sunday, New York City mayor-elect Zeran
Mamdani appeared on NBC's Meet the Press to break down his, and I don't think this is an
understatement, surreal meeting with President Trump. On Friday, Trump met with Mamdani,
a man he once called, quote, a 100% communist lunatic and, quote, total nutjob.
Trump even threatened to cut off federal funding for New York City if Mamdani were to win the mayoral election.
That version of Trump seemingly evaporated.
I think you're going to have hopefully a really great mayor.
The better he does, the happier I am, I will say.
There's no difference in party.
There's no difference in anything.
And we're going to be helping him to make everybody's dream come true.
Everybody's dream come true?
Who is this Disney, fairy godmother-sounding president?
What is going on?
Mamdani and Trump set aside their differences and acted cordially in front of reporters.
Both men said they discussed the issue of affordability, an issue both Mamdani and Trump ran on in the respective elections, and one seriously dogging Trump's presidency.
Trump even went on to say that, quote, some of his ideas are really the same ideas that I have in regards to inflationary issues, always copying someone else's homework.
Mamdani found common ground with the president without overtly praising him, noting that many of his own voters.
supported Trump in the last election.
A sentiment Trump seemed to appreciate
because, of course, he would.
And whenever Disney Magic was at play,
it showed up bigly during this question from a reporter.
Are you affirming that you think President Trump is a fascist?
I've spoken about...
That's okay. You could just say yes.
Okay.
It's easier.
It's easier than explaining it.
You know what?
It is easier.
I think today was worthwhile.
It was very...
Very, very, very, it is probably the most productive day we have had on this issue, maybe in the entirety of our engagement, but certainly in a very long time.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday painted an optimistic picture of talks with Ukraine on Trump's latest peace plan with Russia.
Rubio was in Switzerland to discuss the new 28-point plan that came to light last week with Ukrainian and European officials.
The plan stipulates Ukraine's territory to Russia, knee-caps Ukraine's combat abilities, and prevents it from ever-joining NATO.
basically a wish list that Russia would ask for if it sat on Santa's lap.
And that's because, according to Senator Angus King, it is.
Here's what King said Saturday at a panel discussion at the Halifax International Security Forum in Canada.
This has been an extraordinary weekend, both because of the sessions that we've had with people from all over the world,
but also because of the communication, as was mentioned today from Secretary Rubio and the leaked 28-point plan,
which, according to Secretary Rubio, is not the administration's position.
It is essentially the wish list of the Russians that is now being presented to the Europeans and to the Ukrainians.
King and a bipartisan group of senators at the conference said Rubio reached out to them on his way to Geneva
and said the plan, quote, was not the administration's plan.
But according to the Associated Press, a State Department spokesperson refuted their account,
calling it, quote, blatantly false.
Rubio himself then escalated the situation
by claiming online that the senators were mistaken,
even though they said he gave them the information.
The Trump administration with another masterclass in foreign policy.
During a speech, Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky,
stopped short of rejecting the proposal,
but called for fair treatment and said he would, quote,
work calmly with Washington and other partners
during what he described as, quote,
one of the most difficult moments in our history.
Trump, ever the conciliator-in-chief, once again blasted Ukraine for being,
you guessed it, ungrateful, posting on true social quote,
Ukraine leadership has expressed zero gratitude for efforts.
It was in all caps.
That's why I said it like that.
Which is weird, because typically, when someone sticks a knife in your back,
you always say thank you, may have another?
There was this explosive report that the Coast Guard is no longer going to characterize swathes because of the news.
as hate symbols.
DHS called that a lie and fake news.
Can you clear up?
I don't know anything about it.
When was this written?
Yesterday?
Well, look, the Coast Guard's an incredible group of people.
I know very well.
We just ordered a lot of new Coast Guard cutters, beautiful,
the most magnificent ship.
They look like yachts with lots of guns on them.
So I don't know.
I haven't seen any report like that.
Follow-up question, Mr. President.
What does the Coast Guard do?
Anyway, the U.S. Coast Guard had to do some damage control after the Washington Post reported Thursday that a new policy was set to downgrade the classification of swastikas and nooses from hate symbols, which they definitely are, to just, quote, potentially divisive.
You know, like the new wicked movie or whether or not baggy jeans are cool.
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson, Trisha McLaughlin, called the reporting, quote, fake crap.
According to the Post, the new policy was going to take effect December 15th.
But following understandable and inevitable backlash from lawmakers,
duh, the Coast Guard very quickly corrected its course.
Acting Commandant of the Coast Guard, Admiral Kevin Lundy,
said in a memo issued later Thursday,
the Guard does not, quote,
tolerate the display of divisive or hate symbols and flags.
Lundy said that includes swastikas, nooses, and, quote,
any symbols or flags co-opted or adopted by hate-based groups
as representations of supremacy,
racial or religious intolerance, anti-Semitism, or any other improper bias.
Lundy also noted, just to be extra clear, that his order tops any other previous guidance issued on the subject.
An accompanying Coast Guard press release said the new policy is meant to, quote,
combat any misinformation and double down that the U.S. Coast Guard forbids these symbols.
Say it with me. Sure.
RFK Jr. promised you that he wouldn't do this.
is an exchange you had with him during his confirmation hearing?
If the data is brought to you and these studies that have been out there for quite some time
and have been peer reviewed and it shows that these two vaccines are not associated with
autism, will you ask, no, I need even more? Or will you say, no, this, I see this. It's the
test of time. And I unequivocally and without qualification say that this does not cause autism.
Not only will I do that, but I will apologize for any statements that misled people, other
So I should. Thank you. Dr. Cassidy, he lied to you. Well, first, let me say what is most important
to the American people speaking as a physician. Vaccines are safe. Louisiana Republican Senator Bill Cassidy
spoke with CNN's Jake Tapper on Sunday. During their interview, Cassidy refused to admit that
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. played him on vaccine policy. Cassidy is a
doctor and was a crucial vote in approving RFK Jr.'s cabinet appointment back in February.
At the time, Cassidy outlined a handful of commitments Kennedy had reportedly made to him,
including a promise that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would not remove statements on its website, saying that vaccines do not cause autism.
Because they don't.
Fast forward nine months, and the CDC website still has a header with that language.
But now it has a nice little asterisk at the end.
It points to a statement that says the header has not been removed, quote,
due to an agreement with the chair of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
Committee that it would remain on the CDC website. So don't worry, RFK Jr. kept his promise.
The page also now says that the claim is, quote, not an evidenced-based claim because studies have
not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism.
In an interview with the New York Times on Thursday, Kennedy said he himself directed the CDC
to adjusted stance, even though changes and guidance usually come from the agency scientists,
not the U.S. Health Secretary.
And that's the news.
Before we go, this week is the best time to shop at the crooked store,
and not just because it's an excuse to avoid your MAGA family members.
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That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review.
Put your frozen turkey in the fridge to defrost today
and tell your friends to listen.
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What a Day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe.
I'm Jane Koston. And when it comes to getting food poisoning or accidentally having a turkey still frozen on the day of turkey, this podcast just says no.
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