Lex Fridman Podcast - #441 – Cenk Uygur: Trump vs Harris, Progressive Politics, Communism & Capitalism
Episode Date: August 30, 2024Cenk Uygur is a progressive political commentator and host of The Young Turks. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep441-sc See below for timestamps, tr...anscript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/cenk-uygur-transcript CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Cenk's X: https://x.com/cenkuygur The Young Turks YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/TheYoungTurks The Young Turks Website: https://tyt.com/ The Young Turks on X: https://x.com/TheYoungTurks SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Saily: An eSIM for international travel. Go to https://saily.com/lex Policygenius: Life insurance. Go to https://policygenius.com/lex AG1: All-in-one daily nutrition drinks. Go to https://drinkag1.com/lex MasterClass: Online classes from world-class experts. Go to https://masterclass.com/lexpod LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex NetSuite: Business management software. Go to http://netsuite.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (14:27) - Progressivism (20:37) - Communism (35:24) - Capitalism (41:27) - Corruption (46:13) - Money in politics (1:03:00) - Fixing politics (1:22:11) - Meritocracy & DEI (1:33:10) - Far-left vs far-right (2:07:43) - Donald Trump (2:28:00) - Joe Biden (2:46:27) - Bernie Sanders (2:59:56) - Kamala Harris (3:07:25) - Harris vs Trump presidential debate (3:20:55) - RFK Jr (3:30:37) - The Young Turks (3:38:49) - Joe Rogan (3:48:30) - Propaganda (3:55:46) - Conspiracy theories (4:03:33) - Israel-Palestine (4:13:20) - Hope PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Cenk Yüger, a progressive political commentator
and host of the Young Turks. As I've said before, I will speak with everyone,
including on the left and the right of the political spectrum, always in good faith with
empathy, rigor, and backbone. Sometimes I fail. Sometimes I say stupid, inaccurate,
ineloquent things. and I frequently change my mind
as I'm learning and thinking about the world.
For all this, I often get attacked,
sometimes fairly, sometimes not.
But just know that I'm aware when I fall short,
and I will keep trying to do better.
I love you all.
And now, a quick few second mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description. It's the best way to support this podcast. I love you all. for your business. Choose wise and my friends. Also, if you want to get in touch with me for a variety of reasons, to give feedback,
submit questions for AMA and so on,
go to lexfreedman.com slash contact.
And now onto the full ad reads.
As always, no ads in the middle.
I try to make this interesting, but if you skip them,
please do check out our sponsors.
I enjoy their stuff, maybe you will too.
This episode is brought to you by SALE,
a brand new eSIM service offering several affordable
data plans in over 150 countries.
I've had a bunch of experience when I was traveling
where it was a legitimate pain in the ass
to get a SIM card or an eSIM working.
And being abroad in the foreign land, far away from home,
all these signs and ways of life
you don't understand all around you,
all that combined with the fact
that you don't have access to this little tablet of wisdom,
which is the smartphone, it can be a real pain in the
ass. So a great eSIM that works, easy to set up, is worth its weight in gold. That
said, when I was in the Amazon it was also nice to have no reception
whatsoever. To be completely disconnected from the world. At first it was painful
but after going rapidly through all the stages of grief, I was able
to discover freedom. I was able to, let's say, quiet the mind to a degree that I'm
not usually able to in the busyness of urban life. And the smartphone certainly is a thing
that creates that turmoil in the mind. It can always look and something in there can just perturbate the mind and now it's
off to the races.
Not having a smartphone to do that is a really nice catalyst for peace.
Anyway, when you are traveling, you should have a smartphone and it should work and it
should be easy. Go to salee.com slash Lex and choose the one gigabyte salee data
plant to get it for free.
That's salee.com slash Lex to get one free gig of salee.
This episode is also brought to you by policy genius, a marketplace for
insurance, all kinds, life, auto home, disability, and so on.
Really nice tools for comparisons.
Having talked to Peter Levels, I realized how awesome it is
to create a website that compares stuff,
whether it's hotels, neighborhoods, and whatever else.
It's nice.
Some of it is an interface challenge,
some of it is a data challenge, all of that.
When a company, when a service does it well,
it just makes life easier.
You can compare stuff, you can choose the thing
that's right for you.
I know how powerful it is because most people do it poorly.
And it's a real pain in the ass.
Like with hotels, booking hotels,
and I just saw, I need to check out a little bit better
the Peter Threw Up Hotel list.
That looks really exciting.
You'd be able to compare all different kinds of hotels.
Anyway, Policy Genius does that for insurances.
You know, insurance is a fascinating thing
because basically life is full of risks.
Much of progress in a human life occurs when you take risks. You can use insurance to kind
of muffle the pain felt when after taking the risk the negative consequences are experienced.
So it's really interesting just looking at the landscape of human experience and seeing how
insurance muffles the lows.
It can create a floor, a protection against the lows, especially the real lows.
And it works, of course,
because a lot of people don't experience those lows
and therefore they're funding the people that do.
It's a fascinating system.
And I'm glad we figured out a way
how to take risks together in this society
and help each other out financially for the
people who feel the pain of it.
So with Policy Genius, you can find life insurance policies that start at just $292 per year
for $1 million of coverage.
Head to policygenius.com slash Lex or click the link in the description to get your free
life insurance quotes and see how much you could save
That's policy genius comm slash Lex
This episode is also brought to you by a G1 the thing I just drank and I sometimes drink twice a day and I'm
traveling for a bit here and
I don't have travel packs and so I'll be going without a G1 for a couple of days and I'll miss it
Because it makes me feel like home. So I need to get the travel packs
it's just a really really nice
multivitamin that provides a
nutritional basis
For a crazy physical and mental existence all the crazy stuff. I do that wise. I'm still doing
and mental existence. All the crazy stuff I do diet wise. I'm still doing mostly one meal a day, mostly low carb. And so for that, you know, it's nice to make sure you get in all the right nutrition.
I find when I'm extremely stressed, my ability to enjoy a long run or enjoy a hard training session
in jujitsu is diminished. The physical challenge is a kind of catalyst to let whatever the underlying
reason for the stress come out and pass through you and maybe you even get a chance to let it go.
But when you're in it, sometimes it's rough. Anyway, jujitsu is still a huge source of
happiness for me. I think the puzzle of it, I still try to train with a very large
variety of people from white belt to black belt. As I've talked about with
Craig Jones, it could be sometimes a little bit difficult. Certain people,
especially the lower ranks, go a little bit too hard to see if to figure out that
puzzle. Let them submit you a few times, kind of let them chill out. But it's
still a fascinating puzzle of human psychology, of human sort of biomechanics from arms and legs
and sort of pressure and dynamic movement and transitions,
all that kind of stuff.
It's just a fascinating game.
It's a fascinating dynamic game.
It really is not like chess
because chess is a static game.
There are elements of chess, but it's not discreet.
It's continuous.
And sometimes the subtlest movements make all the difference.
And the timing of those movements
can make all the difference.
Anyway, go check out AG1.
They'll give you one month supply of fish oil
when you sign up at drinkag1.com slash lex.
This episode is also brought to you by Masterclass,
where you can watch over 200 classes from
the best people in the world and their respective disciplines.
I really enjoyed the one that Martin Scorsese did on filmmaking.
I'm fascinated by dialogue and film and the contrast that that dialogue has with, say,
podcasts.
Because a podcast is a single take, if you will.
It's a genuine, relaxed conversation.
It's not really planned.
There's not a script.
And so it's a single take.
And now you take film and depending on the director,
you're doing five, 10, 20, 30 takes
on a single piece of dialogue.
And you're crafting that with the lighting, with the mood,
with the intensity of the faces of the actors
and the music, all of that.
And the final results, honestly,
is looking for the same kind of thing.
It's looking for something real.
Now, great interviews, great conversations
arrive at that something real,
like an improvised dance, let's say.
And a sort of great film arrives at something real,
like a great choreographed dance.
And it still does have similar elements. Like I think about with lighting and all the kinds of things I have very little idea about
but as someone who can appreciate it I
Can reach out towards that and
Try to achieve that in some kind of way to really see a person to really bring out the beauty of that person
is something I would love to do.
And I listened to a lot of great interviewers and podcasts and I'm just in awe, inspired,
truly, truly inspired and humbled.
There's just so, so many people that do a much, much better job than me.
And I learned from them, I'm inspired by them.
Yeah, it's just great.
I think I really enjoy just being a fan.
MasterClass lets me be a fan of all these cool people, get unlimited access to every
MasterClass, and get an additional 15% off an annual membership at MasterClass.com slash
LuxPod.
That's MasterClass.com slash LuxPod. That's masterclass.com slash Lex pod.
This episode is brought to you by Element, my daily zero sugar and delicious electrolyte mix.
My favorite flavor is watermelon salt,
but there's a bunch of other flavors that are great.
And like I said, when I'm training really hard in Jiu-Jitsu,
especially in the Texas heat,
this is something I noticed most clearly,
because I usually don't like drinking water during training.
So what happens is I drink some element beforehand,
I train for an hour and a half, a bunch of hard rounds,
and you're drained from water.
Just, I don't know.
I don't know how many pounds of water I lose, but it's a lot and
You kind of start to feel shitty and the moment I drink element just just within a few minutes
You just start feeling much much better and you just feel
Viscerally the effect of electrolytes of sodium potassium magnesium on the body water and electrolytes. It's quite incredible
And the same is actually true when you're fasting.
And it's been actually a while since I've fasted for more than 24 hours.
So most days I fast, I guess you could say 24 hours. I eat one meal a day, you know,
22 hours or whatever it is, 23 hours. But what I do even longer fasts
element is a lifesaver.
It just removes the headaches and even helps with the hunger and
all that. Get a sample pack for free with any purchase. Try it at www.drinkelement.com
slash Lex. This episode is brought to you by NetSuite, an all-in-one cloud business management
system. In this episode with Cenk, I talk a lot about capitalism. Now I think I disagree with him, and I do in the episode,
and I'll have to really think through it,
and really, my favorite episodes is when I'm really
challenged to think and learn for weeks and months
afterwards, but I don't think our capitalist system is as broken as Cenk suggests.
So he feels that companies have completely captured our politicians, our government.
But I think that a significant number of companies have undue influence on our politicians.
But not as much as Jenck says, and I have a lot of hope.
Primarily underlying that hope is a kind of sense
that even among the politicians, there's integrity.
Not every politician, but a lot of them.
I don't think that money can so easily buy the human heart,
can so easily corrupt the human heart, can so easily corrupt the values
of the people who want to serve.
So, I don't know.
I just think if you wanna make money,
you're not gonna go into politics.
There's a lot easier ways, cleaner ways,
more pleasant ways to make money.
It's just such a dirty game,
and I think you go in that game to try to help.
So anyway, but yes, corporatism is very serious problem.
So the way out to me is great companies, quite honestly, and celebrating those companies.
And that's something I try to do.
Call out bullshit, call out shitty behavior on the parts of companies when they do it,
but celebrate companies when they do great stuff.
Anyway, underlying the flourishing of our nation
is great companies and the very system of capitalism.
And so if you're running a company,
you should be using the best tools
for the job of running that company
because it is an incredible machine
with so many moving pieces.
So it's not an easy job to run it, no matter the scale.
Over 37,000 companies have upgraded to NetSuite by Oracle.
Take advantage of NetSuite's flexible financing plan at netsuite.com slash Lex.
That's netsuite.com slash Lex.
This is the Lex Friedman Podcast.
To support it, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, dear friends, here's Cenk Uygur. You wrote a book.
Yeah.
A manifesto that outlines the progressive vision for America.
So the big question, what are some defining ideas of progressivism?
Yes.
So in order to do that, Lex, we got to talk about where we are in the political spectrum.
And in fact, there's two
different spectrums now. People often think of left right. And that's true that exists, but layered
on top of that is now populist versus establishment. So I'm center left on the left right spectrum,
but I'm all the way on the populist end of the second spectrum. So where does progressivism lie within
that? Well, I would argue that it's exactly in those places. It's populist and it's on the left,
but it is not far left. So far left is a different animal and We could talk about that in a little bit. So in terms of what makes a progressive,
so expand the circle of liberty
and justice for all and equality of opportunity.
Now people will say, well, that seems pretty broad
and all American, but is it?
Think about it.
So expand the circle of liberty.
Everybody's in favor of that, right?
No, absolutely not. So expand the circle of liberty. Everybody's in favor of that, right? No, absolutely not. So certainly the King of England was not in favor of expanding the circle of liberty
and the founding fathers said, we're going to expand it. And they expanded it to propertied
white men. And then progressives have been, they're progressives because they expand the
circle of liberty. Then from then on, as we were perfecting the Union, progressives always say, expand it
further, include women, include people without property, include all races, and at every turn,
conservatives fight against it. So that doesn't mean if you're a conservative today, you don't
want to include women or minorities, et cetera. But today you would say, for example, well,
I don't want to expand the circle of liberty to,
for example, undocumented immigrants.
And maybe you're right about that.
And we could have that discussion
in terms of a specific philosophy.
And I don't believe that undocumented immigrants
should immediately be citizens or anything along those lines.
But I do believe in expanding liberty overall.
And the contours of that are what's interesting.
And then you say justice for all.
Everybody's for justice.
No, right now, marijuana possession is still illegal
in a lot of parts of the country.
Now a lot of right-wingers and left-wingers agree
that it should be legal.
But for my entire lifetime, black people have been arrested
at about 3.7 times the rate of white people,
and the entire country has been fine with it.
So is that justice?
No, they smoke,
white people, black people smoke marijuana at the same rate, black people get arrested about four
times the rate. That is an injustice that an enormous percentage of the country was comfortable
with. Well, progressives aren't comfortable with it. We want justice for all. So the quality of
opportunity is an interesting one because the far left will say,
at least some portions of them will say,
equality of results, right?
So progressives just want a fair chance.
So free college education, but afterwards,
you don't get to have exact same results
as either the wealthiest person
or we're not all going to be equal.
We don't have equal talent, skills, abilities, et cetera.
There's a lot of questions I can ask there.
So on the circle of liberty, yes,
so expanding the number of people
whose freedoms are protected.
But what about the magnitude of freedom
for each individual person?
So expanding the freedom of the individual
and protecting the freedoms of the individual.
It seems like progressives are more willing to expand the size of government,
where government can do all kinds of regulation,
all kinds of controls in the individual.
So Lex, what we're probably going to talk about a lot today is balance.
So a lot of people think,
oh, I'm on the right,
I'm on the left, and that comes with a certain preset ideology.
So the right is always correct, the left is always correct.
So there's two problems with that.
Number one, how could you possibly believe
in a preset ideology if you're an independent thinker?
It's literally by definition not possible.
If you say, I lent my brain to an ideology
that was created 80 years ago or eight
years ago or eight hundred years ago and I'm not going to change it, you're saying, I don't think
for myself. I bought into a culture and by the way, there's a lot of different forms of culture
you could buy into, religion, politics, sometimes racial, et cetera. So that's why you need actually balance. The second reason you need balance,
other than independent thought, is because the answer is almost never black and white.
And that gets into a really interesting nuance because mainstream media, in my opinion, is the
matrix. And its job is to delude you into thinking corporate rule is great for you and we should never change
it and the status quo is wonderful.
So they have created a false middle.
What mainstream media calls moderate is actually, in my opinion, extremist corporate ideology.
So for example, they'll say Joe Manchin is a moderate.
None of his positions are moderate other than potentially gun control in West Virginia. He's not for gun control. The people of West Virginia are not for
gun control, generally speaking. And he uses that and they usually have these shiny objects where
they're like, you see this? I'm a moderate because of guns or I'm a moderate because I'm a Democrat
from West Virginia. But wait, let's look at your positions. You're against paid family leave, that pulls at 84%. So you're a radical corporatist who say that women should be forced back into work
the day after they have birth. You're against the higher minimum wage. You're for every corporate
position and they all pull at 33% or less. So Joe Manchin is not at all a moderate,
and this applies to almost every corporate Republican
and every corporate Democrat.
They're all extremists in supporting
what I call corporatism.
So you have to get to a balance
in order to get to the right answer.
So that's an interesting distinction here.
So you're actually, as far as I understand, pro-capitalism.
Yes.
Which is an interesting place to be.
That's the thing that probably makes you center left
and then still populist.
You're full of beautiful contradictions, let's say this,
which will be great to untangle.
But what's the difference between corporatism
and capitalism?
Is there a difference?
Yeah, so I really believe in capitalism.
I don't think that there's really a second choice.
Where it gets super interesting is the distinction between capitalism and socialism, because that's not at all as clear as people think it is. People often say socialism and communism
as synonyms when they're not synonyms. there's basically four distinct areas.
It's obviously a spectrum.
Everything is a spectrum, right?
On one end, you have communism on the left
and on the other end, you have corporatism on the right.
Okay.
And I would argue that capitalism is in the middle.
And so communism we know, state owns all property.
You're not allowed to have private property.
So I will piss off a lot of people in this show.
And so I'm asking for their patience.
Please hear me out.
And because don't worry, I'm going to piss off the other side too.
Okay.
So communism makes no sense at all.
Totally opposed to human nature.
It never works.
It always evolves into dictatorship because it is not built for human nature. It never works. It always evolves into dictatorship
because it is not built for human nature. We're never going to act like that. It's not in our DNA.
You could try to wish it into existence and they have, and it never works. And it's because once
you have almost no rules in terms of, oh, we're all equal,
even though communism eventually winds up having
an enormous amount of rules, right?
It creates a power vacuum.
When you say, hey, there's no structure of power here,
right, we're all equal, it's a flat line.
One guy usually gets up because that's human nature
and goes, ah, I don't think so.
I think if you're gonna leave a power vacuum,
I'm gonna take that power vacuum.
That's actually a really interesting way to put it,
because when everyone is equal,
nobody is in power, and human nature is such
that there's everybody's, there's a will to power,
so when you create a power vacuum,
somebody's going to fill it.
So the alternative is to have people in power,
but there's a balance of power.
And then there's like a democratic system
that elects the people in power
and keeps churning and rotating.
Who's in power?
That is exactly it, Lex.
You got it exactly right in my opinion.
Okay, so that's why communism never works
and can never work.
So it's an idea of like,
we're all gonna work as hard as we possibly can and take only what we need.
Where, when, when has that ever happened
in the history of humanity, right?
We're just not built that way.
So, okay, we can get into that debate
with my friends on the left, et cetera.
Now corporatism is just as extreme and just as dangerous.
And that is basically what we have in America now.
What we have in America now, and this is another giant trick that the matrix played on everybody,
that they, they did in a shell game and all of a sudden extreme corporatists like mansion
and almost every Republican in the Senate or moderates, Oh my God, Mitch McConnell all
of a sudden is a moderate and et cetera. As long as you're not a populist, populists are never moderate.
Okay.
But if you love corporations and corporate tax cuts and everything in favor of
corporations, you're magically called a moderate when you actually, according to
the polling have super extreme positions that the American people hate.
And by the way, that's part of the reason for the rise of Trump.
You can come back to that.
Okay.
And by the way, that's part of the reason for the rise of Trump.
You can come back to that.
Okay.
But the second shell game is taking out capitalism, putting in corporatism,
but still calling it capitalism.
Okay.
So what is corporatism?
It is when corporations slowly take over the system and create monopoly and oligopoly power.
So that snuffs out equality of opportunity.
So how do they do that?
And when people say the, the system is rigged, they oftentimes can't explain it that well and then mainstream media goes, Oh, you're sounding conspiratorial.
Rigged.
Yeah.
I wonder how.
Yeah.
Super easy to explain it.
Here's one of dozens of examples, carried interest loophole.
So that is for hedge funds, private equity,
the top people on Wall Street,
that's part of their income, they get two and 20, right?
So 2% is a flat fee no matter what happens to the fund
and 20% of the profits of the fund
goes back to the people who invested it.
It's not their money, It's not their money.
It's not their investment.
What they're getting is actually just income and should be taxed at the highest rate.
But it's because of this loophole, it's taxed at a much lower rate at around 20%.
So do you know at what income level you go above 20% if you're a regular Joe?
It's at $84,000 a year.
So these billionaires are getting the same tax rate
as people making $84,000 a year.
It's unbelievably unfair.
And that's corporatism taking over
and starting to rig the rules.
I'm gonna pay less taxes, you're gonna pay more taxes.
So again, I can give you dozens of those examples.
So in mergers, so that they get to
oligopoly power, that's how you rig a system, lowering the corporate tax rates, making sure
that there is no real minimum wage, making sure there's no universal healthcare. We all become
indentured servants of corporations. They take away power from the average guy, give it to the
most powerful people in the world. But the most important distinction is that corporatism hates competition. It wants monopoly
and oligopoly power. Whereas capitalism loves competition and wants to free markets. I remember,
you know, we started Young Turks back in 2002. So we've been around for 22 years,
longest running daily show on the internet ever.
And so we were pre-Iraq war and Iraq war starts
and Dick Cheney starts handing out no bid contracts.
I'm like, what part of capitalism is a no bid contract?
You can't negotiate drug prices.
The most anti-free market thing I have ever heard. It's almost like communism for corporations.
They get everything, you get nothing, right?
So it's preposterous, it's awful,
and it kills the free markets and it's killing this country.
And it is the main ideology and religion of the free markets and it's killing this country. And it is the main ideology and religion
of the establishment.
Are all companies built the same here?
So when you say corporatism,
it seems like just looking here at the list
of by industry lobbyists,
it seems like there are certain industries
that are worse offenders than others, like
pharmaceuticals, like insurance, oil and gas.
So it seems to me it feels wrong to just throw all companies into the same bucket of like
they're all guilty.
No, they're not all guilty.
So let's make a bunch of distinctions here.
So first of all, can you, first of all, are they not all guilty. Let's make a bunch of distinctions here. First of all, are they
quote unquote guilty? No, they're doing something that is logical and natural. If you're a company,
do you want to pay higher taxes or lower taxes? Of course you want to pay lower taxes. Do you
want to have higher employee costs or lower employee costs? Of course you want lower employee
costs. But the government needs to understand that and protect us from that
power that they are going to exercise to get to those results. And if you think free markets is
there is no government, you read it wrong. Go back and reread Adam Smith. He says,
you must protect against monopoly power. If you do not protect against monopoly power,
you will have no free markets.
And he's absolutely right.
So second distinction is between small business
and big business.
That's why Republicans will always be like,
oh, we're doing this for small business.
That's why we got the biggest oil companies in the world,
$30 billion in subsidies.
What happened to small business, right?
So I run a small business.
And so if people were to say like, Hey, uh, maybe there should be exemptions
for some of the regulations.
If your company has less than five employees, 10 employees, 50 employees,
et cetera, there's some logic in that.
Cause businesses have different stages of growth and they have different
interests and different needs in those stages of growth.
And we want to facilitate small business growth because that's great for the economy, that's
great for markets, freedom, et cetera.
But the bigger corporations, even there, there's a third distinction.
It isn't that there are certain industries that are worse.
There's just that there are industries that are better at lobbying. So anyone who like right now,
number one donor in Washington, a lot of people make a mistake. They think it's APAC or they
think it's the oil companies or the banks. No, it's Big Pharma. Okay. And who has the most power in
this country? Big Pharma. So we can't even negotiate the drug prices. I mean, look, guys,
think about it this way.
That's like saying, okay, here's a bottle of water.
And normally in the free market, that would cost about a dollar, right?
And for Medicare, the drug companies come in and go, no, I'm not charging a dollar for that water.
I'm charging $100.
And the government has to say, yes, sir, thank you, sir.
Of course, sir, we'll pay $100.
That's why I
compared it to communism because I can't imagine anything more diametrically opposed to the free
market than you the consumer have to pay whatever the hell a corporation charges. That's insanity,
let alone the patents, let alone the fact that the American people pay for the research and then they
make billions of dollars off of it and we get nothing but robbed by them.
So it's about lobby power.
Oil companies have huge lobby power,
defense contractors have huge lobby power.
It's not that they're more evil,
it's just that they have figured out the game better
and they have basically taken the influence they need
to capture the market, capture the government
and snuff out all competition.
Well, okay.
Or a lot of competition.
Figure out the game better.
So I think a lot of companies are good at winning
the right way, by building better products,
by making people happier with the work they're doing,
and winning at the game of capitalism. And then there's doing and the winning at the game of capitalism.
And then there's other companies
that win at the game of lobbying.
And I just wanna sort of draw that distinction
because I think it's a small subset of companies
that are playing the game of lobbying.
It's like Big Pharma.
So Lex, first of all, you have to set rules
for what makes sense, not, oh, I don't like this industry,
or I don't like this company,
or hey, this company is not
doing that much lobbying at this point. They will later when they realize what's going on.
So for example, in my opinion, APAC has totally bought almost all of Congress. And so now other
countries are going to wake up and go, wait, you could just buy the American government? So
APAC is going to spend about $100 million in this cycle, and then they're getting $26 billion back.
So every country in the world is soon going to realize, oh, take American citizens that live there,
get them a tremendous amount of money, and just buy the US government.
But for corporations, they've already realized that on a massive scale.
So for example, in the two industries you gave, automotive.
So in New Jersey, about a decade ago or so,
one of the most powerful lobbies is car dealerships.
So at the national level, you got pharma
and you've got defense contractors, et cetera.
At the local level, guys who have huge power,
number one is utilities, number two is real estate,
and then car dealerships
are hilariously among the top, right? Because it's local businesses that are financing the
politicians at the local level. So they passed a law saying that you have to sell through
dealerships, but Tesla doesn't sell through dealerships. And it was intended to bully,
intimidate, and push out Tesla out of the
market. They then did that in a number of different states throughout the country.
So does that make any sense in a democracy? Of course not. Why do you have to sell your product
through a specific vehicle or medium? You can sell it any way you like. That's the most anti-free
market thing possible. Why? It was just total utter corruption. But it's perfectly legal.
The Supreme Court legalized bribery. So then what happened in that case? So then Elon came in and
gave campaign contributions and reversed it. So now we're in a battle where it's an open auction.
Different companies are buying different politicians and then they're pretending to have debates about principles and ideas,
et cetera. So now let's look at tech. In the beginning, Facebook was not spending any money
in politics or almost any money in politics. So what happens? They're getting hammered. They get
pulled into congressional hearings and Facebook's got fake news and oh my God, all this trouble from
Facebook. Then Facebook does the logical thing.
Oh, it turns out I need to grease these sons of bitches.
Okay.
So then they hire a whole bunch of Republicans consultants.
They go grease all the Republicans and most of the corporate Democrats.
And then all of a sudden we're no longer talking about Facebook at all.
And Facebook are angels.
And now we've turned our attention to who?
Facebook's top competitor, TikTok.
Funny how that works.
Okay.
And by the way, then Donald Trump goes,
oh, TikTok's big dangerous company,
they're working with China, okay.
And then Jeff Yaz comes in on this cycle,
part owner of TikTok, and he doesn't want TikTok.
Banished, of course, right?
So he gives Trump a couple of million dollars,
Trump turns around the next day and goes,
we love TikTok, TikTok's a good company, right?
So that's a big contributor to influencing
what politicians say and what they think,
but it's not the entire thing, right?
No, it is, it's 98%.
I'll go on mainstream media and they'll be like, oh, I see what you're saying.
I can see how that influences politicians about 10%.
I'm like, no, no, it's 98%.
So and even a lot of good people think it's 50-50.
They have principles and they have money.
No, they have money and this major principles.
That's why I wanted to clarify 98Tube.
Okay.
So how do we fix it?
So it's really interesting and nice
that you're pro-capitalism and anti-corporatism.
So how do we create a system where the free market can rule?
Where capitalism can rule,
we can have these vibrant flourishing
of all these companies competing against each other
and creating awesome stuff.
Yeah, so in the book I call it democratic capitalism, as opposed to Bernie's democratic
socialism, right? We can get into that distinction in a minute. But so as Adam Smith said, and anyone
who studies capitalism knows, you need the government to protect the market as well as the
people. Because so like, why do we have cops? Because if we don't have cops, somebody's going to go,
well, I like Lex's equipment. Why don't I just go into his house and take it?
Right? So you need the cops to protect you. And that's the government. So people say,
I hate big government. Do you? Right? It depends. Right? If your house is getting robbed,
all of a sudden you like the government, but you also need cops on Wall Street.
Because if you allow insider trading, the powerful are going to rob you blind and the little guy is
going to get screwed. So that's this easy example. And so if you don't have those cops, the bad guy
is going to take over. They're going to set the rules, rig the rules in their favor. So that's
why you need regulation. And so the Republicans on purpose made regulation a dirty word.
They're like, all regulation is bad.
Then sometimes on the left,
people fall for the trap of all regulation is good.
A guy I like and has a great analogy on this,
Matt Stoller, he's one of the original,
I would argue, progressives.
There's about four of us,
I'm sure there's more, but that have stayed true to the original meaning
of progressivism and populism.
Me, Matt Stoller, David Sirota, Ryan Grim.
Okay.
And they used to be in that original blogger group,
there was guys like Glenn Greenwald
and other interesting cats, right?
But they went in different directions.
So Matt has a great line.
He says, if somebody comes up to you and says,
how big a pipe do you want?
There is no answer for that.
It depends on the job, doesn't it?
Right?
What are we doing?
What are we building?
I'm gonna tell you the size of the pipe,
depending on the project.
So when people say,
are you in favor of regulation
or against it, that's an absurd question.
Of course you need regulation, it just means laws, right?
So don't kill your neighbor is a regulation, right?
So my idea is a simple one
and one we're gonna keep coming back to, balance.
So when my dad was a small business owner in New Jersey
and they inspected the elevator six times a year, that was over regulation. And I said to my dad,
so should they not inspected at all? I'm a young kid growing up. And he said, no, no, no,
you got to inspected at least twice a year. I said, why? He said, because in Turkey,
sometimes they don't inspected and then the elevator falls. Okay. So, so bounds of reason,
correct regulation to protect the markets and to protect the American people.
Yeah, but finding the right level of regulation, especially in, for example, in tech, something I'm
much more familiar with is very difficult because people in Congress are living in the 20th century
before the internet was invented.
So like, how are they supposed to come up with regulations?
Yeah.
That's the idea of the free market
is you should be able to sort of compete,
the market regulates.
And then the government can step in
and protect the market from forming monopolies,
for example, which is easier to do.
Yeah, but that's a form of regulation.
Right, but then there's like more check in the elevator twice a year.
That's a more sort of specific watching, micromanaging.
So Lex, here's the deal.
There's no way around the laws are made by politicians.
Okay?
So, and so you can't give up then and go, oh, it's a bunch of schmucks.
I think most politicians are just
servants for the donor class. The media makes it sound like they're the best of us. Oh, they
deserve a lot of honor and respect and they kiss their ass, et cetera. I think generally speaking,
they're usually the worst of us, especially in this corporatist structure, right? Because they're the
guys who their number one talent is, yes, sir. No, sir. What would you like
me to do with your donor money, sir? Absolutely. I'll serve you completely or 98%. Right. So in
this structure, the politicians are the worst of us. But at some point, you need somebody elected
to be your representative to do democratic capitalism so that you have capitalism, but it's
checked by the government on behalf of the people.
It's the people that are saying these are the rules of the land and,
and you have to abide by them.
So that, how do you get to the best possible answer?
And which is related to an earlier question you asked Lex, which is the
number one thing you have to do is get big money out of politics.
Everything else is near impossible as long as we are drowned in money and whoever has more money
wins. And by the way, when it comes to legislation, again, that's true about 98% of the time. We
predict things ahead of time. People are like, wow, how did you know that that bill wasn't going
to pass or was going to pass? It's the easiest thing in the world. And we literally teach our audience on the Young Turks, watch, you'll be able to see
for yourself. And now our members comment in, they do these predictions, they're almost always right,
because it's so simple, follow the money. So if you get big money out of politics,
and I can explain how to do that in a sec, Then you're at a place where you got your best shot
at honest representatives that are going to try their best
to get to the right answer.
Are they gonna get to the right answer out of the gate?
Usually not.
So they pass a law, there's something wrong with the law,
they then fix that part, it's a pendulum.
You know, you don't want it to swing too wildly,
but you do need a little bit of oscillation
in that pendulum to get to the right balance.
By the way, I was listening to Joe Biden
from when he was like 30 years old to speeches.
He was eloquent as hell.
It's fun to listen to actually.
And he has a speech he gives
or just maybe a conversation in Congress,
I'm not sure where,
where he talks about how corrupt the whole system is.
And he's really honest and like fun and,
that Joe Biden's great by the way.
That guy, I mean age sucks, you know, people get older.
But he was talking quite honestly about like
having to suck up to all these rich people
and that he couldn't really suck up
to the really rich people and that he couldn't really suck up to the really rich people.
They said, come back to us 10 years later when you're like more, more integrated into
the system.
But he was really honest about it.
He's saying that's, that's how it is.
That's what we have to do.
And that really sucks that that's what we have to do.
Yeah.
So we did a video on our TikTok channel,
then and now of Joe Biden.
This is when I was trying to push Biden out.
We should say you're one of the people early on
saying Biden needs to step down.
Yeah, I started about a year ago
because I was positive that Biden had a 0% chance
of winning and it turned out, by the way,
two days before he dropped out,
his inside advisors inside
the White House said, yeah, near zero percent chance of winning.
So we were right all along.
You got a lot of criticism for that, by the way.
But yeah.
Yeah, we can come back to that.
Yes, I did.
And which makes it Tuesday for me.
I get a lot of criticism for everything.
And by the way, Democratic party, you're welcome. So, but, uh, Biden's a really interesting example.
I'm really glad you brought it up.
So the video on Tik Tok was just showing by then by now, and you're
right, Biden was so dynamic when you see how dynamic he was, we did like
side by side, right?
And then you see him now going, I'm getting better.
Anyways, right.
You're like, oh, that's not the same guy.
I get it.
Right.
So, and I got like 5 million views because, because it resonates.
They're like, yeah, yeah, of course.
Right.
But when he first started to the point you were making Lex, he want to, in fact,
I know, cause I talked to him about this, uh, his very first bill was.
Anti-corruption.
Why?
Cause at that point, everything changes in 1976 to 78, it's Supreme
Court decisions that basically legalize bribery.
But remember Biden is ancient.
So he's coming into politics at a time when money has not yet drowned politics.
And in fact, the American population is super pissed about the fact that it's
begun, they don't like corruption.
So early Biden, because he's reading the room,
is very anti-corruption. And the first bill he proposes is to get money out of politics.
But as Biden goes on for his epic 200 year career in Washington, he starts to get not more
conservative, more corporate, because he's just taking more and more money. By the middle of his And the reason he had that nickname is because there isn't anything Joe Biden wouldn't have done for credit card companies and corporations based in
Delaware, which are almost all corporations.
Okay.
So he became the most corporate Senator in the country and hence the most beloved
by the entire country.
And so he became the most corporate Senator in the country.
And so he became the most corporate Senator in the country and hence the most beloved
by corporate media and corporate media has protected him his entire career until
about a month ago. So for example, in the primaries, both in 2020 and 2024,
if you said the Senator from MBNA,
I guarantee you almost no one in the audience has heard of it.
If you heard of it, good job, You know politics really well. Okay. But the reason you didn't hear
of it is because the mainstream media wouldn't say that's outrageous of Joe Biden to be such
a corporate stooge. They'd say, that's outrageous of you to point out something that's true and
something we reported on earlier. Okay. And so they protected him at all costs. Now, finally, when you get to this version of Joe Biden, we, he can't talk.
He can't walk.
He's he, he bears no resemblance to the young guy who came in saying
that money and politics was a problem.
Now he's saying money and politics is the solution.
And in 2020, he said, well, I can raise more money than Bernie.
I can kiss corporate ass better than Bernie.
I'm the biggest corporate ass kisser in the world.
So I'm going to raise a billion dollars and you need to support me.
Now, of course he doesn't say it in those words, but that was the
message to the establishment and Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Obama, Clyburn.
Everybody goes, oh, that's right.
Oh, Biden, Biden, Biden, Biden, not Bernie.
I don't know that there's anybody in the country
who instinctually dislikes Bernie more than Barack Obama.
That's an interesting,
I'm not taking that attention at this moment.
Because you mentioned mainstream media,
what's the motivation for mainstream media
to be corporatist also?
So first of all, they're giant corporations.
So they're all multi-billion dollar corporations.
In the old days, we had an incredible number
of media outlets.
So you go to San Francisco, there'd be at least two papers
and there'd be a paper boy, and I'm going all the way back,
paper boy on each corner
and they're competing with one another.
Literally, they'd be catty corner, right?
And one guy's going, oh, here are all this details.
They're trying to get an audience.
They're trying to get people interested.
So they're populists, they're interesting,
they're muckrakers, they're challenging the government.
Fast forward to now, or not now,
but about a decade ago, five years ago, in that ballpark,
now there's only six giant media corporations left
and it's an oligopoly, right?
And they're all multi-billion dollar corporations.
They all want tax cuts.
Half of them are also, especially about 20 years ago
during the Iraq war, half of them are defense contractors.
So they're just using the news as marketing to start wars
like the Iraq war and then GE, which owned MSNBC
makes a tremendous amount of
money so much more money from war than it does for media that media is a good
marketing spend for these corporations now that's part of it that they
themselves want the same exact thing as corporate the rest of corporations do
for corporate rule lower tax cuts deregulation so they can merge, etc. But the second part of it
is arguably even more important. So where does all that money in politics go? So for example, in 2022,
it's just a midterm election, no presidential should be lower spending, a ridiculous $17 billion
are spent on the election cycle.
Where does the $17 billion go?
Almost all of it goes into corporate media,
mainstream media, television, newspapers, radio.
They're buying ads like nuts.
So we have a reporter at TYT, David Schuster.
He used to work at MSNBC, Fox News, et cetera.
And David once did a piece about money and politics
at a local NBC news station and his
editor or GM spiked a story. And David goes into his office and asks him why this story is true,
it's a huge part of politics, if we're going to report on this issue, we got to tell you
what's actually happening. So he says, David, come here. It puts his arm around his shoulders, takes them to the big newsroom and he goes, you see all this money in politics
paid for that.
That's really fascinating.
So big corporations are giving money to politicians through different channels
and then the politicians are spending that money on mainstream media.
And, and, and so there's a vicious cycle where it's
in the interest of the mainstream media
not to criticize the very corporations
that are feeding that cycle.
So it's not actually direct.
It's not like corporations are,
because I was thinking one of the ways
is direct advertisement.
Like pharmaceuticals obviously advertise a lot on mainstream media, but there's also
indirect, which is like giving the politicians money or super PACs and the super PACs and
spend money on the...
That's why mainstream media never talks about the number one factor in politics, which is
money.
Like we all know, I mean, now as we talked about earlier,
we see it with our own eyes, open auction,
any country, any company, anybody that has money,
the politicians will now literally say,
I am now working for this guy, as Trump says,
because he gave me a strong endorsement,
which means a lot of money, right?
And so, and the press never covers it, almost never, right?
So you're telling me you're doing an article
on the infrastructure build or build back better, et cetera,
and you're not gonna mention the enormous amount of money
that every lobbyist spent on that bill?
That's absurd, that's absurd.
That's 98% of the ball game.
And the reason they hide the ball
is because they don't want you to know
this whole thing is based on the money
that they are receiving.
And by the way, one more thing about that, Alex,
it's that the ads themselves actually,
they work and they work pretty well,
but that's not the main reason you spend money on ads.
You spend the money on ads to get friendly coverage
from the content, from the free media
that you're getting from that same outlet.
And so since every newspaper
and every television station and network knows
that the Democratic Party and the Republican Party
are their top clients,
they're going to get billions of dollars from them.
They never really criticized
the Republican and Democratic Party.
On the other hand, if you're an outsider,
they'll rip your face off.
That's also really interesting.
So if you're an advertiser,
if you're a big farmer and you're advertising,
it's not that the advertisement works,
it's that the hosts are too afraid,
not like explicitly, just even implicitly. They're self-censoring.
They're not going to have any guests
that are like controversial anti-Big Pharma
or they're not going to make any jokes about Big Pharma.
They're not gonna make, and that kind of,
that continues and expands.
That's really interesting.
Sometimes it's super direct.
When I was a host on MSNBC, I had a company that I was criticizing in
my script and management looked at it. And by the way, I used to go off prompter a lot and it drove
them crazy. Not because I wasn't good at it. I think my ratings went up whenever I went off
prompter, but because they couldn't pre-approve the script. And what do they want to pre-approve?
Hey, are you gonna criticize one of our sponsors,
one of our advertisers, et cetera?
So we had a giant fight over it,
and the compromise was I moved them lower in the script,
but kept them in the story, right?
So sometimes it's super direct like that,
but way more often it's implicit.
It's indirect.
You don't have to say it.
Right.
So I give you an spectacular example of it so that you get a sense
of how it works implicitly.
So since G is a giant defense contractor, they own MSNBC at the time of the Iraq war.
They fired everyone who was against the Iraq war on air.
So Phil Donahue,
Jesse Ventura, Ashley Banfield, but Ashley Banfield, they did something different with.
Okay. She was a rising star at the time. She goes and gives a speech in Kansas, not really
even having a policy position, but just talking about the actual costs of this Iraq war and how
we should be really careful. They hate that. So they take their rising
star and they take her off air. Okay. And she goes, okay, good. Let me out of my contract. It's okay.
I'll go. Because she was such a star at that time, she could have easily gotten somewhere else. And
they go, no, we're not going to let you out of your contract. Why not? You're going to pay me to do
nothing? Yeah. Not only that, we're moving your office. Where are you moving it to? They literally moved it into a closet. Okay.
And they made sure that everybody in the building saw her getting taken off the
air and moved into a closet. The closet is the memo, right?
That's the memo to the whole building. You better shut up and do as you're told.
Okay. So that way I don't have to tell you and get myself in trouble.
It's super obvious.
There are guardrails here,
and you are not allowed to go beyond acceptable thought,
and acceptable thought is our sponsors are great,
politicians are great, the powerful are great.
So how do we begin to fix that?
And what exactly are we fixing?
Is it the influence of the lobbyists,
the influence of, like like it feels like there's
Companies have found different ways to achieve influence. All right. So how do we get money out of politics?
So it's very difficult but doable and we will do it so
But in order to do it the populist left and the populist right have to unite
Because and by the way, that is why we have the culture wars.
That's why you're voting for Trump.
No chance.
Okay, so we can get into that in a minute.
So the culture wars are meant to divide us.
If we get united, we have enough leverage
and power to be able to do it.
But you can't do it through a normal bill.
Because if you do it in a bill,
the whole point of capturing the Supreme Court
was to make sure that they kill any piece of legislation
that would protect the American people.
You're saying the Supreme Court is also captured by this?
Oh, 100%.
So, okay.
So let me explain.
Again, people for the uninitiated,
they think, oh, that sounds conspiratorial.
Well, in this case, that's actually somewhat true
because people now know about this. It's the Powell memo, right?
The most infamous political memo in history. Lewis Powell writes a memo for the Chamber of
Commerce in 1971. That's basically a blueprint for how the Chamber of Commerce can take over
the government. Lewis Powell explains one of the most important things you have to do is take over
the media. But even more important than that is taking over the Supreme Court. Because the Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter
of what is allowed and not allowed.
And he says, we need quote, activist judges
to help business interests on the court, okay?
And then Nixon reads the memo and goes,
that sounds like a really good idea. How about I put you on the Supreme Court? And he puts Lewis Powell, the guy Nixon reads the memo and goes that sounds like a really good idea How about I put you on the Supreme Court and he puts Lewis Powell the guy who wrote the memo on the Supreme Court
where he's the deciding vote in Balani and
and
Buckley so the lies those two decisions are a 76 to 78 and what they say is
Yeah, yeah, I read the Constitution and it says that money is speech.
No, it isn't.
And no, it didn't.
That's not even close to true.
They just made it up.
And they said, okay, and corporations, they're human beings.
No, they're not.
That's preposterous.
Right.
And they have the same inalienable rights as human beings and citizens do.
And money is speech and speech is an
inalienable right so corporations can spend unlimited money in politics and
there goes our democracy gone okay so Citizens United just shot a dead horse
with a Gatling gun and made it worse and put it on steroids but it was already
dead in 78 so that's why every every chart you see for the rest of
your life, you'll see this, every chart about the American economy starts to diverge in 1978.
So until 38 to 78, we have golden 40 years of economic prosperity. We create the greatest
middle class the world has ever seen. And our productivity is sky high, but our wages match our productivity.
After 78, productivity is still sky high.
Best in the world.
Okay.
Sometimes people are all the way American workers, lazy, not remotely true.
We work our ass off.
Okay.
But wages flatline and they've been flatlining for about 50 years straight.
And the reason is because the Supreme court made bribery legal.
So in order to get past the Supreme court, you only have one choice.
That's an amendment.
And so you have to get an amendment.
Amendments are very difficult.
But so, for example, you, you need two thirds of Congress to even propose the
amendment.
So, well, why would Congress propose an amendment that would take away their own power? Right? Because almost everybody in Congress got
there through corruption. Their main talent is I can kiss corporate ass better than you can. Right?
So they take the most amount of money. A person with more money in Congress wins 95% of the time.
Right? But the good news is the founding fathers were geniuses and they put in a
second outlet. They said,
or two thirds of the States can call for a convention where you can propose an
amendment. And after an amendment is proposed,
then three quarters of the States have to ratify it.
That's what makes it so difficult because getting three quarters of the States,
there's so many red States, so many blue States, getting three quarters of the states to agree is near impossible.
But there is one issue that the whole country agrees on.
93% of Americans believe that politicians serve their donors and not their voters.
So this is the one thing we can unite on.
If we unite on this, we push our states to call for a convention. We all go to the convention together.
We bring democracy alive and we propose amendments to the constitution.
And the best amendment gets three quarters of the states to ratify.
You go above the Supreme court and you solve the whole thing.
So if 93% of people want this, why hasn't it happened yet?
I mean, the obvious answer is there's
corporate control of the media and the politicians,
but it seems like our current system
and the megaphone that a president has,
you should be able to kind of unite
the populace left and right.
So it shouldn't be that difficult to do.
Like why hasn't a person like Trump, who's a billionaire,
or on the
left a rich businessman run just on this and win? Well eventually they will right
and so that's why I actually have a lot of hope even though things seem super
dark right now. So and that's why I was for Bernie and so I can come back to
that but why hasn't Trump done it as easy? He's like what am I a sucker? The guy gives me money I do what the guy wants. Why why hasn't Trump done it? It's easy. He's like, what am I, a sucker?
The guy gives me money, I do what the guy wants.
Why would I get rid of that?
That's how I got into power.
And so that's how I'm doing it now.
I go to Mary Mendelsohn and say,
give me $100 million and I'll let Israel annex
the West Bank, right?
So I'll go to the oil companies and give me $1 billion
and I'll give you tax subsidies, I'll let you drill,
I'll take away regulation.
Why would I stop that?
You think he likes money more than he likes being popular?
Because there's a big part of him that's a populist
in the sense that he loves being admired
by large masses of people.
Yeah, and you're absolutely right,
but that is the fault of MAGA.
And so MAGA, you're screwing populists in a way that is infuriating.
Okay.
And smart libertarians like Dave Smith have figured this out.
And that's why he's just as mad at Trump as I am.
And it's because he took a populist movement and he redirected it for his own personal gain.
MAGA, figure it out. Come on. Right? And so if you say, oh, you think Democrats have
figured out that these policies? No, they largely haven't figured it out either. And I think there's
blue MAGA and I could talk about that as well. But for those of us on the populist left, yeah,
we're not enamored by politicians. And for example, when Bernie does the wrong thing,
we call him out. Well, Bernie's not my goddamn uncle.
I don't like him for some personality reason.
It's not a cult of personality.
You do the right thing I love you for.
You do the wrong thing, I'm gonna kick your ass for it.
But Donald Trump does this massive,
ridiculous corruption over and over again,
and MAGA's like, I'm here for it, love it.
As long as you're doing the corruption, I'm okay with it.
What am I?
What does Trump say about getting money out of politics? Does he? He says nothing about it. As long as you're doing the corruption, I'm okay with it. What does Trump say about getting money out of politics? Does he?
He says nothing about it. Maga, why haven't you held him to account? So when Bernie helped Biden
take out $15 minimum wage from the Senate bill on the first bill that was introduced in the Biden
administration, we went nuts. We did a petition, we sent in videos to Bernie, our audience going,
We did a petition, we sent in videos to Bernie, our audience going, don't kill it, Bernie, don't kill it.
And so Bernie then reintroduced it as an amendment,
it got voted down, but he did the right thing, right?
That is us holding our top leader accountable
and saying, you better get back on track, okay?
Because we're not here for you
and your personal self aggrandizement,
we're here for policy, right?
And if MAGA was actually here for policy they would have absolutely level Trump
on the fact that he I mean remember what he ran on drain the swamp that's why he
won in 2016 right I so I predicted on ABC right after the DNC and Hillary
Clinton was up 10 12 points whatever she was and I said Trump would win okay and
they the whole panel laughed out loud, right?
They're like, get a load of this crazy guy.
I said, he's a populist who seems to hate the establishment in a, in a populist time.
And so, and drain the swamp is, is a great, uh, slogan.
Uh, and I knew he would win when he was in a Republican debate.
And he said
I paid all these guys before I paid them and they did whatever I wanted and I
was like that's so true right and people will love that and especially
Republican voters will love that I actually have a lot of respect for
Republican voters because they actually genuinely hate corruption so what would
an amendment look like that helps prevent money being an influence in
politics?
So I started a group called Wolf Pack.
What's its name?
Thank you.
Wolf-pack.com.
And the reason why I named it Wolf Pack is because everyone in Washington I knew would
hate that name.
It's a populist name and everybody in Washington snickers,
like, now you're supposed to name it Americans for America and just trick people, etc. No, no, no.
Wolfpack means we're coming for you. Okay? We're not coming for you in a weirdo physical or violent
way. We're coming for you in a democratic way. Okay? So we're going to go to those steak houses.
We're going to get them to propose a convention and we did it in five states, but then the Democratic Party started beating us back, we'll get to that. And so we are going to
overturn your apple cart and we're going to put the American people back in charge. So what does
the amendment say? Number one, a lot of people will have different opinions on what it should say and
that's what you sort out in a convention. So for example, one of the things that conservatives can propose, which
makes sense is term limits.
Because the reason why these super old politicians are in charge is because
they provide a return on investment.
So, you know, if you give to Biden, Pelosi or McConnell, they're
going to deliver for you.
They love that return on investment.
They don't want to risk it on a new guy.
The new guy might have principles, ew, or might want to actually do a little bit
for his voters, boo, whereas these old, and every corrupt system has these old
guys hanging around that help maintain power, et cetera.
So my particular proposal in the amendments would be a couple of things.
One is end private financing of elections.
So if, and look, if you're a business person, you're a capitalist, you
know this with absolute certainty.
If somebody signs your check, that's the person you work for.
Right?
So if private interests are funding.
Politicians, the politicians will serve private interests.
And then you're gonna get into a fight
like Elon did in New Jersey,
where the car dealerships and Tesla
are getting into an auction.
Can I hear 100,000, no, a million,
two million, three million, right?
And now you gotta go bribe the government official,
that's called a campaign contribution.
And this is a terrible system, right?
And the private financing, go to complete public financing of elections.
That's when the conservatives, because they've been propagandized by corporate
media, yes, mainstream media got into your head too, and right-wing media got into
your head too, and right-wing media also financed by a lot of this corrupt interest.
And so they tell you, oh, you don't wanna publicly finance.
Oh my God, you'd be spending like a billion dollars
on politicians.
Brother, they spending trillions of dollars of your money
because they're financed by the guys
that they're giving all of your money to.
So can you educate me, does that prevent something
like Citizen United, so like super PACs are all gone
in this case?
So indirect funding is also.
Indirect funding's gone, direct funding's gone.
You have to set up some thresholds.
Not everybody can just get money to run.
You have to prove that you have some sort of
popular support, so signature gathering.
You would still allow for small money donations
like up to $100, something along those lines.
Not 5,000 or whatever it is now.
Yeah, I think 5,000 is too high,
but those are fine debates.
Yeah, you know, but you basically
want to create an incentive.
Everything is about incentives and disincentives.
Again, capitalists realize this better than anyone else,
right?
So you want to set up an incentive
to serve your voters, not your donors.
So if you take away private donors, well, there goes that incentive and that's
gigantic, right?
And then if you set up small grassroots funding as a way to get past the threshold
to get the funding to run an election, well then good, because then you're
serving small donors, which are generally voters, right?
So that's what you want.
And ending private financing is critical. But the second thing is
ending corporate personhood. So this is where you get into a lot of fights because you have two
reasons. One is some folks have a principled position against it and they say, well, I mean,
the Sierra Club is technically a corporation. ACLU is technically a corporation. And so if you end
corporate personhood, then that could endanger their existence, right? No, it doesn't endanger
their existence at all, right? So it doesn't endanger GM or GE's existence. It doesn't
endanger anybody's existence. Corporations exist. We're not trying to take them away. I would never
do that, right? That's not smart. That's not workable, et cetera. We're not trying to take them away. I would never do that, right? That's not smart. That's not workable, etc. We're just saying they don't have constitutional rights. So they have
the rights that we give them. And by the way, read the Founding Fathers, this is also in my book.
They hated corporations. The American Revolution was partly against the British East India Company.
And so the Tea Party in Boston was against that corporation.
They threw their tea overboard.
It was not against the British monarchy.
And so they, and all the founding fathers warned us
over and over again, watch out for corporations, okay?
Because once they form, they will amass money and power
and look to kill off democracy and they were totally right
That's exactly what happened. And so it's not that you don't have them
It's that you through democratic capitalism you limit their power
They definitely date you can give them a bunch of rights. You say hey you have a right to exist
You have a right to do this this and this this, okay? But you do not have constitutional rights of a citizen.
And so you don't have the right to speak to a politician
by giving them a billion dollars.
And you believe that the people will be able
to find the right policies to regulate
and tax the corporations such that
capitalism can flourish still?
Yes, you know why? Because I'm a real populist and I believe in the people.
So I drive the establishment crazy because they don't believe in the people.
They think, oh, have you seen MAGA? Have you seen these guys?
Have you seen the radicals on the left? We're so much smarter.
Well, you know how many Ivy League degrees we have, right?
And we know what we're doing. No,
you don't. No, you're, everybody to some degree looks out for their own interests, right?
Why I like capitalism and why I love democracy is because it's the wisdom of the crowd.
And so in the long run, the crowd is right. Oftentimes in the short term, we're wrong,
okay? But the wisdom of the crowd in the long run is much, much better than
the elites that run things.
The elites say, well, we're so smart and educated, so we're going
to know better what's good for you.
No brother.
You're going to know what's better for you.
And, and, and so here's something that a lot of people get wrong on the
populace left and right.
They think, oh, those guys are evil.
They're not evil.
I've, I've met them.
I worked at MSNBC.
I worked on cable.
I went to Wharton, you know, Columbia law. It's I know a lot of those guys. And so they're not evil. I've met them. I worked at MSNBC. I worked on cable. I went to Wharton,
Columbia law. I know a lot of those guys. And so they're not at all evil. They don't even know
that they're mainly serving their own interests. They just naturally do it. And so they think the
carried interest loophole makes a lot of sense. They think corporate tax cuts makes a lot of sense.
You not getting higher wages, you not having healthcare, it makes a lot of sense. You not getting higher wages, you not having healthcare,
it makes a lot of sense.
It doesn't make any goddamn sense,
but they get themselves to believe it.
And that's another portion of the invisible hand on the market.
So there's problems with every path.
So the elite, like you mentioned,
can be corrupted by greed, by power, and so on.
But the crowd, I agree with you, by the way,
about the wisdom of the crowd versus the wisdom of the elite,
but the crowd can be captured by a charismatic leader.
So the problem with populism,
and I'm probably a populist myself,
the problem with populism is that it can be,
and has been throughout history, captured by bad people.
But if you say to me, trust the elites or trust the people,
I'm gonna trust the people every single time.
Well, that's why you're such an interesting,
I don't wanna say contradiction,
but there's a tension that creates the balance.
So to me, in the way you're speaking,
might result in hurting capitalism.
So it's easy to, in fighting corporatism,
to hurt companies,
to go too far the other way.
Yeah, of course, of course.
And so like when you talked about corporate tax,
so what's the magic number for the corporate tax?
Because if it's too high, companies leave.
Yeah, companies leave. Yeah.
Companies have so much power right now.
This pendulum has swung so far.
And guys, we're almost out of time.
The window's closing.
The minute private equity buys all of our homes, the residential real estate market,
we're screwed.
We're indentured servants forever.
There goes wealth creation for the average American. So your right leg's this is that it's not a contradiction
It's a tension that is inevitable to get to balance the reason why people kind of can't figure me out
They're like well, you're on the left, but you're a capitalist etc
That's not a contradiction. That's getting to the right balance.
And in order to do that, like if you say,
well, if we change the system, I'm afraid of change
because what if the pendulum swings too far
in the other direction, right?
Well, then you would be opposed to change at all times.
So if you do that, it actually reminds me
of the Biden fight.
Right?
So I'm like, guys, he has, he has almost no chance of winning.
He stands for the establishment.
He can't talk.
But then the number one pushback I'd get from Democrats was, yeah, but what if we change?
It's so scary.
We don't know about Kamala Harris.
What if it's not Kamala Harris?
It's so scary.
Don't change.
And I'm like, yeah, but if you say change might be worse,
it also might be better and you're at zero.
Anything is better, right?
And right now in terms of corruption in America,
we're at 98% corruption.
So we've got 2% decency left. Brother, this is when you want change.
And so to, and Lex, if you actually have wisdom of the crowd, just like in supply
and demand and how it works in economics, it works the same way in a functioning
democracy, you go too far, you come back in.
So for example, when Reagan came into office,
me and my dad, my family, we were Republicans. Why? At that point, the highest marginal tax
rate was at 70%. 70% is too high, right? Now then he brought it all the way down to 28%.
That's too low, right? And that's how the system modulates itself. Already we were headed towards corruption
because it's the 80s now, we're past 78,
magic 78 marker, right?
So, and even Carter was way more conservative economically
than people realized because we were already getting past it
by the time it's in his administration.
But the bottom line is, yes,
whenever you have real wisdom of the crowd,
whether it's in business or in politics,
you're gonna have fluctuation.
You're gonna have that pendulum swinging back and forth.
You don't want wild swings, communism, corporatism, right?
You wanna get to, hey, where's the right balance here
between capitalism and what people think is socialism?
Yeah, so I guess I agree with most of the things you said
about the corruption.
I just wish there would be more celebration
of the fact that capitalism and some incredible companies
in the history of the 20th century has created
so much wealth, so much innovation
that has increased the quality of life on average.
They've also increased the wealth inequality
and exploitation of the workers and this kind of stuff.
But you wanna not forget to celebrate the awesomeness
that companies have also brought outside the political sphere,
just in creating awesome stuff.
Look, I run a company.
And so I don't want companies to go away.
And I don't want you to hate all companies.
I think Young Turks is a wonderful company, right?
We provide great healthcare. We take care of our employees.
We care about the community, et cetera.
And we're building a whole nation online on those principles and the right way to
run a company. Right. Um, but guys,
we're at the wrong part of the pendulum.
The companies have overwhelming power and they're crushing us.
We're like that scene in Star Wars where the trash compactor is closing in on them.
The walls are closing in.
We're almost out of time because they've captured the government almost entirely.
They're only serving corporate interests.
We've got to get back into balance before it's too late.
And that's why I care so much about structural issues.
So I formed justice Democrats.
So that's AOC, et cetera, right?
That's people know it as the squad.
They know it as just Democrats, et cetera.
One of the co-founders of that.
And my number one rule was no corporate PAC money.
Okay. So you're not allowed was no corporate PAC money. Okay.
So you're not allowed to take corporate PAC money.
By the way, now Matt Gaetz and Josh Hawley have stopped taking corporate PAC money
and they've become to some degree on economic issues, genuine populists.
It's amazing.
It happens overnight.
All of a sudden they're holding, they're talking about holding
corporations accountable, et cetera.
Now just Democrats wound up having other problems. They got too
deep into social issues, not economic issues.
There's a general sort of criticism of billionaires, right? This idea. Now, you could say that
billionaires are avoiding taxes and they're not getting taxed enough. But I think under that flag
of criticizing billionaires is criticizing all companies that do epic shit,
that build stuff, that create stuff.
That's what I'm worried about.
I don't hear enough genuine,
I like celebrating people, I like celebrating ideas.
I just don't hear enough genuine celebration of companies
when they do cool things.
Okay, so are you right?
Not about companies, but about capitalism?
Yes, because you look at life expectancy 200 years ago
and you look at it now and you go, wow, holy shit,
we did amazing things, right?
So, and what happened in the last 200 years?
We went from dictatorships more towards
democracy, wisdom of the crowd. We went from, you know, serfs and indentured servants and a
nobility that holds the land to more towards capitalism. And boom, the crowd is right. Things
go really well. The advances in medicine are amazing, and medicine is a great example.
On our show, I point all those things out and I say, look, we hate the drug companies because
of how they capture the government, right? But we don't hate the drug companies for creating great
drugs. Those drugs save lives. They save my life, they save countless millions upon millions of
lives. So the right idea isn't shut down drug companies,
the right idea is don't let them buy the government, right? So, and I know we get back
into our instinctual shells. So on the left, they'll be, oh, we should get rid of all billionaires.
Why? Like how does that fix the system? Tell me how it fixes the system and I'm all ears, right?
My solution is end private financing.
They can be a billionaire, all you like.
You can't buy the government, right?
That's a more logical way to go about it.
I've never worn an eat the rich shirt and it drives me crazy.
I'm like, you would have eaten FDR, right?
And FDR is the best president, most populous president in my opinion.
And so, no, there's wonderful rich people. Of course, of course, there's a range of humanity,
right? But you don't want to get rid of the rich. You don't want to get rid of companies,
but you also don't want to let them control everything. So, okay, I'll give you an example
that's really, and that informs a lot of how I think about things, which is my dad. So my dad
was a farmer in Southeastern Turkey near the Syrian border.
No money. In fact, his dad died when he was six months old and so they were saddled with debt.
And no electricity in his house, as poor as poor gets. And he wound up living the American dream.
And so how did he do that? What, what made the difference?
Uh, well, what made the difference is opportunity.
Right.
So I'm a populist because my dad was in the masses, right.
And, and the elites say the masses are no good.
We're smart.
You're not, we're educated.
You're not, uh, we, we at meritocracy, we talk about that.
We have earned merit.
And if you're a poor middle-class, you have not earned merit.
Okay.
You're useless and worthless.
And I hate that.
So what did, uh, Turkey do back in the 1960s that liberated my dad?
They provided free college education.
You had to test into it.
Okay.
But the top 15% got a free college education. You had to test into it. Okay. But the top 15% got a free college education at the best colleges in Turkey.
So my uncle saved all of our lives when he came to my dad and said, do
you like working on this farm?
And my dad's like, fuck no.
Right.
It's super hot.
It's super hard.
It's this, they got to get up at four in the morning.
If they're lucky, they have a family next door, gives them a mule.
If they're not, they got to carry the shit themselves.
Okay.
He's so my uncle told him work just as hard in school and you'll be able to
get a house, a car, pretty girls, et cetera.
So my dad works his ass off, gets into the school and he comes out a mechanical
engineer and starts his own company.
He creates a company in Turkey, hires
hundreds of people.
He then moves to America, creates a company here,
hires tons of people.
Right.
So do I hate companies?
No, my dad set up two companies and, and I saw
how much it benefited people.
I saw how much employees would come up to my dad
20, 30 years later in the street and hug him.
And they tell me as a young kid, your dad's the most fair boss we ever
had and we love him for it, right?
That's how you run a company.
And he taught me the value of hard work.
But the reason I brought up here is because he taught me, look, like skill
and ability is a genetic lottery.
So you're not going to just get the rich to win all the genetic lottery. No,'re not gonna just get the rich
to win all the genetic lottery.
No, there's gonna be tons of poor kids
and middle class kids who are just as good, if not better.
You have to provide them the opportunity,
the fair chance to succeed.
You have to believe in them.
So this isn't about disempowering anyone.
It's about empowering all of those kids
who are doing the right thing or smart
and wanna work hard so they can build their own companies
and add to the economy.
What in general is your view on meritocracy?
So I love meritocracy.
I wish that we lived in a meritocracy
and I wanna drive towards living in a meritocracy.
So that's why I don't like equality of results.
So, okay.
Now people that are on the left will get super mad at that and go, what do you mean?
Well, okay, brother, let's say you're at work and you got one guy who's working his ass off and the other guy.
Let's go, I don't care.
I'm not going to do it.
Right.
Well, the guy who works super hard has to pick up the slack.
Now he's working twice as hard.
Right.
And now you want the same results. You want the same salary as that guy? No brother.. Now he's working twice as hard, right? And now you want the same results.
You want the same salary as that guy?
No brother, no, he's working twice, four
times, 10 times harder than you.
That's not fair.
Fairness matters.
I lived, we wound up, I mean, we're in the suburbs
of Jersey, but we wound up in Freehold eventually.
And we lived across a farm, which is kind of,
and central Jersey, it happens, right?
And it was called fair chance for, I was like, how did I get this amazing?
Right.
And I love that.
I, that's the essence of America and that's what I want to go back to.
So we've got to create that opportunity of not just because it's the moral thing to
do, but because it's also the economically smart thing to do.
If you enable all those great people
that are in lower income classes and middle income classes,
you're gonna get a much better economy,
a much stronger democracy.
So that's the direction we go.
So again, it's about balance,
but what do you think about DEI policies,
say in academia and companies,
so the movement as it has evolved,
where's that on the balance?
Is that, how far is it pushing towards equality of outcome
versus equality of opportunity?
Okay, so now we're getting into social issues, right?
So this is where we all rip each other apart
and then the people at the top laugh their ass off at us
and go, we got a fighting over trans issues.
They're killing each other.
It's hilarious.
And they're so busy,
they don't realize we're running the place, right?
Okay, but let's engage.
Some people will look at DEI and go, well, that just gives me an opportunity,
just like anyone else. I love DEI. Another person will look at it and go, no, that gives,
that says that you should be picked above me and I hate DEI. Right? So the reality of DEI is a little
bit more complicated. And so, but you got to go back.
So first, did we need affirmative action in the 1960s?
Definitely.
Why?
All the firefighter jobs in South Carolina, as an example, are going to white guys. All the longshoremen jobs in New York, LA, wherever you have it, are all going to white guys.
Cause that's how the system was.
Yes.
Also in the North, right?
So we now are in a civil rights area.
We decide we're going to go towards equality.
Minorities in that case, mainly black Americans had to find a way to break in.
I'm not trying to, like, if you're a longshoreman and it's a good job, you
naturally want to pass it on to your son.
I get your instinct.
I don't hate you for it.
Right.
But we got to let black kids also have a shot at it.
Right.
So you need it in the beginning, but at a certain point you have to phase it out.
So when I was growing up, it's now in the late eighties, early nineties,
I hated affirmative action and I have been principled on it from day one.
And to this day, I don't, I'm not in favor of affirmative action.
I say it on the show all the time.
Why I'm a minority being of affirmative action. I say it on the show all the time.
Why?
I'm a minority.
Being a Turk, I grew up Muslim, I'm an atheist now, but generally speaking, Muslim is certainly
a minority in America and pretty much a hated one overall.
But I didn't check off Muslim or Turkish or any ethnicity when I applied to college because
I believe in a meritocracy as we were talking about.
But we don't really have a meritocracy now.
And so I can come back to that.
But right now, so I didn't check it off because I didn't want an unfair advantage because
I want to earn it.
I want to earn it.
So now I'm in law school and I'm hanging out with right-wingers
because at that point I'm a Republican. And one of the guys says to me about one of our black
students going to Columbia, he says, Oh, I wonder how he got in here. God, that is the problem with
affirmative action. It devalues the accomplishments of every minority in the country. You have to transition
away from it. If you don't, it sets up a caste system and that caste system is lethal to democracy.
So does DEI go too far in some instances? Yes. But is it a boogeyman that's going to take all
the white jobs and make them black, as Trump would say, black jobs, right, and give minorities too much power, etc. No, the
idea isn't to rob you and to give all the opportunity to minorities. The idea
is to make it equal. But as the pendulum swings, did it swing too far in some
directions? Yes. The left can't acknowledge that and the right thinks, can't
acknowledge that. Of course, at some point, you gotta give a chance
for others to break in so they have a fair chance.
By the way, Michelle Obama had a good line
about the black jobs in the DNC speech.
Great line, I love that.
Where somebody should tell Trump that the presidency
might be just one of those black jobs.
Anyway, but why do you think the left doesn't acknowledge
when DI gets ridiculous, which it, uh, in certain places and in certain places at a large scale has, has gotten ridiculous?
Because people are taught to just be in the tribe they're in and to believe it a hundred
percent. Like I've gotten kicked out of every tribe. I'm the, I might be the most attack
man in internet history,
partly because we've been around forever and partly because I disagree with every part of
the political spectrum because I believe in independent thought. And the minute you vary
a little bit, people go nuts. And so the far left tribe is going to go with their preset ideology, just like the far right tribe is.
So for example, on trans issues, we've protected trans people for
over 20 years in the young Turks.
We fought for equality for trans people and for all LGBTQ people for two decades.
We did it way before anyone else did.
When Biden came out in favor of gay marriage in 2013, we're like,
this is comically late. So like we're all supposed to like congratulate him in the year 2013,
that he thinks gay people should have the same rights as straight people. And then he had to
push Obama to get there, right? So on the other hand, I'm like, guys, if you allow trans women to go into professional
sports, not at the high school level, but professional sports, but let's say they go
into MMA or boxing and a trans woman, I mean, it happens in boxing.
It happens in MMA punches a biological woman so hard that she kills her.
So you're going to set back trans rights 50 years.
I'm not trying to hurt you.
I'm trying to help you.
You have to do bounds of reason.
So when I say simple things like that, and I say you give LeBron James, every
hormone blocker on planet earth, he's still going to dominate the WNBA.
Okay.
It would be comical.
He might score a hundred points a night, okay? And they'll
say, oh, that's outrageous. And they've, some have called me Nazi for saying that trans women,
or that professional leagues should make their own decisions on whether they allow trans women
are in or not. So why do they say that? Cause they're so besieged, they think we cannot give an inch. We cannot give any
ground. If you give any ground, you're a Nazi. Okay, so we've got to get out of that mindset.
You're not, you can't function in a democracy and be in an extreme position and expect the rest of
the country to go towards your extreme position. So why do you think we are not in a meritocracy?
your extreme position. So why do you think we are not in a meritocracy? So because of the corruption. It's so for example, but there's also, but remember
corporate media is the matrix and they plug you into cable, right, in the old
days. Now it's a little bit different because of online media, but especially
ten years ago, and remember we started 22 years ago, so I've been losing my mind over how
obvious corporate media corruption has been for decades now, right? But no one acknowledged it
until online media got stronger. But one of the myths that corporate media creates is the myth of
meritocracy. Not that meritocracy can't exist or shouldn't exist, but they pretend it exists today.
exist or shouldn't exist, but they pretend it exists today.
So the problem with that myth Lex is that it gets people thinking, well, if they're already rich, they must have merited it by definition.
So all the rich have merit and the reverse of that, if you're poor,
middle-class, well, you must not have merited wealth.
So you're no good. We don't have to listen to you.
That's a really dangerous, awful idea. If we get to a meritocracy one day,
I'll be the happiest person in America. But right now, look, here I'll give you an example
that I put in the book. It's not us, this other folks, this YouTube video, I can't
even quite find who they were, but it was a brilliant video.
Um, and they said, we're in a hundred yard race, but hold on before we start.
Anyone who has two parents take two steps forward.
Anyone who has went to college, take another two steps forward.
Anyone who doesn't have bills to pay for education anymore, take two steps forward.
They do all these things, right?
And then at the end, before they start,
somebody's 20 yards from the finish line,
and a lot of people are still at the starting line.
And then they go, okay, now we're gonna run a race.
The guy who's right next to the finish line wins.
And they go, meritocracy.
So the challenge there is to know which disparities
when you just freeze the system and observe
are actually a result of some kind of discrimination
or a flaw in the system versus the result of meritocracy
of the better runner being ahead.
That's right.
There are some parts that are easy to solve, Lex.
So, you know, if you donated to a politician and he gave you a billion
dollar subsidy, that's not meritocracy.
So if you follow the money, you can see the flaws in the system.
Exactly.
And so, and again, nothing's ever perfect at any snapshot of history, right.
Or of the moment, you're going to be at some point in the pendulum swing.
But if you let, if you trust the people and you let the pendulum swing, but not wildly, then you're going to get to the right answers in the pendulum swing. But if you trust the people and you let the pendulum swing,
but not wildly, then you're gonna get to the right answers
in the long run.
So you think this woke mind virus that the right refers to
is a problem, but not a big problem?
No, so the right wing drives me crazy.
So look guys, your instincts of populism is correct. Your
instincts of anti-corruption is correct. I love you for it. In a lot of ways, the right wing voters
figured out the whole system screwed before left wing voters did. I shouldn't say left wing voters
because progressives and left wing have been saying it for not only decades, but maybe centuries, right? But democratic voters,
a lot of democratic voters, some of them actually like this current system,
a lot of them have been tricked into liking this current system. And the left should be fighting
against corruption harder than the right, but right now, unfortunately, that's not the case.
So there's a lot that I like about right-wing voters. Okay.
But you guys get tricked on social issues so easily.
Right.
So how many people are involved in trans high school sports and a girl who should
have finished first in that track, they, you know, race in the middle of
Indiana finished second.
First of all, this is the big crime.
This is, and how many people are involved about seven, 13 out of a country
of 330 million people, and you can't see that that's a distraction, right?
So, and every, everything that, that is like bait that the right wing
media puts out there, they run after.
I mean, Tucker Carlson doing insane segments about M and M
should be sexier.
Uh, potato, Mr.
Potato Head has gender issues.
Guys get out of there, get out of there.
It's a trap.
Okay.
Yeah, that doesn't mean that there absolutely, uh, it doesn't mean that
there's larger scale issues with things like DEI that aren't so fun to talk about it or
viral to talk about an anecdotal scale. There is, DEI does create a culture of
fear with cancer culture and it does create a kind of culture that limits the
freedom of expression and it does limit the meritocracy in another way. So you're, you're basically saying, forget all these other problems.
Money is the biggest problem.
So first of all, on AOC as an example, and I don't mean to pick on her, but she
won through the great work of her and short cut Chucklebar T and Corbyn Trent
and others who are leaders of the Just Democrats that went and
helped her campaign. They were critical help. And we all told her the same thing. So it's not about
me, me, me. And so we all said, you've got to challenge the establishment and you've got to
work on money and politics first. Because if you don't work on money and politics and you don't
fix that, you're going to lose on almost all other issues.
But she didn't believe us because it's uncomfortable.
And all the progressives that went into Congress, they drive me crazy.
They think, oh, no, no, you're exaggerating.
No, these are, and the minute they get in, all of a sudden my colleagues, right?
Your colleagues hate you and they're going to drive you out.
You're a sucker. And Jamal Bowmanman, Corey Bush, what did they do?
They drove them out.
Marie Newman drove them out.
Right.
And because they are not on your side, they're not your colleagues.
And what happened to $15 minimum wage?
And I remember talking to one of those Congress people, I won't
leave out the name and saying, Hey, you know, they're not going to do $15 minimum
wage and he's like, Oh, Cenk, you're out of the loop.
Nancy Pelosi assured us that they are going to do $15 minimum wage. I'm like,
I love you, but you're totally wrong. Moneyed interests are not going to do $15 minimum wage.
You have to start fighting now. Right. And they didn't get it. So they lost on almost all those
issues because it's all about incentives
and disincentives and rules.
If you don't fix the rules, you're going to constantly run into the same brick wall.
Now, the second issue that we were talking about is in the culture wars,
the rest of us are stuck between the two extreme two percenters, right?
On both sides.
So the two percenter on the left goes, you know, if you're a white woman, you need to shut up and listen now.
Okay.
That's ridiculous.
No, you don't.
If you're a white woman, you have every right to speak out.
You have every right that every other human being has.
And so would I love for all of us to listen to one another, to have empathy for one another and go,
Hey, I wonder how a right-winger thinks about this.
I wonder how a left-winger thinks about this.
I wonder how a left-winger thinks about this.
I wonder why they think that way, right?
I love that and I want that.
So I want you to listen, but I don't want you to shut up.
So that 2% gets extreme and I don't like it.
But on the right-wing, you got your 2%
who think that that's all that's happening on the left.
And that's all that's happening in American politics.
And they think the entire left believes that tiny 2%, right?
And so they hate the left and they're like, oh, I'm not going to shut up.
I'm not going to wear a mask.
I'm not going to do any of these things and I'm not going to do any.
That's a freedom.
And then a Republican comes along and goes, oh yeah, that thing you call freedom,
that's deregulation for corporations
because you shouldn't really have freedom.
Companies should have freedom, right?
And then guy goes, yeah, freedom for Axon Mobile.
No brother, they tricked you.
Yeah, the 2% on each side is a useful distraction for,
yes, for the corruption of the politicians via money.
Still, I'm talking about the 96% that remains in the middle
and the impact that DEI policy says on them.
Yeah, so here's where it gets absurd.
I'll give you a good example of absurdity.
So in a school, I believe in California,
they noticed that Latino students
were not doing as well in AP and honors classes.
So they canceled AP and honors classes.
Oh, come on.
What are you doing?
You're that's nuts.
No, your job is to help them get better grades, get better opportunity, et cetera.
That's the harder thing to do.
And the right thing to do that your job isn't, I'm going to make everything
equal by taking away the opportunity for higher
achievement for other students. If that's what you're doing and you think you're on the left,
you're not really on the left. I actually think that's like an authoritarian position that no
progressive in their right mind would be in favor of. But it's all definitional. So here's
another example of definitional, communism. Like they say, oh my God, Kamala Harris is a communist.
Well, when you're telling on yourself,
brothers and sisters, when you say that,
that means A, I don't know what communism means,
and B, I don't have any idea
what's going on in American politics.
Kamala Harris is a corporatist, that's her problem.
Not that she's a communist.
She's on the other end of the spectrum.
Right.
The idea that Kamala Harris would come into office and say, that's it.
There's no more private property.
We're going to take all of your homes and it's down government property,
then all your cars, et cetera.
She was not going to get within a billion miles of that.
Her donors would never allow her to get within a billion miles of that.
That is so preposterous that when you say something
like that, it's disqualifying.
Like I can't debate someone who thinks that
Democrats are communists when they're actually
largely corporatists.
You see what I'm saying?
Yeah, so let's go there.
So when people call her a communist,
they're usually referring to certain kinds of policies.
So do you think, I mean, I think it's a,
it's a ridiculous label to assign to Kamala Harris, especially, um,
given the history of communism in the 20th century and what those economic and
political, uh, policies have led to the, the scale of suffering that led to,
and it just degrades the meaning of the word, right?
But to take that seriously
why is she not a communist so you said she's not a communist because she's a
corporatist okay but that they can't be okay everybody in politics is a
corporate just almost almost everybody in politics a corporatist but that
doesn't mean the corporations have completely bought their mind.
They have an influence on their mind
and issues that matter to those corporations.
Yep.
Right?
Yep.
Outside of that, they're still thinking for the voters
because they still have to win the votes.
Barely.
Okay.
So here, let me give you an example
so you see what I'm saying.
So if you just wanted votes,
you would do a lot of what Tim Walz did. And by the way, a lot of what Bernie did, that's why Bernie, who had no media coverage,
went from like 2% in 2015 to by the end about 48% because he was just doing things that were
popular and that American people wanted, et cetera, Because he's not controlled by corporations. By the way, neither is Tom Massey on the right-wing side, on the
Republican side, right? So it's not all, that's why I always say almost all, right? So if you're
doing things that are popular, people love it. So today, what would Kamala Harris do if she actually
just wanted to win, right? So number one, she was trying to pass paid family leave right now. Why? It pulls at 84% and
even 74% of Republicans want it. Why? Because it says, hey, when you have a baby, you should get
12 weeks off. Bond with your baby. Right now, in a lot of states that don't have paid family leave,
you have to go back to work the very next day or you have to use all of your sick days, all your vacation days, just to have one or two weeks
with your baby. Right? So conservatives love paid family leave, liberals love paid family leave,
that's why a poll is so high. So why isn't she proposing it? It's not in our economic plan.
Tim Walz already passed it in Minnesota. He showed how easy it was. If you want votes,
and then you know what's going to happen if you propose paid family leave, the Republicans are
going to go, no, our beloved corporations don't want to spend another dollar on moms, right?
And they fall for that trap. And then you're in infinitely better shape. So why doesn't she do it?
She doesn't do it because her corporate donors don't want her to do it. $15 minimum wage, layup, over two thirds of the country wants it because it not only gives
you higher wages for minimum wage folks, but it pushes wages up for others.
And what do the elites say?
Oh, that's going to drive up inflation.
You shouldn't get paid anymore.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, hold on.
So you're saying all the other prices should go up, but the only thing that shouldn't go
up is our wages?
No, our wages should go up, okay?
So these are all easy ones.
Here's another one, anti-corruption.
Why isn't she running on getting money out of politics?
It pulls it over 90%.
Why isn't Trump running on it anymore?
He won when he ran on it in 2016.
He didn't mean a word of it, but he ran on it.
It was smart.
They don't do it because their corporate donors take their
heads off if they do it.
So in contradiction to that, why did she propose to raise
the corporate tax rate from whatever 21% to 28%?
Because that's easy because that is something that's super
popular and she's not going to do it.
That's why.
So, so guys, this is,
this is where I break the hearts of Blue Maga.
Uh, Blue Maga thinks, oh my God, these Democrats, they're angels.
And the right wing is, and the Republicans are evil and, and they,
they work for big business, but not Kamala Harris, not Joe Biden, right?
Okay.
Well, Donald Trump took the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%.
So that's trillions of dollars that got transferred.
Because guys, you got to understand, if the corporations don't pay it, we have to pay
it.
Because we're running up these giant deficits, and eventually either they're going to, not
eventually, they keep raising our taxes in different ways that you're not noticing.
They keep increasing fees and fines and different
ways for the government to collect money. So we're paying for it. And on top of that,
eventually they're going to cut your social security and Medicare because they're going to say,
oh, we don't have any options left anymore. Yeah, you don't have any options left anymore
because you kept giving trillions of dollars in tax cuts to corporations.
So we're going to have to pay for that. So then Trump, then Biden says, oh my God,
I'm going to bring corporate taxes back up
to 28%. I'm like, wait, hold on. They were at 35. You already did a sleight of hand and said 28.
Then he gets into office and Manchin says, no, 25. That's the highest I'll go. And he goes,
okay, fine, 25. And then while you're not looking, they just dump it. They don't even do 25, it's still at 21.
So hear me now, quote me later,
I do predictions on the show all the time
because you should hold me accountable,
you should hold all your pundits accountable.
If you held all your pundits accountable,
we'd be the last man standing
and that's kind of what happened.
Okay, so I guarantee you,
she will not increase corporate taxes.
So would the same be the case for price controls
or the NT price gouging that she's proposing?
So it's not price controls, it's price gouging?
It is price controls, but minimum wage
is price controls also.
Now we're gonna get into a lot of minutiae,
but I'll try to keep it broad.
So price controls are a disaster, they never work.
If you say, oh, here's a banana,
it has to stay at a
dollar a pound and make up a number, right? Well, supply and demand is going to move and then that's
going to – and so the minute it moves to $2 where the price should be, then you're going to run into
shortages. We all know this. It's a bad idea, right? But are there laws against price gouging?
There already are and they're a good idea. So why? Like you have a natural disaster, all of a sudden the water that was a dollar, now they're charging $100.
The government has to come in, democratic capitalism, they come in and go,
no, I'm going to protect the people. So you're not allowed to price gouge,
you know, maybe charge $2, et cetera, but you're not going to charge $100. But it is temporary.
We get that done, we end the problem there, and then we bring it back to a normal supply
and demand.
Okay?
So that's what she's proposing.
That's all political because the price gouging has already passed.
They did it in 21 and 22, and so now the grocery stores are actually low margin business.
She says grocery stores, that's how I know she doesn't mean it,
because the grocery stores weren't the problem, consumer goods were the problem.
Those companies. She's following the polls where most people say that the groceries are too
expensive. So she's just basically saying the most popular thing. Yeah. 100%. And you could
tell in which proposals she means it and which proposals she doesn't because of the, of the framing.
Right.
So this is a mediocre example, but in housing, she said, we have to stop
private equity from buying, uh, houses in bulk.
I'm like, huh, curious that they put the word in bulk there.
Why does it have to be in bulk?
Why don't we just stop them from buying any residential home?
Like you could set up normal boundaries, right?
For example, Charlie Kirk was on the Young Turks this week.
By the way, sorry to take that tangent.
I really enjoyed that conversation.
I really enjoyed that you talked to, that was like civil.
You guys disagreed pretty intensely,
but like that was a lot of respect.
I really enjoyed that.
Thank you, brother. That was like, that was a lot of respect. I really enjoyed that.
Thank you, brother.
That was beautiful.
Yeah, you and Charlie Kirk and I think Anna was there.
Yeah, that's right.
So, yeah, quick tangent.
Look, I've done a lot of yelling online.
Okay, and I yell when A,
there's a issue that you should be passionate about. 40,000 people, 25,000 women and children
slaughtered in Gaza. If you're not emotionally upset by that and you think it's no big deal,
I think that's a problem. But when you add gaslighting on top, that's what drives me crazy.
And then when you add filibustering on top, then that sets me off. So for all my life,
right wing has gone on cable and filibustered. They take
up so much more time than the left wing guests. And the left wing guests always like, oh, okay,
well, I'm offended. He's taking up too much time. No, brother, go over the top. Go over the top.
You're not going to talk over me. I'm going to talk over you. Okay. So, and then when you gaslight and you go, oh no, 1200 people in Israel being killed is awful, which it is,
but 40,000 people being killed in Gaza is no big deal.
We should keep giving them money, keep killing, keep killing.
And that that's normal.
No, it's not normal.
I'm not gonna let you say it's normal.
That's nuts, okay?
When you, like we were against the Iraq War,
there was only two shows that were on the air nationally that were against the Iraq war, there was only two shows that were on the air nationally.
I were against the Iraq war us and democracy now with Amy Goodman.
And, and at the time I used to yell all the time because mainstream media would gaslight the
fuck out of us. We're going to be greeted as liberators. Me and Ben Mankiewicz on the air.
Ben doesn't yell as much. He's now the host of Turner Classic Movies, but we're, he's saying it in a calm way.
I'm saying it in a screaming way.
We're not going to be greeted as liberators.
When you drop a bomb on someone's head, they don't greet you as a liberator.
Stop saying insane things.
And seven out of 10 Americans thought that Saddam Hussein had personally attacked us
on nine 11, we got lied into that war by corporate media.
Okay.
Now there's one, there's a couple of good things that Trump has done.
One is get people to realize corporate media
is the matrix, right?
And so now, and get them to an anti-war position.
He himself doesn't have an anti-war position,
but his voters do, and that's a positive.
We can come back to that.
But these days, the reason why the Charlie Kirk conversations
are going great, and Rudy Giuliani and Mike Lindell and historically though, we've been,
go back again, 10 years, 20 years, we've always been respectful when someone comes on our show
and we have a debate. As long as they're not yelling, I matched the tenor of the host, right?
You and I are having a reasonable conversation. I'm not raising my voice.
I'm not yelling at you for no reason, right?
So now when Charlie's not going to battle anymore
for like talking points, I'm shutting off my mind,
all I'm doing is yelling at you,
then I'm gonna yell back at him.
But now he's saying,
okay, let's have a reasonable conversation.
Great, I love it.
I love reasonable conversation. It was great love it. I love reasonable conversations.
It was great.
It was refreshing.
And, uh, what were we talking about?
You buying up, buying up housing.
Yes.
So Charlie, when he was on said, Hey, listen, you know, I think that there
should be a cap though.
I forget if he said 10 billion or a hundred billion in assets.
If you have less than that, you should be still be able to do real estate as an
investment, even if it's residential.
But above that, it gets to, okay, that's good.
No problem.
Well, we can have a debate about that.
We can figure out is the right number 10, 125.
No problem.
You could put in reasonable limitations, but, but we got to get them to stop
buying the homes.
So when Kamala Harris says, Oh, we'll stop them from buying homes in bulk.
I'm like, okay, there's the loophole.
And so they're going to use that loophole.
And besides, which it's not going to pass.
Wall street owns the government.
So there's no way corporate Republicans and Democrats, which are about 98% of
politicians are going to limit private equity.
And so when do we ever get a little bit of change when Democrats are in charge?
They do five to 15% of their agenda.
And that's not because they're warmhearted,
it's a release valve, right?
Oh, see, under Obama, we got about 5% change.
And what was that?
That was Obamacare, right?
That was most of the change that we got.
And what's the greatest part of Obamacare. And now a lot of right-wing also agree, almost all of right-wing
agree about this portion, which is they got rid of the bias against preexisting
conditions.
Why did they do that particularly?
Because the country was about to get in a fucking rage.
We all have preexisting conditions.
If you deny me when I'm sick,
what the fuck's the point of insurance? Right? And the anger had gotten to a nuclear level.
So they're like, release valve, get rid of pre-existing conditions. Let's go back to
just milking them regularly. And oh, by the way, put in a mandate so that they have to buy it from
us. Right? Do you know who originally came up with Obamacare? The Heritage
Foundation. It was their proposal. Romney did it in Massachusetts. It was called Romneycare.
I think this is a super important election, but I've earned the credibility to be able to say that
because in 2012, I said this is a largely unimportant election. Mitt Romney and Barack Obama's policies on economic issues are near
identical. Obamacare was literally Romneycare. Right now the left says, oh, the Heritage
Foundation, it's so dangerous, Project 2025. Well, brother, they're the ones who wrote Obamacare.
And you say that's the greatest change in the world, right? So that's why the Democrats,
yeah, I'll take the 10% change overall.
I think Biden did about 15%, Obama did 5%,
but they're gonna, they'll also march you backwards
by deregulating like Clinton did and Obama did,
their bank bailouts like Obama did.
But 10% is better than 0%, but it's not to help you.
It's the release valve, so the system keeps going.
Is it possible to steel man the case that
not all politicians are corporatists?
Or maybe how would you approach that?
For example, this podcast has a bunch of sponsors
and I give zero fucks about what they think
about what I'm saying.
I have zero control over me.
Maybe you could say that's not because it's not a lot of money or maybe, maybe
I'm a unique person or something like this, but I just think it's possible to
have, and I would like to believe a lot of politicians are this way, that they
have ideas and while they take money they kind of
uh see it as a game that you know you accept the money kind of go to certain parties
hug people and so on but it doesn't actually fundamentally compromise uh your integrity on
issues you actually care about. I can steel man almost anything. I can steel man Trump.
I can steel man conservatives easily, right?
Corporate politician is a hard one.
So first, it's not all politicians.
We can start out nice and easy.
Tom Massey, now Hawley and Gates,
not taking corporate PAC money.
Bernie, the squad, they don't take corporate PAC money.
You could disagree on either end of those folks
on social issues, but generally,
they are a thousand times less corrupt.
They're more honest.
And part of the reason you might hate the squad
is because they're so honest.
They tell you their real opinion on social issues
that you really disagree with.
A lot of the corporate politicians won't do that
because they're trying to get as many votes as possible
so they can filet their donors
when they get into office and do all their favors for them.
Okay, but you see I'm already falling apart on the steel mending of corporate politicians.
Let's zoom in on that.
So if you take corporate PAC money,
you're, that's it, you're corrupted.
Can you imagine yourself, say you're a politician,
you're a president, you're a human being,
you're a person with integrity,
you're a person who thinks about the world.
You're saying if I was a corporate PAC
and I gave you a billion dollars,
you still, you'd be, I could tell you anything.
So like, everything is a spectrum,
humanity is a spectrum.
So can you find outliers who could take corporate PAC money
and still be principled enough to resist this lure?
Yeah.
And I would hope that I would be a person like that,
but I wouldn't take corporate PAC money.
But if you force me to,
I think I would still stay principled and do it.
Could you find 10, 20 other people in the country?
Yeah. But on average, that is not what will happen.
What will happen is they will take the money
and do exactly as they are told.
I think most people have integrity.
Okay, okay, hold on.
So what I'm more worried about
is when you take corporate PAC money,
it's not that you are
immediately sold, it's over time.
Over time, that's true.
So yeah, I get it, but I wonder if the integrity
that I think most people have can withstand
the gradual slippery slope of the effect of corporate money.
Which if what I'm saying is true,
that most people have integrity,
one of the ways to solve the effect of corporate money
is term limits, because it takes time to corrupt people.
You can't buy them immediately,
and then the term limits can, for the listener.
Cenk is shaking his head.
Yeah, no, so look, you're right that over time it gets way worse.
And as we talked about earlier, Biden's a great example that comes in anti-corruption,
winds up being totally pro-corruption by the end.
But he was also here for almost all of it as we started in a world that was not run
by money in politics and is now completely run by money in politics.
So does it get worse over time?
Cinema is a, Kristen Cinema in Arizona is a great example
that comes in as a progressive,
doesn't wanna take back money,
cares about the average person, et cetera.
Over time, she becomes the biggest corporatist in the Senate
and a total disaster.
But if you say that the majority of politicians have,
I don't know if this is what you're saying,
the majority of politicians have integrity?
No, let's start at the majority of human beings.
And I think that politicians are not,
they are not a special group of sociopaths.
I think they are.
They lean a little bit towards that direction, but they're not like only sociopaths. I think they are. They lean a little bit towards that direction,
but they're not like only sociopaths going to politics.
It's like you have to have some sociopathic qualities,
I think, to go into politics,
but they're not complete sociopaths.
I think they do have integrity,
because sometimes for very selfish reasons,
it's not all about money, even for a selfish person,
for a narcissist, it's also about being recognized for having had positive impact on the world.
Yeah, I get it.
But all right, so let's break it down.
So first, human beings, then we'll get to politicians.
Do human beings have integrity?
Well, it's a spectrum.
So some people have enormous integrity. Some people have no integrity.
So there is not one type or character.
Right.
So some people have a ton of empathy for other human beings and they literally
feel it like I feel the pain of someone else and I'm not alone.
Most people feel the pain of someone else.
If you see a on video, a baby being hurt.
And overwhelming majority
of human beings will go, no, right?
You have empathy.
That's a natural feeling that you have.
Some people have no empathy because they're on the extreme end of the
spectrum, uh, serial killers and Donald Trump.
Uh, okay.
And so I'm, I'm partly joking, but not really.
He has never demonstrated any empathy that I have ever seen for any other human being.
I'm going to trigger some right wingers because they think every terrible thing he
said is out of context or joking or not real or fake news, but his chief of staff
didn't make it up.
He called the people who went into the military suckers and losers.
Why, why did he say that?
If just hang with me for a second, don't have your head explode.
Okay.
And I'm not saying the likes, I'm saying to the right wingers out there.
Right.
So the reason is because if you're like Trump and you don't, you
literally don't feel the empathy.
You think, why the hell would I go in the military?
Get killed for someone else.
What a sucker.
No, I'm going to stay out of the military. I'm going to stay alive. I'm going to make a ton of money and I'm going to look out for myself.
And he assumes because everybody does this.
You assume that everyone thinks like you do, but they don't.
So Trump assumes everybody's as much of a dirt bag as he is.
And because he doesn't feel it, he doesn't feel the empathy.
And so he's like, yeah, you'd be an idiot, a sucker feel it he doesn't feel the empathy and so
he's like yeah you'd be an idiot a sucker and a loser to go into the military and have
sacrifice for other people so you see the spectrum even if you think Trump's not on that end and you
think I'm wrong about that you get that there are people on that end right so you have a spectrum
of integrity empathy etc that's what I would call your hardware. You layer on top of that, your software.
Okay.
And the software is cultural influences, your parents, media, your friends,
all these are cultural influences.
So now when you're in certain industries, they value more integrity.
So religious leaders, if you're doing it right, which is also very rare, right?
But if you're doing it right, you're supposed to have empathy for the poor, the needy, the whole
flock, right? So that profession is incentivizing you towards empathy and integrity, okay? And even
then a giant amount of people abuse it, right? But okay, good. In politics, it creates incentives
for the opposite, no integrity. And that software, to your point, over time, gets stronger and
stronger and stronger until it takes over. Now, you might have someone with a lot of integrity,
like Tom Massey, right? A Republican from Kentucky. And Whether I agree with him or disagree with him on policy,
I get that the brother is actually doing it based on principles. There isn't any amount of money you
can give Tom Massey for him to change his principles. Why? He's on the principled end of
the spectrum as a human being. So is Bernie. They're on the same part of that spectrum.
But for most people, the great majority of the spectrum, if you overload them
with software that incentivizes them to not have integrity, they will succumb.
And now let's switch to politicians in particular.
Why do I think that they're on average, far more likely to be on the sociopathic
part of the spectrum because of the incentives and disincentives.
So this changes every congressional cycle.
And when just Democrats were winning a lot, it got all the way down to 87 and a
half percent. But on average for congressional elections,
the person with more money wins 95% of the time.
It doesn't matter if they're a liberal conservative, Republican or Democrat,
or any ideology they have, 95%.
Okay, so now let's say you got the 5% that went in that are not hooked on the money.
Well, they're gonna get a primary challenge.
Then they're gonna get a general election challenge.
And 95% of the time, the one with more money wins.
So eventually this system cycles through
until almost only the corrupt are left.
Wait a second, is that real?
95%, so if you have more money,
95% of the time you win, huh?
Yes.
I'd like to believe that's less the case for, for example, for higher you get.
Yes, that's true.
You're right.
So you know why?
So the presidential race is ironically in some ways the least corrupt.
So let's dive into why.
If you're running a local race anywhere in the country, you're going to get almost no
press coverage, meaning a congressional race, right?
If you're running a Senate race in the middle of Montana, you're going to get almost no press coverage, meaning a congressional race. If you're running a Senate race in the middle of Montana, you're going to get almost no media coverage. That's
where your money in politics has the most effect because then you could just buy the airwaves.
You outspend the other guy, you get all the ads, plus you get the friendly media coverage because
you just bought a couple of million dollars of ads in the middle of Montana. So the local news loves you,
the TV stations, the radio stations, the papers. So some of the papers are principled. They might
say, oh no, but overall they're not calling you a radical. They're not calling you anything.
And you're buying those races. But when you get to the presidential race, that's much harder.
Because presidential race, you have earned media, free media that overwhelms paid media.
Perfect example is 2016.
Hillary Clinton outraces Trump by about two to one, but she loses anyway.
Why?
Cause Trump got almost twice as much earned media as she did.
And the earned media is better.
It's inside the content, right?
That is definitely better.
So in a presidential election, as long as you got past the primary, you could
actually win with not that much money.
And, and that's part of the reason why I have hope Lex, because all you got to do
is get past a Republican or democratic primary.
And now that's very, very, very difficult, but Trump did it.
Right.
Now he took it in the wrong direction, but he did get,
leave a blueprint for how to do it.
And so once you get to the general election, you're off to the race.
You could do any goddamn thing you like.
Okay.
You could be super popular.
You don't have to give a shit about the donors.
You can get into office.
You could bully your own party and the other party into doing what you want.
And you can get everything done.
You could even get money out of politics.
So don't lose hope.
I mean, we even started operation hope at TYT and
our first project was to knock Biden out.
And everybody said, you guys are nuts.
That's totally impossible.
And we knocked Biden out.
Right.
Did we do it alone?
Of course not.
We were a small part of it, right?
But we laid the groundwork for hope and we laid the
groundwork for when he flopped in the debate, people had already
been told, remember he's bad, he's old, he's not right.
And the debate proved it.
If we hadn't done that groundwork and not just the Young Turks, obviously, but Axelrod
and Carville and Nate Silver and Ezra Klein, et cetera, Charlemagne the God, John
Stewart, all these people helped a lot
so that when the debate happened,
it confirmed the idea that out there
that he was too old and couldn't do it.
So my point is, hope is,
if you lose hope, you're done for,
then they're definitely gonna win, right?
Hope is the most dangerous thing in the world
for the elites.
So whether you're right-wing or left-wing,
I need you to have hope,
and I need you to understand it's not misplaced.
We just got to get past the primary and we're going to turn this whole thing around.
So you basically a presidential candidate who's a populist who, uh, in part runs on
getting money out of politics.
Okay.
Well then let's talk about Donald Trump.
So to me, the two biggest criticisms of Trump is the, Well, then let's talk about Donald Trump.
So to me, the two biggest criticisms of Trump is the, the fake election scheme.
Out of that whole 2020 election, the fake election scheme is the thing that really bothers me.
And then the second thing across a larger timescale is the The counterproductive
Division that he has created in let's say our public discourse. What are your top five criticisms of Trump? Okay, so
Number one it I have the same exact thing as you the fake elector scheme is
unacceptable totally
Disqualifying so the fakeive scheme was a literal coup attempt. So he doesn't win them.
Like for folks who don't know, I need to explain why it's a coup attempt because you just throw
out words and then people get triggered by the words and then they go into their separate corners.
Right? So the January 6th rioters, they were not going to keep the building. That was not a coup attempt. It's not like, oh, the MAGA guys have the building.
I guess they win.
Right?
No, that was never going to happen.
So what was the point of the January 6th riot?
It was to delay the proceedings.
Why did it matter that they were going to delay the proceedings?
Because if you can't certify the election, they wanted general confusion
and chaos so that the Republicans in Congress could say, well, we don't know who won, so we're going to have to kick it back to the states.
In the states, they had the fake electors ready.
And remember the fake electors are not Trump's electors.
There's both candidates have a slate of electors, Biden's electors and Trump's electors.
They go to the Trump electors first in this plan and half the Trump electors go,
no, I'm not going to
pretend Trump won the election when he didn't win the election.
So they're like, shit, now we've got to come up with fake electors.
Okay.
So they enlist these Republicans to go, yeah, I'll pretend Trump won.
Right?
And so they sign a piece of paper that's fraud and that's why a lot of them are now being
prosecuted in the different states. And so the idea is the Republican legislature, legislators then go, we're
sending these new electors in and we think Trump won Arizona and Georgia and
Wisconsin, right?
That was the idea.
That was the plan.
And then you come back to the house at that point, when there are two
different sets of electors, the rule, constitutional rule is the house decides.
But the house decides not on a majority because the Democrats had the majority
at the time, they decide on a majority of the States, they vote by state and
the Republicans had the majority of the States.
So in that way, you steal the election.
Even though Trump didn't
win, you install him back in as president. That is a frontal assault on democracy. And I loathe it.
And then Trump on top just blabbers out, well, sometimes if there's massive fraud in an election,
in other words, I think I won, I don't even think that I'm just saying that I won. Right. He says you can terminate any rule regulation or article, even in the constitution.
No brother, you cannot terminate the constitution because you'd like to do a
fake electors scheme and do a coup against America.
Fuck you.
Okay.
So I'm never going to allow this want to be tyrant to go back into the
white house and endanger
our system. And so you want to endanger the corrupt system? I'm the guy. Okay?
Let's go get that corrupt system and tear it down. If you want to endanger the
real system, democracy, capitalism, the Constitution, then I'm your biggest enemy.
So I'm never going to take that risk. And you see it every time he goes to talk to
a dictator. Look guys, I'm asking you to be princi risk. And you see it every time he goes to talk to a dictator.
Look, guys, I'm asking you to be principled, right?
I asked the left of that and we drive away some of our audience when we do that.
So we got the balls to do that to our, to our own side.
So for the right wing, be honest, if it was Joe Biden or Barack Obama or Kamala
Harris that went and wrote quote unquote love letters to a
communist dictator who runs concentration camps you would say
communist we knew it look at that and Trump literally says about Kim Jong-un we
wrote love letters to one another I fell we fell in love if a Democrat said that
they'd be politically decapitated, right? Their career would be
instantly over, right? But Trump, whatever is Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin, I'm not, don't
get into Russia Russia Russia, but it's just that he's a strong man, right? Kim Jong-un
or any Victor Orban, Duterte in the Philippines. Anytime it's a strong man that says, screw our constitution, screw our rules.
I want total loyalty to one person.
Trump loves them.
He loves them.
He said once, he's like, oh, it's great.
You go to North Korea or China and when the leader walks in, everybody
applauds and everybody listens to what he says.
That's how it should be here. No brother says. That's how it should be here.
No, brother, that's not how it should be here.
You hate democracy, you wanna be the sole guy in charge.
As a populist, you should loathe Donald Trump.
I agree on the fake election scheme.
Can you steal man and maybe educate me on,
there's a book rigged that I started reading.
Is there any degree to which the election was rigged or elections in general are rigged?
So I think the book rigged, the main case they make is not that there are some shady
fake ballots.
It's more the impact of mainstream media and the impact of big tech.
So rigged is another one of those words that triggers people and is ill-defined.
Right.
So let's begin to define it.
So the worst case of rigged is we actually changed the votes.
Right.
So a lot of Trump people think that that's what happened.
Nonsense.
That didn't happen at all.
Okay.
So then you move.
And by the way, some on the left thought the votes were changed in the 2016 primary and it was literally rigged against Bernie.
No, that did not happen. Okay.
That is a massive crime and is very risky and is relatively easy to get caught.
People who are in power are not interested in getting caught. They're not interested in going to jail, et cetera.
It is a very extreme thing.
Could it happen?
Yes, it could happen.
Have I seen any evidence of it happening in my lifetime?
Not really.
Given how much people hate this, you probably just need to find evidence of one
time, like one thing, one vote being changed where you can trace them saying
something in some room somewhere,
that would just explode.
That evidence just doesn't seem to be there.
And by the way, for the right wing who say verify the vote, goddamn right verify the
vote, right?
So you want to have different proposals like paper ballots, recounts, hand recounts, which
by the way, you had not the paper ballots, but the three recounts and a hand recount in
Georgia and so many of these swing states, he lost, he lost, he lost. There was no significant
voter fraud. Now, second thing in terms of rigging is voter fraud. So how, and the right wing believes,
oh my God, there's voter fraud everywhere. Not remotely true. Heritage Foundation does a study,
they want to prove it so badly.
And it turns out no matter how much they move the numbers, the final number they got was
it happens 0.0000006% of the time.
It almost never happens.
They found like 31 instances over a decade or two decades. So it's what counts as voter fraud.
So a lot of times these days it'll be Republicans who do it because it'll be,
and it's not nefarious. It's a knucklehead who goes in and he's, Oh,
I heard they are. They're having non-documented the illegals vote.
So I voted for me and my mom, even though she's dead, but that's fair.
They're doing it. No brother. That, no brother, that's not fair.
That's not how it works, you're under arrest.
So what about non-citizens voting?
So it's preposterous.
Of course non-citizens shouldn't vote and they don't vote.
But you don't have to prove citizenship
when you're voting, right?
No, you do.
I mean, so it depends on what you mean by prove
and when you vote, right?
So you're not allowed to vote as
an undocumented immigrant. So that happens upfront. Again, it's a hall of mirrors. There's so many
different ways to create mirages. So the Republicans will say, well, when you go to the voting booth,
they don't make you show a passport. Yeah, that's true. But you showed it earlier when you registered, right?
And so, and we can get into voter ID laws, there's all sorts of things, but
we got to, we'll speed up the spectrum, right?
So these things almost never happen.
Voter fraud happens, but super rarely, uh, and not enough to swing elections.
And by the way, sometimes if there is an issue, they'll redo an election.
There is actually a process for that.
And it happened in North Carolina because Republicans did voter fraud in this one district. Okay. And it wasn't the
candidate himself. It was this campaign person and they did ballot harvesting. But ballot harvesting,
again, it depends on what you mean. If you're just collecting ballots, that's okay. He changed the
ballots. That's not okay. And so they had to redo that election. So, um, now the real place where it gets rigged is before elections.
And there's two main ways that things get rigged.
One is almost exclusively.
No, that's not fair.
I was going to say Republicans, but Democrats do it too, in a different way.
So Republicans would come in like Brian Kemp is the king of this in Georgia.
So he was against Trump doing it ex post facto.
He's like, no, you idiot.
We don't cheat after the election.
We cheat before the election.
Okay.
So they'll go, well, I mean, you got to clear out the voter rolls every once in a while.
That's true because people die, people move, and you got to clean out the voter rolls.
So then they come in and they go, we will clean them out mainly in black areas.
Okay.
Oh, look at that.
There goes a couple of in black areas. Okay. Oh, look at that. There goes a couple of million, uh, black voters.
Well, some of those, I suppose are real voters, but they'll have to
re-register and then they'll find that out on election day and, oh, well,
now, sorry, you couldn't vote this time.
Remember to re-register next time.
And so do they go, Hey, we're going to take black people off the voter rolls?
No.
What they do is we're having more issues in these districts.
Right.
Here's another way they do it.
How many voting boosts do you have in the area?
So primarily Republican areas will get tons of voting boosts.
So you don't have to wait in line.
You go in, you vote, you go to work.
No problem.
You're in a black area run in a, in a Republican state.
All of a sudden, Hey, look, that city.
Well, we sent you four voting booths.
Oh, you got a million people there.
Well, what are you going to do?
I guess you got to wait in line the whole day.
You can't go to work, et cetera.
So that's the way.
I refuse to believe it's the, it's, it's only the Republicans that do that.
I would say, so that's why I paused.
Yeah.
That just seems too obvious to do by both sides. No, no. The Democrats are so weak, Lex. They mainly don't do that, but they do do
the third thing, which is gerrymandering. So both Republicans and Democrats.
Also, they have favorite flavors of messing with the vote. Okay.
Yeah. So gerrymandering is the best way to rig an election.
That way the politicians pick their voters
instead of the voters picking their politicians, right?
So all these districts are so heavily gerrymandered
that the incumbent almost can't lose.
They'll push most of the voters into one district,
most of the voters in another district
because they don't want competition.
Then you're screwed. The vote isn't rigged, but the district is rigged so that the incumbent wins
almost no matter what. That's why we've gotten so polarized polarized because the gerrymandering creates like 90% of seats that are safe. So they don't have to compromise. They don't have to get to a middle. They could just be
extreme on either side because they already locked it up. Okay. So that's the number one way to rig
an election. Now, finally, the last part of it is maybe the most important, maybe even more important
than gerrymandered and that's the media. So it just happened to RFK Jr. It happened to Bernie in 2015. It happens to any outsider,
right or left. The media, if you're an outsider, will say, well, radical,
number one, they don't platform you, right? So they're not going to have you on to begin with.
Nobody's even going to find out about you. If nobody finds out about you, you're done for.
Right.
So Bernie broke through that because he was so popular and the rallies were so
huge that local news couldn't help, but cover him.
Jesus Christ.
What are all these people doing in the middle of the city?
Right.
And he slowly broke through that.
But do you know that in 2015, as he's doing this miraculous run against Hillary Clinton, nobody thinks he has a chance.
And here comes Bernie and he's almost at 48%.
This is, he had seven seconds of coverage on ABC that year.
They just will not put you on.
That is the number one way they rig an election.
Bobby Kennedy Jr. sitting at 20% in a primary, no town hall.
20% is a giant number, right?
And you're not going to do a town hall. You're not going to do a debate.
12% in the general election, a giant number in a general election, no town hall, no
debate, if no one finds out about you, they don't know to vote for you, right?
If they don't find out your policies, corporate media rigs elections more
than anything else in the world.
Now, this is something you've been a bit controversial about, but the general
sort of standard belief is that there's a left leaning bias in the mainstream
media because as I think studies show a large majority of journalists are
left leaning and then, uh, that there's a bias in big tech employees of, uh,
big tech companies from search engines to social media are left leaning.
And there, that's a huge majority is left leaning.
So the conventional wisdom is that there is a bias towards the left.
Yeah.
So do you think, first of all, I think you've argued that that's not true,
that there's a bias in the other direction,
but whether there's a bias or not,
do you think that how big of an impact that has
on the result of the election?
Okay, so let's break that down.
Tech and media are totally different.
So let's do media first and we'll do tech.
So on mainstream media,
corporate media, and I actually think that right-wing media like Fox News is part of
corporate media. They just play good cop, bad cop. And so in that realm, the bias is not right or
left, except on social issues. Okay. So, and that's where that image comes from on social issues. Yes. The media is generally on the left and right wing.
Sorry, but like this started in the 1960s and the right wing got super
mad at mainstream media saying that black people were equal to white people.
That's not the case anymore.
Okay.
Right wing calm down.
I'm not calling you all racist, but in the 1960s, were there racism?
Was there racism?
Oh, of course.
Of course.
They wouldn't even let black kids into the schools, right? There was massive segregation
in the South, but a lot in the North as well. And at that point in mainstream media says, well,
I mean, they are citizens. They should have equal rights. And the right wing goes, bias!
Okay. Yeah. I mean, you're kind of right. It is a bias. It is a bias towards equality in that case.
Okay, yeah, I mean, you're kind of right. It is a bias.
It is a bias towards equality in that case.
Uh, but that is perceived as on the left.
Now fast forward to today, you don't have that on the racial issues as obviously
as much as you had it back then, but on gay marriage that existed for a long
time where the media is like, well, they kind of should have the same rights
as straight people, right?
And the right wing went bias. Right.
So, okay.
You're kind of right about that, but at the same time, I would argue
their position is correct.
Right.
So, but can they go too far?
Of course they can go too far.
Okay.
Now, but that's not the main deal guys.
That's to distract you.
The main deal is economic issues.
And again, we say it ahead of time and you can see if we're
right or wrong, right? So we will tell folks when we get to an economic bill, you will see all of a
sudden the guys who theoretically disagree, Fox News and MSNBC close ranks. And you just saw it
happen with price gouging. That issue of price gouging, all of a sudden there's a lot of MSNBC
hosts, CNN hosts, Washington Post writes an op-ed against it and everybody panics.
It's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, wages when they were talking about increasing the minimum wage Stephanie ruled Giants screed against it on MSNBC all of a sudden Fox News and MSNBC
agree right do not touch beloved corporations so now that gets us to our
real bias it's not left or right it's pro-corporate for all the reasons we
talked about before corporate media corporate politicians so if you don't
believe me today whether you're on the right or the left,
watch. Next time an economic issue, where do they fall? How do they react? When anytime it's a
corporate issue, where does the media go? So that's the real bias of the media. And so since the real
bias of the media is pro-corporations, that is not a left-wing position. That is considered more of
a right-wing position. I is considered more of a right-wing
position. I even think that's a misnomer because to be fair to right-wing voters,
they're not pro-corporations. They're not pro-big business. They're not pro-corruption,
but the Republican politicians are, so it gets framed as a right-wing issue.
So if you think that the corporate media is too populist, you just don't get it. They aren't. They hate populism.
So now when you turn to tech. Tech is a complicated one because yeah, people write the code.
If they're left-wingers, they're going to have certain assumptions and they might write that
into the codes or the rules. But they're also, generally speaking, wealthy.
They're usually white, they're usually male, and those biases also go in.
There's a lot of people on the left who object to that bias.
Okay, but that's a fair and interesting conversation, and one we have to be careful of, and one
we could hopefully find a middle ground on.
But that's not the major problem. The major reason why big tech gets attacked is because they are competitors of who
social media competes with mainstream media.
So mainstream media has been attacking big tech from day one, pretending that
it's a, they're really concerned.
Yeah, they're really concerned because that's
their competition and they're getting their ass handed to them.
I did a story on the Young Turks about CNN article
about all the dangers of social media.
I'm like, guys, this is written by their advertising department.
In fact, they go to the advertisers and they find a random
video on YouTube or Facebook, right out of billions of videos.
And they're like, look at your ad is on this video.
Do you denounce and reject every big tech company and every member of social media?
And the advertisers like, yeah, I do.
Right.
Meanwhile, they're doing MILF Island on TV.
Okay.
I didn't know that.
Okay, there's literally a show that came out recently
where it's moms and their sons, and they fuck each other.
Oh wow.
Okay, they don't have sex with their mom.
They have sex with a different mom, or they date,
but then the show is, oh, then they go off into a corner, et cetera.
Right.
I'm like, you're doing this kind of like the worst degrading, ridiculous,
immoral programming, and then you found a video on YouTube that has a problem.
Get the fuck out of here.
You're just trying to kneecap your competition.
Let's talk about the saga of Joe Biden.
So over the past year, over the past few months, can you just rewind?
Where have you, maybe tell the story of Joe Biden as you see from the election perspective?
Yes.
So about a year ago, I'm looking at the polling and first of all, I have eyes and ears.
So whenever I see Biden, I'm like, this is a disaster.
And then I go and talk to real people.
And when I say real people, I mean, not in politics,
that's not their job, right?
Because people involved in politics for media
have a certain perspective and it's colored
by all of the exchanges in mainstream media,
social media, etc.
Real people aren't on Twitter having political fights.
They're not watching CNN religiously, etc.
Whenever I was at a barbecue, you guys all Democrats in some barbecues?
Yeah.
Uh, what do you guys think of Joe Biden?
Like almost in unison, too old.
Every real person said too old.
So I look at what real people are saying.
That's why I thought Trump was going to win in 2016.
I go in the middle of Ohio.
I can't see a Hillary Clinton sign for hundreds of miles.
Right.
It's Trump paraphernalia everywhere.
Right.
So that's not end all be all.
You could say it's anecdotal, but you begin to collect data points.
Right.
But then the real data points are in polling. Okay. So now I'm looking at Biden polling. He's in the thirties.
No incumbent in the thirties has ever come back to win. So I'm like, it's already over. Then all of
a sudden, Oh my God, Trump takes the lead with Latinos. It's double over. Later in the process,
Trump took the lead with young
voters.
I'm like, this is the most over election in history.
A Democrat cannot win if they're not winning young voters.
That's impossible.
Trump's cutting into his lead with black voters.
This thing is over.
Right.
And I go tell people and they're like, you're crazy.
Why do they think I'm crazy? Cause MSNBC is lying to them 24 seven, telling them that Joe Biden, uh,
created slice bread and the wheel and fire.
And by the way, and my favorite target point was he's a dynamo behind the scenes.
I'm like, okay, let me get this right.
It's like an SNL skit, right?
I'm like, so behind the scenes is like, all right, Sally, get me the memo on that.
And we're okay.
We're going to do this.
And I'm in command of the material.
Then he goes in front of the cameras.
And anyways, why would any politician do that?
Why would they be terrible in front of the camera and great off camera?
It doesn't make any sense.
But once you get people enough propaganda and MSNBC created blue
MAGA, right, they'll believe anything.
So they believe that Biden was dynamic and young and that he was the best
possible candidate to beat Donald Trump.
When in reality, he was about the only Democrat who couldn't beat Donald Trump.
So number one, I don't co-sign on a bullshit.
I don't care which side you're on.
Number two, as you heard earlier, I can't have Trump winning. It endangers the country. It endangers our constitution, etc. So I'm going to do something about it.
And so I start something called Operation Hope on the Young Turks. And we asked the audience,
what should we do? Right? So there's different
projects in Operation Hope. And, but the first project that pops up is knock Biden out of the
race. Okay. And so then I ask our paying members on TYT, I say, guys, you're going to vote and then
I'm going to do what you tell me to do. If you say, no, I like Biden, or I think Biden's the
best candidate, or even if he isn't, we're not going to be able to win on this.
So don't do it.
Right.
Should I enter the primary against Biden?
Okay.
76, 24, go enter.
Right.
I'm a populist.
You tell me to go, you're my paying members.
You're my boss.
I'm going to go.
Okay.
So I enter the primary.
Now I'm not born in the country. So people are going to freak
out about that. I'm a talk show host. Like the establishment media despises me, right? So I'm
not going to get any airtime. In fact, we consider hiring the top booking agent in New York. We talk
to him and he says, well, you know, I'm actually in New York this week. And he says, I'm going to go talk to those guys and I'll come, I'll come back to you.
And he was really decent because normally, you know, he charges a lot.
Just take the money, right?
And go, oh yeah, yeah, I'll get you on.
But he was a wonderful guy.
He said, I talked to them, you're banned.
So don't, don't do it.
Like you're not, you're banned at CNN, you're banned at MSNBC.
And I think you're banned on Fox News, but I'm not sure.
Long odds, why do you do it? Because if you think we're going to crash into the iceberg,
you might as well bum rush to captain's course. I'm lunging at the wheel. What difference can I
make? Well, I can make a difference by going on every show on planet Earth and going,
he's too old, he's in the 30s, he has no chance of winning, no chance of winning. I go on Charlamagne
show, Breakfast Club, right? Charlamagne agrees. All of a sudden we're having Buzz and then people
go, oh, Charlamagne said he has no chance of winning. Then Charlamagne's on The Daily Show,
talks to Jon Stewart. Jon Stewart does a segment. This is not necessarily causal,
but Buzz is building, right? So then John Stewart does a segment. Not, this is not necessarily causal, but buzz is building, right?
So then John Stewart does a segment, if you remember,
and people got super pissed at him,
too old, can't win, and all that buzz is building.
Meanwhile, unrelated to us, David Axelrod and James Carville,
and I'm like, guys, figure it out.
Who does Axelrod speak for?
The top advisor for Barack Obama. Who is James Carville the top advisor for Barack Obama.
Who is James Carville the top advisor for?
The Clintons.
This is the Clintons and the Obamas sending their emissaries to say,
we can read a poll.
He's going to lose, change direction.
So when the debate happens, we laid the groundwork.
If we hadn't laid the groundwork, debate would have been the first time that Blue Maga would have thought, oh, maybe Biden can't win, right?
But since all of a sudden and strange bedfellows, I loathe Nancy Pelosi, but she was on our side.
I got a lot of issues with Bill Maher.
He was on our side, right?
I got a lot of issues with Axelrod and Carville and they were on our side.
So the people who believed in objective reality
kind of independently made a plan,
let's show people objective reality.
And we did and we drove them out
and it made all the difference.
So you think he stepped down voluntarily
or was he forced out?
Both.
So again, it depends on what you mean.
So was he forced out?
Of course he was forced out.
You think he just woke up and he's like,
oh yeah, you know what, screw my legacy.
I don't want to be a two-term president.
I'll just drop out for no reason.
No, we forced them out.
Of course we did, right?
And when I say we, I had a tiny, tiny, tiny role.
The people who had the major roles,
Nancy Pelosi, Barack Obama, and all those folks.
But even they were not the main driving force. The
number one driving force were the donors. What is the source of power of Bernie or Massey? The people.
What is the source of power for Biden? The donors. The donors made Biden. He is the donor's
candidate. And that's why he told the donors, nothing will fundamentally change.
And the donors, that's why he told the donors, nothing will fundamentally change.
That is like, you can, if you say like, No, Jank, I think you're too extreme
that Biden works for the donors 98%. I didn't think he only works for them 80% or 55%.
Fine.
We could have that debate, but you can't argue that it isn't his source of power.
And you can't argue it anymore.
Even if you were going to argue it earlier, because once the donors said, we're not giving you any more money,
he didn't have any options.
He couldn't, he couldn't go on.
So, but was he forced out at like knife point or something?
No.
So was it voluntary?
Yeah.
Ultimately, if Biden decided to stay in, there was nothing we could do about it.
And so he had to voluntarily make that decision, but he voluntarily made
it because he had no choice left.
Yeah, I wish he stepped down voluntarily
from a place of strength.
So I think presidents, I think politicians in general,
especially at the highest levels, want legacy.
To me, at least, one of the greatest things you could do
is to walk away from at
the top. I mean, George Washington, to walk away from power is I think universally respected,
especially if you got a good speech to go with it and you do it really well. Not in
some kind of cynical or a calculator, some kind of transactional way, but just like as
a great leader.
And maybe be a little bit even more dramatic
than you need to be in doing it.
Yeah, I thought that would be a beautiful moment
and then launch some kind of democratic process
for electing a different option.
Not only did I agree with you 100%,
I reached one of his top advisors,
one of the guys you see in the press all the time,
as in his inner circle.
I never said that before because we were in the middle of it
and I'm never gonna betray anyone's confidence
and I'll never say who it was, okay?
But he was gracious enough to meet with me
as I was about to enter the primary.
And look, it's smart too, because you get information, intelligence, et cetera.
Is this guy going to be trouble or not trouble, right?
But at least he took the meeting.
And the case I made is exactly the one you just said, Lex.
I said, if he drops, this is about 10 months ago.
I said, if he drops out now, they build statues of him, right?
The Democrats, if you're a right-winger, you hate him, I get it.
But the Democrats would have said he beat Trump and protected democracy in 2020.
And he steps down graciously now to make sure we beat Trump again in 2024.
And he lets go of power voluntarily.
You're, he's going to be a hero, an absolute hero.
But if he doesn't, you're going to force all of us to kick the living crap out of
him and tell everybody he's an egomaniac, which he is, and he's doing this for two.
So that he could be, if you don't know Washington in that bubble, if you're a
one-term president, you're a loser.
If you're a two-term president, you have a legacy and you're historic.
He's running for one reason, one reason only.
My legacy.
I will be a two term president.
I will be considered historic.
I'm like, brother, now you're going to be considered the villain, the villain of the story.
You're handing it right back to Trump.
You're not going to win.
And you know, look at the numbers.
Any political professional knows you're not going to win and you know, look at the numbers. Any political professional knows you're not going to win.
So you have hero or villain and you get to choose, but if you think you're going
to be a hero and be Trump, that is not a choice you have, that is not going to
happen and they didn't believe us.
But by then they did.
Well, you're troubled by the, um, how Kamala Harris was selected after he stepped down?
Yes and no.
So I argued for an open convention.
And so if Biden had stepped down
when we were trying to get people
into the primary and knock them out,
then that would have been a perfect solution.
Then all the governors could go in,
Walls, Beshear, Whitmer, Kamala Harris goes in,
obviously. They have a real primary. At that point, me and later Dean Phillips came in, me,
Mary Ann wouldn't drop out. Me and Dean would definitely drop out because our whole point was
get other people in the race, make sure we win. Then you would have had a great primary. It would
have been the right way to do it both morally, you know, constitutionally, et cetera, but also as a matter of politics,
cause you would have gotten a lot of coverage for your young, exciting
candidates. Uh, and you would have legitimized the idea of that you're
protecting democracy. Okay. So that didn't happen because of Biden.
It is what it is. So now when Biden drops out,
at least do a vestige of democracy,
go to the commission and do what it's designed to do,
which is pick a candidate. Ezra Klein made a great case for this in a New York Times podcast
that he did. That made a huge difference and he was great for doing that. So I believe in an
open convention, but I know Democrats, they love to anoint because they don't trust the people.
So they think the elites are geniuses. Don't worry.
We'll pick the right candidate.
Yeah.
I remember when you picked Hillary Clinton, how'd that work out?
Right.
And I remember when you said Joe Biden was the right candidate in 2024.
How'd that work out?
Do not anoint.
Right.
So, but in the end, they didn't.
So what happened was Biden does the first announcement.
He either forgot or on purpose didn't put Kamala Harris in there.
So there's all this kumbaya now. Nah, they don't like each other. Okay. And Biden's been screwing
her over the entire time she's been vice president. So he doesn't put her in the original statement.
And I'm like, whoa, I do a live video immediately. I'm like, Kamala Harris is not in the statement,
right? In the middle of my video, they put out a second one, okay, okay, fine. Kamala Harris, right? Because that's too much for the president not to endorse.
You think he was like really, like somebody like stormed into the room? I said you absolutely must.
I don't know. I wasn't there, but probably, right? Or they planned it. I don't know. But the bottom
line is it was glaring that he didn't put her in the first letter Okay, so he had to put her in the second one fine. No problem, but
Obama Pelosi and Schumer did not endorse Kamala Harris
That's huge. Normally the Democrats would all endorse her and would all say she's anointed
Shut up everybody and then MSNBC would scream shut up. Shut up
She's anointed right Right. But they didn't
do that. So then Kamala Harris had to win over the delegates. And I thought she would win them
over in the convention, but she locked them up in two days. And she, I know because I know delegates
cause I ran and the delegates are calling me saying she's on, she's getting on a zoom right now
with us. Right. She went to all the states and worked her ass off
and locked up enough delegates
to get the nomination in two days.
Yeah, but come on, it's Biden endorsed.
Of course.
So why is that an of course?
Why not say sort of layout walls and Shapiro
and Kamala Harris and the options that say,
let's like, at least the facade of democracy, of a democratic process.
There's what should happen and what is likely to happen.
So should Biden not have endorsed?
Yeah, of course.
I think Biden should have done the same thing as Obama and Pelosi and not
endorsed and say, hey, we'd love to have a process where we figure
out who the right nominee is.
And at that point, I'm really worried about Kamala Harris because she's doing word salads
nonstop.
Right?
So I'm like, don't make the same mistake we did before and just pick someone out of a
hat.
Test them, test them.
You get stronger candidates when you test them.
The authoritarian nature of the DNC drives me crazy.
They don't believe in testing candidates. They don't believe in testing candidates.
They don't believe in letting their own voters decide.
And look, when we were in the primary,
they canceled the Florida election.
And then, and they took me, Dean, and Marianne
off the ballot in North Carolina and Tennessee.
I'm like, guys, if you're gonna make a case
for democracy in the general election,
and you cancel elections in the primaries,
do you not get how ridiculous
you look, how hypocritical you look?
Right?
So I didn't want them to buy into endorse anyone, but I'm shocked that they didn't
all endorse her because normally what happens is they all endorse.
So bottom line Lex is did she like earning in a perfect system, not even close, right.
But did she earn it enough in this imperfect way where at least she showed
some degree of competence that assuaged my concerns?
Yes.
So, because a normal Democrat would bungle that they wouldn't go talk like
Hillary Clinton, when they talk to the delegates, she would assume that she's
the queen and that they would all bow their heads.
She would, you know, so the fact that she did
elementary politics correct,
for Democrats, that's like a big win.
It just really frustrated me because
it smelled of the same thing of fucking over Bernie
in 2015, 16, and RFK and just the anointing aspect.
Now they seem to have gotten lucky in this situation
that it's very possible that Kamala Harris
would have been selected through a democratic process.
But I have to say, listening to the speeches at DNC,
Walls was amazing, Shapiro was really strong,
and Kamala actually was much better
as compared to her as a candidate
previously, but personally don't think she would have been the result of a democratic process.
So you don't often give your opinions, but when you give the opinions, I actually agree 90,
like a huge percentage of the time in this conversation. So I fought for Shapiro in the
primary and when she was trying to pick for a VP, cause I thought there's no way she's going to
pick walls. He's way too, not just progressive, but more importantly, populist, right?
So I didn't think she'd go in that direction.
And Shapiro actually did a bunch of populist things in Pennsylvania.
That's part of the reason why he's so popular in Pennsylvania.
He looks like a smooth talking politician, but his actions are pretty good.
And so Shapiro was great.
Walls was great.
The Obamas are legendary.
Even Clinton at his advanced age makes terrific points in a
speech where you go, well, that one's hard to argue with.
Right.
And so they all, I'm shocked at the competence of the DNC,
shocked at it, but of all those likes, so you can give a good
speech and the Obama's give a mean speech, but I saw Obama
as president, you know,
he didn't deliver on that.
So, but the one guy that stood out is walls.
And the reason is because he's a real person.
Yeah.
Real person, populous.
We all got to work towards picking the most genuine candidates.
So here, uh, on the right wing side, for example, I would prefer a Marjorie Taylor
Green to a Mitch McConnell any day a Marjorie Taylor Green to
a Mitch McConnell any day.
Marjorie Taylor Green is genuine.
She might be genuinely not, so I don't agree with her.
She might be even more right wing than others, but I believe that she means it.
And I'll take that any day over a fraud corporatist like Mitch McConnell, who's just gonna do
what his donors command of him, et cetera.
I gotta ask you, because I also love, Bernie still got it.
I love Bernie, I always have.
I enjoyed his, I think he might still do it,
but I enjoyed his conversations with Tom Hartman.
He's a genuine one, like Bernie,
even though you disagree with him,
that's a genuine human being.
Yep.
So just talk about that.
Is it trouble you that he's been fucked over in 2015, 16,
and again 2020?
He seems to be, and why does he keep forgiving people?
Yeah.
So I love Bernie for the same reason you're saying it,
because he's a real person,
he's a populist, he means it, and that is so rare in politics. I feel like I'm Diogenes and I went
looking for the one honest man and found it in Bernie. And so I did a video in 2013 saying
Bernie Sanders can beat Hillary Clinton in a primary. In 2013, that video exists. Because
why did I think that?
I didn't say it of any of the corporate politicians
and the guys who were supposed to challenge her and stuff
because populist and honest, right?
And the country's dying for an honest populist,
dying for it, right?
So love the brother.
Now that doesn't mean that he's right on strategy
and he drives me crazy on strategy. So two elements of that number one in 2016 and in 2020, for God's sake,
attack your opponent.
You said something about Trump that I disagree with, uh, where I'm defending
Trump, okay, you don't like what he did to the public discourse.
No, I don't mind it.
I would, and I'll tell you why.
Yeah.
Because at least he got to the public discourse. No, I don't mind it. And I'll tell you why.
Because at least he got a little bit past the fakeness.
Like he's a con man and he's a fraud overall
and he does everything for his own interest,
but at least he doesn't speak
like a bullshitting politician, right?
And he's not wrong that you have to bully your own party
to have mass enough power to get things done.
And he showed that that's possible.
So the problem with the Democrats is civility.
So my whole life, they're like, Oh, no, no, no, no, don't say anything.
Let's lose with civility.
Right.
So for example, in debates, you know, whether it's on TV, online or whatever, uh, Democrats or people
on the left are always saying, I'm offended.
I never get offended.
No, after I'm done, you're going to be offended.
Okay.
Fight back, fighting back wins.
And we couldn't get Bernie to fight back in 2020.
He, he was one state away.
He won the first three states.
He crushed in Nevada.
All we needed was South Carolina, but in order to get South Carolina, we all knew
everybody on his campaign, everyone who was in progressive media, we all knew
you've got to attack Biden.
If you don't, they're just going to tsunami you, you know, corporate
medias and the corporate politicians are going to run rough shot over you.
You have to make the case against them.
And so two times Bernie flinched one in 2016 in the Brooklyn debate. They asked, did the money that Hillary Clinton taking from banks affect her votes?
And he said, no, of course it affected her votes.
Of course it did.
You have to say yes.
And you have to show it and prove it.
The bankruptcy bill when she was first lady, she was totally in favor of the American people and
against the bankruptcy bill because it has the banks, you can't discharge any
debts that the credit, you know, credit card debt and bank debt, et cetera.
It's an awful bill.
It's one of the most corporatist bills.
She was on the right side as a first lady.
She becomes a Senator, takes banker money, and all of a sudden she
flips over to the banker side.
Say it, Bernie, for God's sake, say it.
Right.
Then in one of the debates in 2020, his team prepares attacks against Biden.
They're not personal.
They're not like I, you can sense by now, if I'm in a political race, my
objective is ripped other guys's face off, right?
Yeah.
Politically, rhetorically, never physically.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
And so, but I would get it to a point where they'd think, I don't know
if I'm going to vote for Cenk, but I know I'm not voting for the other guy.
Okay.
So you got to do that if you want to win.
So they prepare this.
He says, I'm going to do it.
He goes on the podium and doesn't do it because he can't, he's too damn nice.
He just can't attack the other guy.
Now that's problem.
Number one in strategy problem.
Number two is something you alluded to.
So Biden gets in office.
Bernie thinks they're friends.
They're not friends.
Biden's just using him.
So he uses them to get the credibility.
Biden's just using him. So he uses them to get the credibility.
And then he eviscerates 85% of the progressive proposals that Bernie put forward.
Biden throws away $15 minimum wage.
That was Bernie's signature issue.
Doesn't even propose the public option, dumps paid family for no reason.
I can go on and on.
And Bernie co-signs on it because he thinks he's in an alliance.
He thinks Biden's on his side and he co-signs on it because he thinks he's in an alliance.
He thinks Biden's on his side and he thinks we're going to get things done. And to be fair to Bernie, like I said earlier, Obama got only 5% of his agenda passed and Biden got 15%.
Okay.
So you're right, Bernie.
You got three times more than under Obama, but you're wrong.
That is not fundamental change.
And without fundamental change, we're screwed.
Uh, let me ask you about another impressive speech.
AOC, uh, is it possible that she's the future of the party?
Future president?
No.
Uh, so AOC in my opinion, lost her way.
And so in which way, so it way. In which way?
It's tough talking about these things because people take it so personally, right? That's why you'll see very few politicians on our shows because we give super tough interviews and the
words out in the street, right? Don't go out and you know, they'll ask you super hard questions.
Don't go out and you know Turks, they'll ask you super hard questions. Right.
So there are only a couple do it.
Like Ro Khanna does it, he's brave.
We'll get into shouting matches sometimes in the middle of bills and stuff,
but at least he's there to defend his position I respect him for that.
Tim Ryan, a little bit more of a conservative Democrat when he was in the house,
he would take on any debate, et cetera.
So there's a couple of good guys that do it, but generally they don't.
So this relates to AOC because when AOC is running, we do 34 videos on her.
We get her millions of views.
We founded Just Democrats and now launched it on the show.
Our audience, Ryan Grim, documents it in one of his books.
Our audience raises two and a half million dollars for those
progressive candidates overall.
Uh, and at that point, AOC and all those Rashida Tlaib, et cetera, they're all
dying to come on a Young Turks.
It makes sense.
I would too, of course.
And it's not because it's the Young Turks, any media outlet and most media outlets,
almost all the media outlets reject them.
We cover AOC more than all the other press combined.
Right. And she wins for a number of reasons. all the media outlets reject them. We cover AOC more than all the other press combined, right?
And she wins for a number of reasons. That's one of the reasons, but there's many others, and she did a terrific job herself. She then takes Shoykot and Corbyn, who were the,
Shoykot was the head of Just Democrats and Corbyn was communications director for Just Democrats.
Then Shoykot made one of the most brilliant political decisions in,
arguably in American history. He said, he called me and he said,
jank, I'm going to go from head of just Democrats to running AOC's campaign.
And I'm like, well, the other candidates are going to get pissed.
And you're staking the entire enterprise on one candidate.
And I'm like, sure. I'm not in it.
I'm doing the media arm.
You're, you're in the, in the trenches.
You're the guy making the decisions.
So I'm going to trust whatever you say.
You sure.
And he said, yeah, I'm sure.
So him and Corbin go over to AOC's campaign.
AOC then wins that miraculous win.
Then she hires shortcut to be her chief of staff and she hires Shortcut to be her chief of staff and she
hires Corbin to be her communications director. Within six months, they're gone. Once they're
gone, AOC then goes on an establishment path. Okay. Because why were they gone? Oh, they
insulted one of her colleagues. Yeah, that colleague who's a total corporatist and was
selling out one of our policy proposals.
If you don't call out your own side, you're never going to get anything done.
But if you call out your own side, you become persona non grata and it is super uncomfortable.
And we couldn't get them to do things that were uncomfortable. Now she's going to find that
outrageous and she's going to be very offended by that. And she's going to point to a bunch of things she did that were uncomfortable.
And to be fair to her, she does, she has, she's until that speech,
she was pretty good on Palestine when we desperately needed it.
She was pretty good on a bunch of issues.
Corey Bush did that campaign on evictions, et cetera, on the capital
stocks, that was great.
AOC's original sit in and Pelosi's office.
That point we're all still on the same team.
It's a spectacular success.
Me, Corbyn and Shortcut are saying, do it again, do it again.
Like not, don't abuse it.
Like, don't be a clown and do it every other day.
But like, when it matters, you need to be able to challenge Pelosi.
Right.
And see, in my opinion, she just got to a point where she got exhausted being uncomfortable.
It's like, it's really hard.
The media hates you and they keep pounding away and calling you a radical and you're
destroying the democratic party.
You're destroying unity.
So, whereas if you go along, all of a sudden you're a queen.
And, and now all of a sudden, you're a queen.
And now all of a sudden the mainstream media is like, oh, AOC, she could be the progress.
I mean, there's some degree to which you wanna
sometimes bide your time and just like rest a bit.
And I think from my perspective, maybe you can educate me.
She seems like a legit progressive,
legit even populist, charismatic, young, like a
lot of time to develop the game of politics, how to play it well enough to
avoid the bullshit.
I guess it doesn't take corporate pack money.
That's right.
No, she's still true on that.
Um, so as far as I, just looking in the, over the next few elections, like
who's going to be running, who's going elections, like who's going to be running,
who's going to be a real player.
She just seems like an, to me,
she seems like an obvious person
that's going to be in the race.
So while I fight for the ideal, I'm very practical.
So for example, in,
Very practical.
So for example, in she wins, uh, and then one cycle later, uh, after 2020, um,
there's these guys who want to quote unquote, force the vote.
And it was a, on the speakership of Nancy Pelosi and they wanted to
use it to get Medicare for all.
I'm like, guys, forcing a vote is a terrific idea.
On the speakership, okay, who's your alternative? Oh, we don't have an alternative.
Already giant red flag, okay.
What's the issue you're looking to have them vote on?
Medicare for All.
Oh, you don't know politics.
So I love Medicare for All.
We have to get Medicare for all.
But if that's the first one you put up without gaining any leverage, you're gonna get slaughtered.
Put up something easy, force a vote on $15 minimum wage or pick another one that's easy,
paid family leave. These are all polling. Great. Because if you force a vote on that,
you could actually win. And if you win, you gain leverage and then you do the next one and the next one.
And then you do Medicare for all, not bullshit gradualism that the corporate
Democrats do, but actually strategically, practically building up power and
leverage and using it at the right times.
So if I thought that's what AOC was doing, I would love it.
Right.
So I don't need her to force a vote on Medicare for all.
I don't need her to go on some wild tangents that don't make any sense
and is only going to diminish your power.
But when they eviscerated all the progressive proposals and build back
better, how did that happen?
Mansion and cinema used every ounce of leverage they had.
They said, I'm just not going to vote for it.
I don't care.
Okay.
Uh, you know, the status quo is perfect for my donors, so I don't need you.
I vote no.
Okay.
Now take out everything I want.
And Biden did right.
Progressives had to push back and say, here is two to three proposals, right?
Not everything, not everything, two to three proposals.
They all pull over 70%.
They're all no brainers and they're all things that Joe Biden promised.
We want those in the bill.
Otherwise we're voting no.
At that point, the media, what would have happened is the media would have exploded
and they would have said AOC and the rest are the scum of the
earth. They're ruining the Democratic Party. We're not going to get the bill.
They're the worst. You have to withstand that. If you cannot withstand a nuclear
blast for mainstream media, you're not the person because you have to
run that obstacle course to get to change. If they had stood their ground, they definitely would have won
on one to two of those issues.
Instead, they went with a strategy that was called, it was
literally called trust Biden.
All right.
So, uh, big question who wins, uh, who was this election,
the comma or Trump and what's commas path to victory. And, uh, if you can steal And what's Kamala's path to victory?
And if you can steal man, what's Trump's path to victory?
Yeah, so there's not enough information yet.
So since I make a lot of predictions on air
and then brag about it unbearably,
people are always, they'll stop me in the streets
and I'm like, predict this, like predict my marriage. Brother, I don't know anything about your marriage.
How could I possibly predict something
without having any information?
So in the case of the, this campaign,
right now I got Kamala Harris at 55% chance of winning.
Okay, which is not bad.
Doesn't mean she's going to win by 55,
because then that wouldn't be a 10 point margin.
That's not going to happen, right?
But I say around 51 to 55,
but it's nowhere near over because of a lot of things. One,
the Democrats are still seen as more establishment and people hate the
establishment. Two,
if war breaks out in the middle East, which is now unfortunately
bordering unlikely, right? If that war breaks out, the Middle East, which is now unfortunately bordering unlikely, right?
If that war breaks out, all bets are off.
Do you mean a regional war?
Yeah.
Like Iran, Israel gets to be a real thing, not just a pinprick and a little bombing here
and an assassination there, but no, we're going to war, right?
If that happens, then all bets are off and no one has any idea who's going to win. Okay. And if they're pretending that they know, that's ridiculous
because it's so unpredictable. And then the third bogey for her is
if she goes back to word salads. So that, so there's three phases of Kamala Harris's career.
She's not necessarily any different in terms of Kamala Harris's career.
She's not necessarily any different in terms of policy. She's, you can frame it in a bad way.
You could frame it in a good way.
You can say, Oh, she's just seeing which way the wind is blowing.
And then, Oh, she's a tough cop prosecutor.
Oh, and then she's doing justice reform when you need people want justice reform.
Oh, she's a Waffler.
Right.
Or you could paint it as she's pretty balanced, right?
She prosecuted serious criminals very harshly,
but then on marijuana possession, got them into rehab.
And you know what?
That's actually what you should do, right?
So I'm not talking about policy.
So there you could have one of those views
about Kamala Harris and I get it.
I'm talking about strategic stylistically.
So Kamala Harris until the second debate in the primaries in 2020
is a very competent politician who's in line to be the next Obama.
Right.
She's killing it.
District attorney, attorney general, Senator.
And then the first debate, if you remember, she won.
She had that great line about the, you know, uh, there was a little girl on that bus that was integrating the schools and that girl was me and Biden being
the knucklehead that he is, he's caught on tape going, you're like, don't have
that reaction brother, brother.
Okay.
Cause she's criticizing his segregation policy on buses back in the seventies.
Right?
So anyways, so she's doing terrific.
And then after that debate until Biden drops out is a disaster area for
Kamala Harris's career in the primary.
She starts falling apart. She can't strategize, right? She's for Medicare for all. Noala Harris's career. In the primary, she starts falling apart.
She can't strategize, right?
She's for Medicare for all. No, she's not.
She's for Medicare for some.
What's Medicare for some?
I don't know.
Right.
And she goes into the next debate and Telsey Gabbard kicks her ass and
then goes into the third debate, gets her ass kicked again, and she's starting to drift away.
Then at this point, and this is funny, I have more votes for president than Kamala Harris does
because Kamala Harris dropped out before Iowa because that's how much of a disaster her
campaign turned into when she was leading. She was leading, right? So then she becomes vice president
and Biden, probably because of that bus line, Jill Biden caught tremendous feelings over that line.
So Biden's like, here, have this albatross around your neck. It's called immigration. Good luck.
I'm not going to do anything about it. I'm not going to change policy, but I'm putting you in
charge of it to get your ass handed to you. And she does, so that's a disaster. And then she starts
doing interviews where she's like, we have to become the being, but not the thing we were,
and the unbecoming, and you're like, what is going on?
Why can neither one of them speak?
Right?
Yeah.
And so, but then the third act shocks me.
So Biden steps down, she goes, grabs all those delegates
in a super competent way that we talked about earlier,
and then she goes out and gives a speech.
I'm like, oh, that speech is good.
Okay, here's another one, another one.
I'm like, wait a minute, these are good speeches,
no more worst salads.
Then she picks Tim Walz and shocks the world.
I'm like, that's a correct VP pick.
That is a miracle, right?
And then she goes and does the economically populist plan,
all those proposals about housing that people care about,
grocery prices that people care about.
Real or not real, that is correct political strategy.
So this Kamala Harris is back to their original Kamala Harris
who was a very competent, skilled politician.
And as I was telling you offline, she's doing, uh, whoever's doing her
TikTok is, is like blowing up and they're doing risky, edgy stuff.
Yes.
I did not expect that from somebody that kind of comes from the Biden
camp of just like be safe, be boring, all this kind of stuff.
So you have to give Kamala Harris ultimate credit cause she's the leader
of the campaign and she makes the final decisions. But there's
apparently a couple of people inside that campaign that are ass-kickers and they have
convinced her to take risk, which Democrats never take. And it is correct to take risks.
You cannot get to victory without risk. So the vice president pick is the bellwether. When Hillary Clinton
picked Tim Kaine, I said, that's it, she's going to lose because Tim Kaine is playing prevent
defense. He's wallpaper. I mean, he'd be lucky to be wallpaper. He's just a white wall, right?
He's just, and when he speaks, it's white noise. He never says anything interesting. He's the most
boring pick of all time. That's saying we already won. Ha ha. Okay. If Kamala Harris had picked Mark Kelly, that's the Tim
Kane equivalent. Okay. Oh, he's an astronaut. I don't give a shit that he's an astronaut.
What is he saying? Is he a good politician? Does he have good policies? Is he exciting
on the campaign trail? Is he going to add to your momentum? Mark Kelly, he might be a good guy, but number one, he's a very corporate
Democrat and number two, it's like watching grass grow.
He, oh, he's terrible at speaking.
If you ask me, right.
So, so I thought for sure she's going to pick Mark Kelly because that's
what a normal Democrat does, or if they want to go wild and crazy, they'll go to
Beshear.
So I was like, please let it be Shapiro because he's at least not bad.
He's done some populous things and he's strategic.
He's really smart.
I need smart candidates.
Dumb candidates don't help.
They don't have a mind of their own.
They can't take risks.
They're not independent thinkers.
They're, they're going to lose.
So she picks the smartest, most populous candidate.
Boom, boom.
We got a winner.
That's a good campaign.
Uh, speaking of risks, when they debate, when, uh, Kamala and Trump debate,
what do you think that's going to look like?
Who's, who do you think is going to win?
Oh, that's not close Kamala Harris. So, yeah, unless she falls apart, unless she goes back to the bad era, right?
That's risk number three.
Hold on a second for, oh, I guess in a debate debate you don't have, you can have pre-written.
It seems like when she's going off the top of her head is when the word,
word salad sometimes comes out. Sometimes. Yeah, we'll have to see, right? We'll have to see
because she hasn't done any tough interviews. She hasn't really been challenged. So I hope to
God that doesn't happen. That she doesn't fall apart. You mean,
cause I hope she does a bunch of interviews, right? Oh, definitely.
Definitely. I'm like, I'm,
this is going to sound really funny. I'm too honest, but, but I am like,
in the context of common hairs probably shouldn't come on the young turks.
We do a really tough interview and it would hurt her. Okay.
Do you though, like it's tough, but like you're pretty respectful.
Maybe I just have my sort of, uh, uh, like I'm okay with a little bit of tension.
You're pretty respectful.
Even when you're yelling, there's like respect, like you, you don't do, uh,
uh, like a gotcha type thing.
There's certain things you could do.
Like you said this in the past, You can say a line from the past that's out of context.
Uh, it forces the other person to have to define the content.
It's just, you know, sort of debate type tactics over and over.
Like you don't seem to do that.
You just like ask them questions generally, and then you argue the point.
And then you also like hear what they say.
The only thing I've seen you do. And then you also like hear what they say.
The only thing I've seen you do sometimes tough that you sometimes
like interrupt, like you speak over the person if they are trying to do the same.
Right.
Which only if they're filibustering.
Yeah.
Right.
If they're filibustering, but like that, that's a tricky one.
That's a, yeah, that's a trick.
Right.
No, but like the problem for her coming on our show isn't that we would be
unfair to her, it's that we would be unfair to her.
It's that we would be fair.
So we would ask questions.
She is going to have trouble answering.
Other corporate stuff.
Right.
I mean, like, so Biden said he was going to take the corporate tax
rates to 28% and he barely tried.
You say you're going to take it to 28%.
Why should we trust you?
Right.
You guys said $15 minimum wage, and then you took it out of the bill.
Why should we trust you? Right? Those are very tough questions.
She's never going to get that in mainstream media.
Mainstream media is going to have faux toughness, but in reality,
they're going to be softballs. Right? And so the debates, you're right, Lex,
is, is a little bit easier because Sarah Palin proved that you could just
memorize scripted talking points.
And she admitted it later.
She's like, she was super nervous.
She memorized the talking points and no matter what they asked, she just gave the
talking point, which by the way, people barely noticed because that's what all
politicians do, okay.
She just admitted it.
And so no, Trump's a disaster in a debate.
He's a, he's a one man wrecking crew of his own campaign.
So any competent debater would eviscerate Donald Trump.
I mean, they just, on any given topic, when he says something like here, let's
take it one lunatic conspiracy
theory that he just had recently. Uh, and by the way, if you're a right winger and you
keep getting hurt every time I say he's a lunatic or I insult Donald Trump, don't like
you're, you sound like a left winger. I'm offended. I'm offended. I'm offended. Get
over it, get over it. Okay. So we, we have disagreements here. What the other side is saying. And by the way, I say the same thing to the left.
Okay.
I say, you think everybody on the right's evil?
You're crazy.
No, they just have a different way of looking at the world, which by the way, is an interesting
conversation.
We should talk about that in a minute too.
But so I do it to both sides, but okay.
Trump says, oh, I don't think there's anyone at Kamala Harris's rallies.
It's all the pictures are AI.
Okay.
So I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is.
I think that's the way it is. I think that's the way it is. I think that's the way it is. I think that's the oh, I don't think there's anyone at Kamala Harris's rallies.
It's all the pictures are AI.
Okay, so let's say he says that in a debate
because he's liable to say anything, right?
You just say, okay, so you think every reporter
that was there, every photographer that was there,
every human being that was there. They're all lying.
They have a conspiracy of thousands of people, but none of them were actually there.
Do you understand how insane you sound?
So this is a good place to, uh, can you steal man, the case for Trump?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Trump is a massive risk because of all the things we talked about earlier, but there is a
percentage chance that he's such a wild card that he overturns the whole system. And that is why the
establishment is a little scared of him. So if he's in office, here, I'll give you a case of
Donald Trump doing something right. Something wrong first and then something right. So he bombs, uh, Soleimani, the top general of Iran and kills him.
That risks world war three.
That risks a giant war with Iran that devolves Iran is four times the size of Iraq.
If you're anti-war, you should have hated that he assassinated Soleimani.
But after the assassination, Iran doesn't want to get into it, even though
they're in a rage and they do a small bombing.
You could tell if it's a small or a big one. Right. So that's them saying, we don't really
want war, but for our domestic crowd, we have to bomb you back. Right. And that's when the
military industrial complex comes to Trump and says, no, you have to show them who's tough
and bomb this area. And Trump says, no, they did a small bombing, not a large bombing.
I don't want the war.
I'm not going to do that bombing.
That was this shining moment.
Yeah.
For me, one of the biggest deal man for Trump is that he has both the skill and
the predisposition to not be a warmonger.
He, I think better than the other candidates I've seen is able to end wars and end them.
Now you might disagree with it, but in a way where there's legitimately
effective negotiation that happens.
Like I just don't see any other candidate currently being able to sit Donald
Zelensky and Putin and to negotiate a peace treaty that both are equally unhappy with.
So on the one hand, almost all other politicians are going to be controlled by the military
industrial complex and that complex wants to bleed Russia dry. And that's what the Ukraine
war is doing. It's a double win for the defense contractors.
Number one, every dollar we send to Ukraine is actually not going to Ukraine. It's going to US
defense contractors and then they are sending old weapons to Ukraine. The money is to build
new weapons for us. So a lot of people don't know that. So the defense contractors want that war to go on forever.
And they're an enormous influence in Washington.
The second win is they're depleting Russia and Russia has gotten themselves
into a quagmire like we did in Iraq and Afghanistan, and they're bleeding out.
So they, the military industrial complex wants Russia to bleed out
for as long as humanly possible.
They actually care more about their own interests, of course, than they do about Ukrainian interests.
In fact, there's a good argument to be made that Ukraine could have gotten a peace deal
earlier and we prevented it.
But the bottom line now is probably how a deal gets done is they let go of three more areas in Ukraine. They already
lost Crimea. They'd have to let go of three more regions. And that is tough because at that point,
Russia's a little bit encouraged. Every time they do an invasion, they get more land. They might not
get all the land they wanted, but they get a lot of land. So that's a very difficult issue.
But literally, which person, if they become president,
will end the war?
Trump will end that war, because Trump will go in
and he loves Russia and Putin anyway.
I just disagree with he loves Russia,
the implication of that,
meaning he will do whatever Putin tells him.
I think...
He'll do 90% of what Putin tells him.
I just disagree with that.
I think he wants to be the kind of person that says, fuck you to Putin, while patting
him on the back and being, you know, but out negotiating Putin.
So I don't like talking about Russia because there's so much emotions that go into that topic.
The right wing, the minute you mentioned Russia, they're like, oh, it's a hoax and all this
baggage that comes with it, et cetera. To me, Russia is not any different than Saudi Arabia
or Israel for Trump. You give me money, I like you. You buy my apartments, I like you. If you
don't give me money, I don't like you. It's not that complicated. Don't worry about the Russia
part of it. The bottom line is Trump thinks, what do I care about those three regions of Ukraine?
I want to get this thing done. So he'll go and he'll say, Ukraine, we're going to withdraw all help unless you agree to
a peace deal with Russia and Russia wants those three regions. That's the peace deal. That's it.
So Ukraine will lose a part of their country and we'll get to a peace deal.
Yeah, I hope not. I hope not. I think Trump sees themselves and wants to be a great negotiator.
And I personally want the death of people to end.
And I think Trump would bring that much faster.
And I disagree with you.
At least my hope is that he would negotiate
something that would be fair.
He's not, his anti-war record is so complicated because moving the
embassy in Israel and killing the top Iranian general were super provocative.
And they could have easily triggered a giant war there.
And then you know, what's going to happen
if you get into any kind of real war, Trump's going to want to prove his buttons larger. So
then he's going to do massive ridiculous bombings. I mean, I worry about nukes.
And so we had Giuliani on the show on the RNC and I asked him this question. I said,
you know, I keep saying, oh, they wouldn't do it if I was in charge. I'm like, what does that mean?
Cause it sounds like what it means is they wouldn't do it because they know if they did it, I would do something insane like attack Russia or use nukes.
And Rudy said, yeah, that's what it means.
So that means you have to at least bluff that and you have to get them to believe that he's a madman.
That's the madman theory of Nixon and Nixon and Rudy said that too.
He was very clear about it, but the problem is if you get your bluff called,
and so if you actually attack Russia, you're going to start World War three.
So that's why, yeah, if you could, if you could just get away with bluffing,
maybe, but he's playing a very dangerous game and he massively increased drone strikes.
On the other hand, he didn't bomb Iran further.
And on the other hand, he started the process of withdrawal from Afghanistan.
So not black and white complicated record.
And one thing I'll give them another piece of credit here.
I think I'm taking this steel manning too far.
Uh, the credit was that, um, he changed the rhetoric of the right wing.
They went from the party of Dick Cheney, war is great.
Uh, and let's, you know, all Muslims are evil.
And so he hates Muslims too, but that's a different thing.
Right.
But like, oh, we have to attack the enemy.
We have to start wars, et cetera to now Republican voters are generally anti
war and hate Dick Cheney.
Oh, I'll take it.
I'll take it.
So that's a great thing that Trump did, even if he didn't mean it, even if he does
these provocative things that could lead to a much worse war, even if I'm worried
that he'll be so reckless, he'll start a bigger war, at least he did that right.
And so I'm happy to have our right wing brothers and sisters join us in the anti-war
movement and, and I'm not being a jerk about it.
Like I love it.
And, and any, and so this is another thing the left does wrong from time to time,
which is if you agree with a right winger, 2%, they'll be like, Oh, welcome in.
Come on vote for Trump.
Come on in.
Yeah.
Woo.
Woo.
Water's warm.
Right.
If you, if you disagree with the left 2%, they're like, that's it.
You're banished and you're a Nazi.
Well, brother, how are we going to win an election if you're banishing
everybody there is right?
So hold up the, these Republican voters are coming at your anti-war position.
Take the win.
No, they're MAGA and I won't deal with them.
Even when they agree with you, that doesn't make any sense.
That doesn't make any sense.
Take the win, right?
So when Charlie Kirk says yes to paid family leave,
when Patrick Bette David on his program says yes,
roughly says yes to paid family leave, take the win.
R.F.K. Jr., you said some positive things
for a while about R.F.K. Jr.
And I think you said you would even consider voting for him, given the slate of
people. This was at the time when Biden was still in. What do you think about him? What do you think
about RFK Jr.? As a candidate, as a person, he's been on the show, right? Yeah.
Yeah. So he was on our show. People love that interview. You could check it out anytime. Right. And why do people love it? Whether they're right or left, because we're fair.
We actually asked him about his policy positions. He explained them. I challenge him and then he
explains and we give him a fair hearing. But I knew Bobby a little bit before he ran when he was an environmental lawyer. Right. Uh, and his legal work is excellent.
Um, and, and he's been on the right side of most of the issues for most of his life.
So, uh, I like him on that too on his wildlife, the dead bear and the worms
and all that stuff, right?
So there's two important lessons you should get about out of that.
Well, one's just about Bobby, but the other one's a general one that's really important for you to
know, no matter what you think of Bobby Kennedy. On the personal front, I have a friend that's
very similar to him. In fact, he's one of my best friends. And I know why, this is my theory on why
Bobby and my friend led a wildlife.
Both of their dads, young died young.
When my friend's dad died, he was 18 and his dad died in his arms.
And he has a motto, what is lived cannot be on lift.
So if I had a great time and I thought it was hilarious to dump a dead bear at central park, then I lived it and I had a great time and nothing
you could do about it. Okay. And sometimes that'll get you in trouble and sometimes you'll have a
fantastic time. Right. And, and obviously Bobby's dad was killed when he was young. And maybe that
got into his head of like, you better live strong and live an interesting life.
I don't begrudge him that. Even if I begrudge some of the things that he did in that life,
I get why he did it. I don't hate him like other people hate him for some of those personal stuff.
I like him for all the things that he did positive, holding fossil fuel companies
accountable, protecting communities that had
poison dumped into their rivers, et cetera.
The thing that affects everybody is when he gets – corporate media smeared the hell
out of him and they didn't allow him to speak and then they did the needle in a haystack
trick. So whenever it's an insider, they find the best parts of their lives.
And then they amplify.
So Joe Biden is average Joe from Scranton.
Motherfuckers been in DC for the last 52 years.
You think we don't have eyes and ears?
Okay.
Like average Joe from Scranton.
Who are you kidding?
So there's a guy named Fred Thompson who's an actor
and he was a Senator from Tennessee later.
And he had this great little trick that he would do
is a red pickup truck that he would campaign with.
So he looks like a regular Joe, right?
But he's a millionaire actor.
But here's the funny part.
He would drive to the red pickup truck in a limo
and he would drive back from the campaign event in a limo,
but the press never reported the limo.
They only reported him in the red pickup truck
as if that's what he drives.
See, that's the theater of politics.
Why?
Because Fred Thompson was a corporate Republican,
so they loved him.
So they go, yeah, sure, yeah, red pickup truck.
Oh, good old Fred Thompson, right?
So, but if you're an outsider and they don't like you,
then they're gonna look at the haystack of your life
and they're gonna try to find needles.
So they've done this to Trump, they've done this to Bernie,
they've done this to Bobby Kennedy Jr.
And with Bobby, they're like, ooh,
there's some juicy needles in here, okay?
So they find those and they go, you see this?
The only thing you should know about Bobby Kennedy Jr.
Is that he found a dead bear and put it in central park.
Uh, oh, wait, wait, wait.
I found another one.
The other thing you should know about Bobby is that he once said in a
divorce deposition that he had a brain worm that day.
By the way, it turns out that that affects millions of people
and it's not that big a deal.
Right.
But look, he has a radical. Ah, he is. This defines him completely.
There's spectacular cases that actually happened to me. So I ran for Congress in 2020
and the New York Times, LA Times, CNN, they all butchered me with needles. Okay. So they said, it's a long history of making anti-Muslim jokes. Well, first of all,
they didn't even say jokes. They said anti-Muslim rhetoric.
I'm like, I'm Muslim. I mean, I'm an atheist, but I grew up Muslim.
My family's Muslim, my background's Muslim.
You don't think that's relevant in this story.
And they did it based on one joke I told about,
and they said, oh, also, of course,
they say that I'm anti-Semitic.
That's like, you start with that.
That's just baked in for everyone, right?
So I made a joke about how Orthodox Jews and Muslims,
they think that getting into heaven
is a little bit of a fashion contest, okay?
So the Orthodox Jews go in there with the Russian coats from the 1800s and the giant Russian hat,
the Muslims go in with their robe and the skull cap and stuff, and God's looking around going,
no, no, no, ooh, nice outfit, come on in, right? Do you really think the creator of the universe
gives a damn what you wear?
Okay. So the New York Times took that and said long history of being anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim.
Right.
Okay. So there's this, oh, this is a famous one. Relatively famous. I did a joke about bestiality,
like a dozen years ago.
Very nice.
So I start out the joke nice and dry and I go, look, is the horse going to object if
he's the one getting pleasure?
Now Anna is my co-host, she's younger at that time and she's like, that seems like a bad
idea Jake.
I'm like, of course it's a bad idea.
But I'm being dry, but some people are laughing in the studio and stuff.
And then I say, if I was emperor of the world,
I would make that legal. And they cut the tape. If you watch the rest of the tape,
I say, now would the horse object? No. So, but they cut the tape. So the New York,
so originally a right-winger did that. And then like a establishment troll in that primary
started putting out those tapes to everyone.
Jake Tapper retweeted it.
Didn't look to see if it's edited or not edited.
The New York Times implied that bestiality
was part of my agenda.
Jesus Christ.
Please tell me that's part of your Wikipedia.
That the bestiality thing is part of your.
I don't know, I don't know.
But guys, so in those stories, I'm not important,
and even Bobby Kennedy Jr. is not important.
What it reveals about the media is what's important.
So they're gonna find those needles,
whether it's, and even if they don't have the needles,
you know what, we'll cut the tape
before your joke's punchline, right? So we'll just run it and we'll lie about you. Who cares?
Right? And so, oh, they also said that I had David Duke on to share his anti-Semitic point of view.
If you watch the interview, I told David Duke, you're an anti-Semite, you're a racist,
you're a bigot, you're an idiot, right. It was the toughest interview he's probably ever had in his life.
And other journalists got mad at that part.
And they were like, no guys, you're just flat out lying.
Like I, I watched the interview.
Did any of you watch the interview?
He takes the guy's head off.
Right.
And so the New York times issued a correction on that one.
So they're like, okay, fine.
He was being sarcastic when he said, one. So they're like, okay, fine, he was being sarcastic
when he said, sure you're not racist, Dave.
But one of the sources of hope to all of this
is there's a lot of independent media now,
but mainstream media has a lot of power still
and cares a lot of power.
You think they're gonna die eventually?
Yeah, definitely.
So two things about that that are super important. First of all, this is why I tell people to have hope. I don't believe
in false hope, right? So if you think Kamala Harris is your knight in shining armor,
she's going to come in, she's going to get money out of politics,
she's going to ignore the donors, that's false hope. It's crazy talk, right? So why am I in favor
of Kamala Harris? I'm going to live to fight another day. I'm worried that Trump's going to
end the whole thing and then we're not going to have an opportunity to actually
get a populist to win. And I'm encouraged by some of the things she's doing and maybe she does even
25% of her agenda, but I'm not going to give you false hope that she's your savior. But I believe
massively in hope. And number one, because it's true to the point that we were talking about earlier,
like and how last 200 years have been choppy, but overall fantastic, terrible things have
happened in that time period.
Some of the worst things that have ever happened in history, but overall life expectancy is
higher.
Everything is, you know, incomes are higher, health is better, et cetera.
Right?
So hope is not misplaced.
It's real.
It's empirical. So now we talked about how
you could get money out of politics and that's a legitimate hope. But media is another place where
we have huge hope. So of all the corporate robots, the most important robot is media.
So when mainstream media has you hooked in at the back of your neck, you're going to
believe all these fairy tales about how politicians are nice people and they're trying to do the right
thing and donor money doesn't have any influence on them. So once you unplug from the matrix,
well then you begin to see, oh yeah, hey look, he took the donor money, did what the donors wanted.
He took the donor money, did what the donors want, He took the donor money, did what the donors want 98% of the time.
Right.
So then you see clearly, so now what's happening at large mainstream media
is losing their power and now online media swarming, swarming, swarming, swarming.
And so this goes back to why I started the Young Turks.
So let me touch on that here and then we can come back to do if you want. So in 1998, I write an email to my friends and I say, online video is going to be
television. And unsurprisingly, and they say, you're nuts. That's never going to happen. At that point,
we're still doing AOL dial-ups,, right. The online video barely exists and television's mammoth.
Um, I said, guys, it's just a matter of logic.
Like for me, it's, there's so many ironies.
I'm known for yelling online sometimes, but in reality, I'm obsessed with logic.
So when you have gatekeepers, gatekeepers pick based on what they want,
what the powerful want, in that case advertisers, politicians, etc. They are never going to design
programming as good as wisdom of the crowd. When people start doing online video, I'm like,
boom, there's no gatekeepers. This is democratized. Wisdom of the crowd is going to win.
So if you start with no money, and let's pick a different example,
not the young Turks, let's say Phil DeFranco, he's been around forever.
Okay.
And, uh, and he also does news.
And so Phil starts doing a show and he doesn't have any money.
It's just like us.
And so what does he, what does he have to do to get an audience?
He has to do a show that is really popular.
He's got to figure out a way. How do I get their attention?
How do I keep their attention?
And he starts doing a great show.
Right.
And so every year it's us and Phil for best news show for like a decade.
Right.
And meanwhile, I'm back over at CNN Wolf Blitzer still droning
on from a teleprompter
You put wolf blitzer online without the force of CNN with him. He gets negative seven views
No one's interested in what wolf blitzer has to say. It's not personal. I don't know the brother, right? I'm just saying institutionally logically, etc. So I'm like these guys are gonna win. So
When YouTube starts we go on YouTube right away.
We're the first YouTube partner.
So I am literally the original YouTuber.
Okay.
Susan Wojcicki, the former CEO of the late Susan Wojcicki, a wonderful woman.
And if that triggers you again on the right, you're wrong.
She was a terrific person.
And, um, and she, when she started her own
YouTube channel, uh, I was the first interview
because we were the first YouTube partner.
So, so I love that.
So we're in that, but let me connect it back to
the hope when mainstream media has you hooked.
You got no hope because you don't have the
right information.
You have propaganda, you have marketing because you don't have the right information. You have
propaganda, you have marketing, you don't have real news. When you're in the online world,
it's chaotic. And don't get me wrong, it's got plenty of downsides, right? But within that chaos,
the truth begins to emerge. And so, for example, young Turks has had dozens of fights with
different creators throughout history. Why? When you're number one in news online, the algorithm rewards anyone attacking you
because then you get into their algorithmic loop. It's not an accident that we've been attacked
dozens of times. One, we're independent thinkers, so anyone, if we don't match their ideology,
they're going to attack us. But number two, they get in our algorithm loop, it's too hard to resist.
So all of a sudden they think that we're being funded by Nancy Pelosi or the
CIA and then, oh, we're off to the races.
There's another fight.
Right.
But our competition is a graveyard.
And so we've, we won all almost all of all of those fights.
Why?
Because we try really hard to stick with the truth, with logic, and we don't do audience
capture. Even if our audience is going in one direction, we don't think it's right,
well, Anna and I will come out and go, no, sorry guys, love you, but rent control is not a good
idea. Okay. Et cetera. So in that world, the people, it's going to take a while guys, but people who are telling
the truth are eventually going to rise up.
And when they do, now we're free.
And now the second part is even more devastating for mainstream media because I'm a businessman,
right?
I keep looking at their revenue for CNN, et cetera, and they have a massive problem and
people don't realize how big the problem is.
That thing's gonna capsize.
I don't talk about it often
because I don't want more competition.
Okay, I also have a company, right?
In the online world, et cetera,
but I'm too honest, I gotta say it, I gotta say it.
So they have two revenue streams.
One is ads, that's why they serve advertisers
and politicians are huge advertisers, as we mentioned.
The second revenue stream, depending on the company,
is arguably more important, which is subscribers.
So now what happens in a business normally is,
so they started out low and then they got high and now they got a ton of
subscribers at its peak cable, uh, has a hundred million households, right?
So they're raking in unbelievable money from subscriber fees and
they got advertising on top.
So when you're all the way up here, your costs start to rise.
Why do they rise?
Because then the on air talent has leverage.
And, uh, as an example, there's many others.
And so the on air talent, like Sean Hannity says, I do a program that brings
in X amount of maybe a hundred million, maybe 200 million.
So give me 40 million a year.
And they do.
Sean is making 40 million a year last I checked.
Okay.
So I don't know if he's still getting that kind of money and I'm just spacing out and reporting, right?
But that's a monster.
So they have all these giant costs, but the minute you lose, you go from a
hundred million now we're at, I think around 70 million, you just lost a giant
chunk of your revenue now when your costs are higher than your revenue.
Nighty night.
It's been nice knowing you.
Yeah.
It's going nice knowing you.
Yeah.
It's going to collapse. This can be painful, but what we need guys is like, sorry.
Last thing on that is we need the print guys like AP Reuters, Intercept, the
lever, the Saroda runs, whatever Ryan's working on now, it's that Ryan Grim.
So we need those badly.
We need someone to collect actual information and do the best they can in presenting it in an objective way.
We all got to support that.
So you can't lose text.
That's so important.
The TV guys are just actors.
You can lose them overnight and it won't hurt you.
It'll help you.
Yeah, it's going to be a messy battle for truth because the reality is there's a lot of money to be made and a
lot of attention to be gained from drama farming.
So just constantly creating drama and sometimes drama helps find the truth like we were mentioning,
but most of the time it's just drama and it can, it doesn't care about the truth.
It just cares about drama.
And then the same is like conspiracy theories.
Now some conspiracy theories have value in depth and they allow us to question the establishment institutions.
But the bottom line is conspiracy theories get clicks.
And so you can just keep coming up with random conspiracy theories.
Many of them don't have to be grounded in the truth at all.
And so that's the seat we're operating in. And so it's a tricky space too.
But Lex, look at all the people who are the biggest now, because we've now had a couple
of decades at this, right? So, and I mean, as an industry. So I would argue you're huge,
and you don't do that. You don't do the conspiracy theories. You don't do the drama at all.
Right.
Um, Rogan is huge.
Yeah, maybe there's drama, but he's genuine.
Right.
I got a lot of issues with some of his policies.
I mixed opinions on Joe in a lot of different ways, but I don't doubt that
he's genuine and people can sense that.
Right.
And he's huge.
We're genuine. We're huge. ways, but I don't doubt that he's genuine and people can sense that. Right.
And he's huge.
We're genuine.
We're huge.
So this is the market beginning to work.
Yeah.
So speaking of Joe, let me ask you about this.
Here we go.
I didn't actually know this, but when I was prepping for this conversation, I saw
that you actually said at some point in the past that you can beat up Rogan in a fight.
No, you said that you have a shot.
It's a non-zero probability.
Do you still believe this?
Yes, but the probability is dropping.
It's dropping every day.
I think it's probably the stupidest thing
I've ever heard you say.
So I wrestled and did Jiu-Jitsu and Judo
and all the kinds of fighting sports my whole life.
And I just observed a lot of really confident So I didn't much, I wrestled and did Jiu-Jitsu and judo and all the kinds of fighting sports my whole life.
And I just observed a lot of really confident, large guys roll into gyms.
He's ripped, he can deadlift, he can talk all kinds of shit and he's
beliefs he's going to be the next world champion and he just gets his ass kicked.
Yeah.
Of course.
Okay. And I've seen, like, I saw this Israeli MMA fighter take
on an anti-Semite who was huge and thought that, you know, he believed in like Nick Fuentes'
conspiracy theories or something. And the MMA fighter dismantled him and I loved it. Okay.
And then he like, we tweeted back and forth, et cetera. So guys, first, let me just assure you, I get it. So now let me tell you why I said it.
And then why I think it's a non-zero chance.
So Michael Smirkonish had written this blog like, I don't know, 10, 15 years ago
on Huffington Post, we were both bloggers at that point about the wussification
of America. And now he was saying the left point, about the wussification of America.
Now he was saying the left is a bunch of wussies, right?
So I wrote a blog saying, hey, Michael, I would rather debate you.
So if you want to debate about how we're wussies, let's do it.
Let's find everything.
But you know, you're mentioning physicality, right?
And how you guys are tougher.
So if you prefer only in a prescribed setting, right?
And we're not going to
go do it in the streets like idiots, right? But if you want, we'll have a boxing match or whatever
you want and we'll see who's tougher. And he panicked and he cried to mommy, which was Ariana
Huffington and oh, Jake's intimidating me. Right? Okay. All right. Well, who, who's the wussy now,
bitch? Right? So that is not to actually get into a fight
with poor Michael Smarkonish, right?
It's to prove, hey, don't use rhetoric like that.
That's dumb.
And this is me proving that it's dumb.
Okay, so now Joe had said, I forget what he said at the time
and he says something similar, right?
And I'm up to here with Joe at that point.
I don't know if we'll ever talking yet, right? But you've been on a show and I really,
that was a good conversation.
That's a lot.
It was a great conversation.
It was a while back, yeah.
Yeah.
I hope he has you on again.
Yeah.
So I get it.
He, I bet you, I don't like this take you have a lot.
I bet you he hates it because him as an MMA commentator,
he gets to hear so many bros.
It's all about the mindset, bro.
Now, to steal man the point you're making,
which I do think it's the stupidest thing you've ever said,
but the actual intent, which is whether you're left or right,
there's strong people on the left,
like mentally strong
Physically strong like I think the whole point is not that you can beat them But you're willing to step you're willing to fight if you need to this is 100%
So it's not like I believe I could beat him
It's like I'm willing like all this shit, you know calling with the people on the left who says or whatever
I'm willing to step in the fight. Even if I'm on train, even if I'm a father shape, I'm willing to fight.
Yeah, I get it.
I understand that, but it's just pick a different person.
Um, that's why I wrote down my genuine curiosity is if you can beat up Alex,
Alex Jones versus.
That, that, that the legitimate is I would pay for that because you're both untrained.
Um, you both got, I would say the spirit.
No, no.
He has, look, I'll give the same fairness.
I think I got an 8% chance of being, beating Rogan.
You're, you're nuts.
I know I got it.
Hold on.
And I think to be fair, Alex has an 8% chance of beating me.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Okay.
Because you never know he catches you on a lucky punch. I got punched in the ear once
and you lose your balance and then you're in a lot of trouble. Right? So I can get lucky.
Alex Jones can't lucky. It's me against Rogan is harder. Like if you said to me,
you don't have 8% chance, but Alex does. Okay. I'm not gonna, it's, it's fine. Right.
So why would it, does Alex stand almost no chance? He asked me.
So first of all, it's not just because I'm big and he's big. One, I wrestled.
Are you rustled?
Yeah. If you wrestle, then you're like, I watched this show with my kids,
physical 100. It's like a Korean show where they try to find out who's the best,
best athlete.
They have one thing where they have to wrestle away the ball and keep it this big giant
ball.
I'm like, every wrestler is going to win.
Every MMA fighter is going to win and every time
they win.
And they're like, dad, how'd you know that?
Because we get trained.
We're not going to lose to a non-wrestler
in a wrestling contest.
It's not going to happen.
Right.
So you can get lucky, but it's unlikely.
So one wrestling now that was from a long time ago, but at least you know the mechanics.
Right.
Uh, number two, I've gotten into about 30 actual street fights in my life.
And you can say street fights, not the same as MMA.
Of course that's true.
Obviously true.
Right.
But it's not no experience.
It's some experience.
And the most important part of a street fight is being able to take a punch to the face.
Okay.
Yeah.
No one, it feels like to get punched in the face. Yeah being able to take a punch to the face.
Okay.
Yeah.
Knowing what it feels like to get punched in the face.
Yeah.
So I've been punched in the face, I don't know, dozens of times in my life.
I used to start fights by saying, I'll let you take the first punch.
Okay.
So I didn't start the fights.
They just started because they'd punch me in the face.
Okay.
So, and then, and then for Alex, the main thing,
and also true for Rogan is it's about willpower, right?
So if you, if Joe has a 92% chance,
in my opinion, of knocking me out or beating me
because he has the skill and he's trained
and he knows what he's doing,
so all the willpower in the world isn't gonna help you
if you get kicked upside the hat, right?
So, but in the unlikely circumstances that I've worn him down, right.
Then I'm a little bit more in the ball game because I got willpower for Alex.
He doesn't have the willpower I have.
Okay.
I'm because to me, the idea of losing to Alex Jones is unthinkable.
I would do anything not to lose, anything.
Let me just say, so that's beautiful.
I love this.
I will pay a lot of money to watch the two of you
just even like wrestle.
But with Joe, I think, I have to say it's like,
it's 0.0001% chance you have a chance before you even
get to the mentality.
And the other thing is on the mentality side, one of the fascinating things about
Joe is he's actually a sweetheart in person like this, but there's something
that takes over him when he competes.
Brother, we've been around 22 years in the toughest industry in the world.
Right.
If you like, do you have any idea how hard it is to run a 75 person company and make money
online and survive after all the guys who took billions of dollars went?
I hear you.
Tremendous willpower. So, but overall you're, I, this is not the Hill I'm dying on.
Okay. Joe would win. I get it.
I think we're all allowed one kind of blind spot, I suppose.
So you don't think a big guy that still is in good shape,
that was a wrestler, that's been in a lot of street fights,
you still think.0001?
It depends on street fights, but yeah,.001.
I just see technique.
Okay, yeah, and it's such a minute disagreement
because, so take me out of it. So you take out the willpower part of blah, blah, blah. I just see technique. Okay, yeah, and it's such a minute disagreement because, so take me out of it.
So you take out the willpower part of blah, blah, blah.
I think it's one to 2%.
Yeah, he could catch the guy and about, you know,
and get lucky.
I think it's because I've talked to,
so I trained with a coach named John Donahue,
and we talk about this a lot.
And I think technique is just such,
technique is the thing that also feeds the willpower.
It actually builds up your confidence in the way that like
nothing else does, in the more actionable way.
Because you won't need that much willpower.
No, I totally get it.
If the technique is back.
You don't have to be like a tough guy to win debates
if you're just fucking good at debates, right?
So I think people just don't understand the value in sport and
especially in combat of technique.
No, I, there are great irony years.
I actually totally agree with that.
That's why I may measure the physical 100 techniques going to win every
day, like almost every time we're having a debate about whether it's
eight or one or 0.01, Like it's either way technique wins.
We agree.
Okay.
Beautiful.
In the, uh, one of the controversial things you've done in the nineties, as a
student at UPenn, you publicly denied the Armenian genocide, which is the mass
murder of over a million Armenians in 1915 and 16 in the Ottoman Empire.
You have since then publicly and clearly
changed your mind on this.
Tell me the process you went through to change your mind.
Yeah, so when you're a kid,
you're taught a whole bunch of things.
That's the software that we talked about earlier, right?
So cultural software is media, family, friends, social media, etc.
And so growing up in any tribe, whether it's a religious tribe or an ethnic tribe,
you're going to get indoctrinated into that tribe's way of thinking.
So you take a Turkish person who's super progressive, loves Bernie, believes with all their heart and peace,
and you tell them something about Kurds and they'll say, oh no, not those guys. They're terrible and evil and we have to do what we do to them.
Ah, you see, that's the tribe taking over, right?
And so you tell any religious person what's wrong with the other religions, they're like, oh yeah, yeah, that's totally true. You get to their religion, tribe takes over.
Know how dare you, I'm offended, right? So I grew up with Turkish propaganda. So I'll tell you a
couple of funny instances of it. When we were kids, we'd go to Turkish American Day Parade.
I'm like 10 or 12 years old, it's in the middle of New York because I grew up in Jersey. That's why I got in all those fights. Uh, and, uh, and we would chant in Turkish,
Turkey is the biggest country.
There's no other country that's even big.
And I was like, this is crazy.
I'm like, dad, isn't this crazy?
America's big.
China's big.
Why are we chanting this nonsensical chant?
Right.
So that's the beginning of being in the realize your indoctrination.
I'm in college and I read about some battle that the Ottoman Empire lost.
And I'm like, that can't be right.
Uh, the Turks have only lost one war, world war one.
Right.
And then I was like, Oh my God, I'm an idiot.
I got taught that in third grade in Turkey.
Of course that's not true.
That's ridiculously untrue.
Right.
All those thoughts are in your head.
You don't even realize it.
And so on the Armenian genocide, I read the Turkish version and the Turkish version has all of this evidence.
So it's real in that it exists, but here I'll give you a great example of it.
I think it was Colonel Chester, he's some random American military guy after World War I,
and he says about the Armenians after the mass, uh, march,
the forced marches, he says they returned to the area fat and entirely unmascored.
Okay. I'm like, Hey, that's an American Colonel that's saying that.
So that's obviously true. You see they didn't happen, right?
Or at least in the way that the Armenians say now as a grownup,
I look at it and I go, are you kidding me? That guy's obviously trying to get a contract with the Turkish government, right?
Nobody returns from a force march fat and entirely unmassacred.
Right?
So that's propaganda.
And so it, and that one was so indoctrinated that it was tough to let go.
So in, at Penn, I write that op-ed, et cetera,
and then over the course of time. And so Anna and I disagree on things from time to time.
And we've been co-hosting now for, she's been at the Young Turks for 18 years and co-hosting for,
you know, almost 18. And so she's Armenian. And by the way, I love America. I mean, look,
we came to America because we love this country, land of hope and
opportunity.
That's part of why I fight so hard for the average American, for the American idea.
So here's a Turk and an Armenian doing a show together and it becomes the
number one online news show.
That's the beauty of America.
Right.
So she's telling me things and we're having some on air discussions about it, et
cetera.
And then it just dawned on air discussions about it, etc.
And then it just dawned on me like, no, this was this too was obviously propaganda.
So at that point, once you realize that it becomes easier, that's why I'm trying to unplug people
from the matrix. Because once you realize it's propaganda, oh my God, it gets infinitely easier
to start telling what's true or not true. So maybe by way of advice, how do you know when you're diluted by propaganda?
How do you know you're not believing a kind of, uh, how do you know when you're not plugged into
the matrix, when you're plugged into the matrix? You have to keep testing it against objective
reality. Okay. They said something. Did it happen or did it not happen? So here's an easy one.
Alex Jones, for a long time, especially under Obama,
kept saying, they're gonna put us on FEMA camps.
They're gonna stuff us all in the FEMA camps
and they're gonna put us in and they're not gonna let us out.
I know it, I know it for sure, right?
Nobody's been in a FEMA camp.
Obama left, there was no FEMA camps.
So what I asked for the right-wing conspiracy guys,
guys, has any of their things ever come true? Like they always say all these crazy things that never ever
happened. So the third time it doesn't happen, can you please start to wonder maybe I'm on the wrong
side? Maybe. And, but, but that's not just for right wingers. That's easy. Right. But it's also
for mainstream media. And that's where I get the biggest pushback. And that's not just for right-wingers. That's easy. Right. But it's also for mainstream media.
And that's where I get the biggest pushback and that's where, because my
tribe is, is what the kids call PMC professional management class.
Okay.
Their careers, you go up the ladder, you have this route, that route, et cetera.
And so for that class, the status quo is pretty good. So when you get, when Biden gives
you 15% change, you're like, what else do you want? That's amazing. He just course corrected
a little bit. Now it's perfect. Right. But for the average guy who needs a hundred percent change,
not 15, they look at it and they go, what the fuck? He only did 15% and everybody's declaring him a hero, right?
So those are the hardest guys to get through on.
And those are the guys who get most mad at me, not the right wingers,
the establishment.
That's why I, I'm nails on a chalkboard for them because I'm on the left, but I
call out their crap and their marketing and propaganda.
And that's why I mentioned earlier, no one probably, he might not even consciously know it, but no one
dislikes Bernie more than Obama because if Bernie
got into office, he'd embarrass Obama by doing a
lot more change.
And Obama told us the change wasn't possible.
You could only get 5%.
And so if Bernie does 50%, then Obama's
humiliated and his record and his legacy is ruined.
Right. So he, I think that's the biggest thing that And so if Bernie does 50%, then Obama's humiliated and his record and his legacy is ruined.
Right.
So he, I don't think he makes that conscious decision, right.
But it's subconscious.
It's a way of thinking.
So if you're watching morning Joe, test them.
He says something that Biden is for $15 minimum wage.
When Biden takes it out of the bill,
know that Morning Joe was lying to you.
He says that Biden said he was for the public option,
but he never even proposed it.
When Morning Joe still defends him
and you see an objective reality,
Biden didn't actually propose that bill,
you know that they're lying to you.
Test it against objective reality.
Did it actually happen or didn't it?
I mean, there's some of that,
just to steal a man some of the conspiracy theories.
Do you think there's some value to the conspiracy theories
that come from the right,
but actually more so come from the anti-establishment?
I mean, for me, there's a lot that raise a bit of a question.
A lot of them could probably be explained by corporatism For me, there's a lot that raise a bit of a question.
A lot of them could probably be explained by corporatism and the military industrial complex.
But there's also a lot of them can be explained
by creepiness and shadiness in human nature.
Epstein is an example of that.
There's a lot of ways to explain Epstein,
including the basic creepiness of human nature.
But there could be bigger explanations on denying it.
So sometimes when we have long, thoughtful conversations like this, I'll say it depends
a lot.
Yeah.
And then people get frustrated by that.
But then you're frustrated by the world because it depends.
So conspiracy theories, if you say, are they
all right or are they all wrong, already the question is wrong. So it depends what is the
conspiracy theory. So if it's some of the absurd ones we've mentioned here, that's easily disproven.
Right? On the other hand, there's a conspiracy theory, uh, about JFK's assassination.
Which one is the conspiracy theory that Lee Harvey Oswald from like 12 miles away shot a magic bullet that went like this and hit like 13 people and came out Kennedy's brain, or that the government might've wanted to cover up an assassination of the president for whatever reason.
Okay, come on.
Now I'm of course doing hyperbole
and like the JFK enthusiasts will be like,
no, the bullet didn't actually go like this.
It didn't actually hit 13 people.
I'm kidding guys, okay.
But in terms of, is that conspiracy theory real
that JFK was not just killed by Lee Harvey Oswald?
Almost certainly.
If you read real books with tons of information, the most likely culprit is Alan Dulles, the head of the CIA that he fired. Back when there was a deep state, there actually was a deep state,
they did coups against other countries leaders all the time, but they tell us,
oh, they wouldn't do it to our own leader.
But remember that's not the CIA.
He'd left the CIA already.
Right.
So he get, you know, so I don't know if it was X CIA guys.
I don't know if the mob was involved.
I don't know any of those details, but I know some things that are obvious.
That bullet didn't magically hit him from over there.
As Jack Ruby killed Lee Harvey Oswald.
Jack Ruby was a mobster who on the record had said that he hated Kennedy.
All of a sudden he became patriotic overnight and shot the assailant who was unguarded.
Maybe less likely.
Okay.
So let's speed up though.
So my point is, yeah, some conspiracy theories could be true.
It depends on objective reality, right?
You get to Epstein.
Again, I always do it ahead of time because I want you to test me and see,
does it match objective reality?
So I said the minute that it happened, you'll have your answer based on whether
the video in the hallway worked or not. If the video in the hallway works, there'll be just as many
conspiracy theories, but it'll show actually who went in and didn't go in. Okay. But if the video
in the hallway doesn't work, they definitely killed him. Okay. So a couple of days later,
oh, the video in that particular hallway happened to not be working.
And the guards both happened to be on break at the same time.
And the most notorious pedophile criminal in the country happened to be unguarded.
And that is the one time he decided to hang himself.
Listen, man, the only way you believe that is if you got mainstream media to get you
to believe that the word, that the minute the phrase conspiracy theory is mentioned,
you have to shut off your mind and you have to believe whatever the media tells you.
Yeah.
Well, it's interesting you just mentioned.
Do you think the CIA has not grown in power versus?
No, no, they've greatly waned in power.
Interesting.
So, so in the old days, the CIA has an actual deep state and because the
country was run by a bunch of families, right?
So you go to Yale, the skull and bones thing was real, right?
And you go to Harvard, you go to this and half the, look at the Dulles family,
right?
Half of them go into government, the other half go into banking.
Uh, why are the Central
American countries called Banana Republics? Because we, America, did a coup against one
of those countries because a banana company wanted it, okay? Because they're like,
how dare you charge whatever you want for your natural resource? We American corporations have
the right to all of your natural resources at the lowest possible
rate. Alan, get rid of these guys. Okay. And Alan Wood. And sometimes they would go extra judicial,
right? Like potentially with the JFK assassination. So now, and by the way, you pissed off J. Edgar
Hoover, he was just going to put a bullet in your head and we were done with you.
Okay.
Fred Hampton among others.
So, um, but nowadays that's not how the world works.
So a small number of families cannot control a country and an economy this size.
New people pop up.
Well, Mark Zuckerberg wasn't part of those families.
Elon Musk wasn't part of those families, neither was Bezos, right?
For you to believe those conspiracy theories, you have to think that Bezos and Musk, et cetera, were like, oh, you guys are still running the country?
No problem.
Go ahead.
They're not going to do that.
Right?
So now we've gotten into a system where it's the invisible hand of the market
that runs the country, but unfortunately it's for only for the powerful.
And so it's more of a machine and they don't do, and this is super
interesting in ties to what we were talking about earlier, like, which is that
they don't do political assassinations anymore.
They do character assassinations.
That's the needle in the haystack thing.
So, and if you do an assassination of someone, you build up their status. They become a martyr
and you build up their cause. But if you do a character assassination, you smear the cause
with the person and the cause goes down, not up. So the market found a better way
of getting rid of agitating outsiders.
Well, that's one of the conspiracy theories with Epstein
is that he's a front for like a, I guess, CIA
and they're getting data on people
like creepy pedophile kind of data
that they can use to then threaten character assassination
and then to put them, in this way,
put the people in their pockets.
So look, we're not in on it,
so there's no way we can know, right?
But I just always go back to logic.
So he has dirt on a lot of powerful people. He dies in a way that is an
obvious murder and not a suicide. And then you begin to think who would have enough power to be
able to get away with that crime. And that is a very limited number of either people or governments.
Right. So that's probably your answer without knowing
anything that's internal. Yeah. That's crazy. We don't have the list of clients. What is the
best way to achieve stability and peace in Israel and Palestine in the current situation
and in the next five, 10 years. If people wanted to get to peace, it's relatively
straightforward. There's already a deal that was negotiated, the Saudis agreed to it, and they're
an important player in this game. The Palestinians and the Israelis have initially agreed to it,
even Hamas has kind of agreed to it. That deal exists and it's just waiting on the shelf to get
done. It's pretty straightforward. Israel gets out of the West Bank and Gaza Strip,
but they keep an X percentage. It used to be 4% then it went up to 6%. It's probably a higher
number now. The Palestinians keep losing leverage as we go. Do you remember how hard it was to get
a deal on Ukraine, I thought. That's a very complicated
one. Israel is much more straightforward. Get the hell out of the occupying territories,
keep some of the god… Those settlements are the worst thing. They're cancer. But anyway,
I don't know. But there is an answer to the settlements and it's probably that Israel keeps
them, even though that drives me crazy. No right of return for Palestinians.
There'll be symbolic right of return for a couple of families.
And so Palestinians go, Oh, no way guys, you have no leverage. Take the deal.
Take the deal.
Okay.
So you're not going to get a right of return days.
There is not going to allow millions of Palestinians to go and vote in Israel.
It would end the Jewish state.
You have to get to a practical solution.
So honestly,
the number one person blocking it now is then Yahoo. That's obvious. That doesn't take a lot
of courage to say that. He says publicly, I don't want a Palestinian state, I'm against
the two-state solution. He's been monstrous. He's one of the worst terrorists of my lifetime.
So that's easy.
The right wing of Israel has lost its mind.
So the Smotrich and the Ben Gavir is openly talking about ethnic cleansing and
driving them into other Arab countries.
Uh, I mean, this is the definition of ethnic cleansing.
So, but is like, I know that the Arabs are going to take the deal. Saudi Arabia cannot wait to take the deal because they just want to get business going, right?
Do you think Hamas takes the deal?
So I had a solution where you don't need Hamas, but yes, Hamas would definitely take the deal.
Hamas already publicly said that they would even get rid of, that Israel doesn't have a
right to exist, but there's so much propaganda in American
media, it's maddening, right?
So, and this idea that you don't deal
with Hamas is so dumb.
So the reason it's dumb is you don't
negotiate with your friends.
You negotiate with your enemies.
Well, I don't want to negotiate with them.
I don't like them.
Well, then you're not going to get to peace,
right?
But still there is a path that doesn't include Hamas.
So make a deal with Fatah that runs the best West Bank.
Then they get right now, Fatah went into Gaza Strip.
They wouldn't be able to manage it because they
don't have enough credibility.
They're mainly seen as in cahoots with the occupiers,
whereas Hamas is hardcore and fighting against the occupiers.
But if Fattah delivers a peace, not only a peace deal, but a Palestinian state,
then they come in as heroes.
So you make the deal with them, you let them run the Gaza strip and you empower
them to drive out Hamas that way they do your dirty work for you in a sense, right?
But good, because Hamas is a terrorist organization,
they're not helpful, and especially if the Palestinians
get a state, the violence has to stop immediately.
That's the whole point.
The trade is, you get a state, Israel gets safety and peace.
So no more rockets than Israel.
No more rockets.
If you do any other rockets when, and Israel does the barbaric thing they just did.
Even I would say, Hey brother, we had a peace deal.
Okay.
So if you violate a peace deal and you do a bomb, they're going to do a bomb and their bomb is much larger.
Okay.
So that, and by the way, can it work?
It already has worked.
Israel already did it with Egypt.
So Egypt was a hundred times Hamas.
Egypt gathered all the Arab armies and actually physically invaded Israel
when Israel could lose and they did it several times.
And Lex at the time, all, not just the right, like the war hawks, but most people thought
there's no way Egypt will keep that peace deal.
Oh, they're suckers.
We're giving them the Sinai peninsula back and then they're just going to keep bombing
and attacking us.
There hasn't been a single bomb from Egypt since the peace deal.
Peace deals work.
War gets you more war. Peace deals get you peace.
And you should never, this is true of all of life, don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
So if you're saying, well, I'm not positive that a peace deal is going to be perfect
and 12 more rockets might be fired. Well, brother, what do we have now? Right? We have endless rockets now.
If Israel is supposed to be a safe haven for Jews, and I get it and I want it, okay, then become a
safe haven. The way that you're a safe haven is stop the occupation. It's not complicated.
And, and the reason they're not, let's be honest, the reason the right wing government of Israel is not stopping the occupation is because they want to take more and more land.
And so they have throughout time taken away more of the West Bank than they had originally.
And now Netanyahu is saying, I want a corridor at the, in the middle of Gaza and I want a corridor
at the border of Egypt. Now we're back to occupying Gaza physically, let alone through power and et cetera.
So BB has to go.
Definitely.
What's the role of us in making a peace deal like that happen?
It's going to sound outlandish, but I can get you a ceasefire almost overnight if Bibi's gone.
And because the Israeli negotiators have said publicly, please, not publicly,
it got leaked and it was in the Israeli press. You have to give us a little bit of wiggle room.
If you don't give us a little bit of wiggle room, obviously they're not going to do the deal. And
he's like, I know, right?
That's why he's not giving them the wiggle room.
So don't ask for land in Gaza, get the hell out of Gaza, you just ceasefire.
That's the easy part.
So the hard part is the occupation, ending the occupation, but even that, I can
get it to you in two months, as long as Israel actually wants a deal.
So go to an election, get rid of Netanyahu, put in,
you know, Benny Gantz. Is Benny Gantz an angel? No, he's the one that ordered all the bombings
of Gaza to begin with, right? Look, Benny Gantz has got massive war crimes on his record. So don't
worry, he's not a softy, okay? But he's not my favorite guy in the world,
to say the least. But Benny Gans can do a peace deal if he wants to. So look, only one group of
people can actually settle this. Well, there's actually two groups of people. One is the Israeli
population. You voted someone who wants to do a peace deal, you'll get a peace deal. Okay.
Number two is the American president. So if
I'm the American president, I'm saying in a hypothetical, right, or any American president
that actually wants to get a peace deal done. You just say, I'm going to cut the funding.
Israel will do the deal immediately. They don't say they want to cut the funding because APAC
gives them a hundred million dollars. It's not complicated, not 1% complicated.
It's not complicated, not 1% complicated. Yeah.
So Lex, tell me this, okay?
So if the US president said, I'm going to cut the funding.
Do you think that it might have a giant problem for Netanyahu?
Might it hurt his government?
Might they have to go to an election?
Would Israeli politicians, let alone the population, begin to really, really worry that they're
going to lose an enormous source of funding and weapons.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
So why wouldn't we use our leverage?
It's crazy not to use our leverage.
Yeah.
Uh, and this is where we go back to the steel man of Trump.
It feels like he's the only one crazy enough to, to use that leverage by crazy.
I mean, in a good kind of sense, bold enough, not giving a shit about convention,
not giving a shit about pressures and money and influence and all that kind of stuff.
Yes.
But with the biggest asterisks in the history of the world, which is 12% chance
he does that and that's great, but in huge chance he does the opposite.
And he goes, let's call it 80 again, 80%.
Oh yeah, Miriam wanted me to give West Bank to Israel.
So you have it guys now, you just occupy the whole thing forever, okay?
Ah, a giant war.
Oh yeah, I'm going to prove how tough I am.
I'm going to nuke Iran.
Oh no, what are you doing?
What are you doing?
Trump is a massive risk.
He's an enormous amount of risk.
If you were running a company and not a country,
would you hire Trump as your CEO?
Everyone watching just screamed inside their heads,
no, okay.
You would never think take that kind of risk
with your company.
You got an 80% chance the guy's gonna blow up the company?
No way, no way.
And you know it too.
If you're, especially if you're a businessman,
you know, you're not going to hire that loose
cannon to run your company.
It's, it's unacceptable risk, but you're not wrong.
We talked about it earlier, but as part of that
risk, there's a sliver in there that he could
accidentally do the right thing.
We talked a lot about hope in this conversation.
Zooming out, what gives you hope about the future of this whole thing of humanity? Not just the United thing. We talked a lot about hope in this conversation. Zooming out, what gives you hope about the future of this whole thing of humanity?
Not just the United States of us humans on earth.
So why am I center left and not center, right?
It gets to that question.
So you look at the polling, not just here in America, but in almost any country.
And it almost always breaks out to two thirds of one third, right?
Two thirds of the people say, let's be empathetic.
Let's share.
Let's be, let's do equality justice.
Let's be fair.
Right.
One third goes, no, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me.
Okay.
That's just the nature of humanity.
And so, and usually the same third goes, no change.
And the other two thirds go, well, some change.
So, because if you don't do any change, you're, you're never going to get to the
right answer for the wisdom of the crowd to work for free markets to work, for
everything to work, you have to keep changing because the times change and the
culture changes and the situation changes.
Right.
So that's why there's amendments in the constitution,
because you need to be able to change the document
from time to time.
Be careful with it, right?
But you need to allow for an avenue for change.
So now why does the one third keep winning
in so many different places?
Because they have more money and power.
And by the way, if you're more selfish,
you're more likely to get more money and power, right?
And I wish that weren't the case, but it is.
And these are not blanket rules, they're on average.
So that third winds up winning in so many circumstances.
But the bottom line is we are a species that requires consent.
So I mean, I'm a stone cold atheist. So I don't think
we're kind of like apes. I think we are apes. Okay. And all the scientists out there are going,
well, of course we are. Everyone else is going, that's crazy. Okay. So when you look at it as a species, different species react in different ways.
Snakes have no empathy cause it's not in their DNA.
They, and that's why we have a sense of what a snake does.
Right.
So for good news is for higher level apes like us, bonobos, chimpanzees,
and humans, we all roughly want consent.
So a chimpanzee, for example, who has a violent, uh, you know, reputation and they are violent and unfortunately we're pretty close to them.
Uh, but what people don't know is a leader doesn't win through violence,
especially for bonobos, they lead, they win by picking lice off of other
chimpanzees by going and doing favors,
going to a hunt, getting food and giving it to someone else, because what they're
gathering is the consent of the governed. And that's how you become the alpha. You
don't do it through physical dominance, you do it through consent. So that's how we're
hardwired, that's in our DNA. That two thirds in the long run will win.
And that, and we will have empathy, we will have change and that's the hope that we're all looking for.
Hope has got the numbers.
It seems like.
Yeah.
And in fact, one more thing, Lex, look at history, hope and change always win.
And so again, conservatives don't catch feelings. There is a need for conservatives because you have to balance things out. If you just had, even though wonderful
two thirds, that still wouldn't be the ideal system. You need a Winston Churchill if you're
in the middle of World War II. You need someone to say regulating six inspections of the elevators is too many.
You need that balance and conservatives have a role and it's a really important role.
But having said that, they're assigned to losing throughout history because they're fighting on
losing ground. A conservative says no change, but the world is constantly changing. So they're destined to lose.
That's why the founding fathers won against the British monarchy.
That's why the civil rights movement won.
They didn't win overnight.
It took them a hundred years to get equal rights, let alone past slavery.
Right.
So we want all women's rights.
We want on gay rights.
We keep winning, but every snapshot in, in time
makes it feel like we're losing.
There's a bad guy in charge.
We are living under corporate rule, et cetera.
But in the long tide of history, change always
wins.
So the empathetic, generally speaking, left wing, but again,
don't worry about the titles, right?
People get obsessed with the labels.
The two thirds, that's empathetic.
That includes a lot of right wingers, right?
You win at the end in history, every single time.
So we fight forward.
We, we, we're tough when we need to be, we need that
willpower to win any fight, right?
But we're civil and respectful to the other
side because they are us.
So progressives all the time.
And we say, look, and I, this is like the ending of my book, which is.
We, for conservatives, you have a lot of empathy for inside the wagons.
So conservatives are great to their family, generally speaking, to their
community, to their church, to anyone
that's inside the wagons. But they set up electric fences and barbed wire around their
wagons. So if you're on the outside, you're the others and you're going to get electrified
and it's constantly, right? And so I like to think the left wing has wider wagons. So we view the world as more us and not you.
But the good news of that is, if we win,
we're not gonna do Medicare for only the left, right?
We're gonna do Medicare for all.
You're all gonna get universal healthcare.
We're gonna do higher wages for all.
The right wing is not gonna be left out.
And Lex, I'm gonna tell you a fun story. It's
about my family and I'm sure that parts of it are apocryphal because it's from like
500 years ago. But it gives you a sense of the old Mark Twain quote, if it's really Mark Twain's of change happens really gradually.
And then all of a sudden, so my mom's last name in Turkish is Yavaşça. It means slowly. It's a
weird name, even in Turkish. And so one day we're walking past the mosque in Istanbul when I'm a kid. And it says on the mosque, Yavasha.
Well, like, what is this?
Okay.
So it's a small little mosque.
We go inside and my dad starts asking them mom questions.
Okay.
So he says, why is the, why is the mosque named that?
And he said, well, do you don't know?
And he's because my dad said, my mom, my wife's name is last name is Yasha.
He's like, Oh my God. And he's like, your ancestor was the Admiral of the Ottoman Navy
when they conquered Constantinople. Okay. So grandpa from five, 600 years ago came up with
the idea. So you can't ever conquer Constantinople because there's a giant chain in the, underneath the Bosphorus. All the ships get stuck on the chain. There's cannons on both sides. Half
the ancient navies in the world are at the bottom of the Bosphorus, right? So hasn't been conquered
in over a thousand years. Nobody thinks it can be conquered. Grandpa comes up with the idea of,
why don't we build giant wooden planks over land and grease them and pass our fleet over land onto the other side.
Everybody goes because whenever anybody poses a new idea, no matter how logical it is, they go,
oh, that's impossible. No way it's going to work. Oh, you're crazy. This is an unconquerable city.
What are you guys even doing? Every day, Mem and the Conqueror comes up to grandpa and says,
all right, how's your plan to do this project going? And grandpa says,
slowly. And he names him Commander Slowly. And one night after the whole thing's done,
they pass the entire Ottoman fleet over the land, wind up in the middle of the Bosphorus, and the Holy Roman Empire concedes. They surrender.
Change happens really gradually and then all of a sudden.
Good story. Well, Cenk, thank you for fighting for that change for many years now, for over
two decades now. Thank you for talking today.
Appreciate it, Lex. Thank you for having the conversation.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Cenk Huger.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now let me leave you with some words from Hanna Arend.
Totalitarianism is never content to rule by external means, namely through the state and a machinery of violence.
Thanks to its peculiar ideology and the role assigned to it in the apparatus of coercion,
totalitarianism has discovered a means of dominating and terrorizing human beings from
within.
Thank you for listening.
I hope to see you next time.