PBD Podcast - Vivek Ramaswamy: Trump Wildwood Rally & Ann Coulter's Controversial Comments | PBD Podcast | Ep. 410
Episode Date: May 14, 2024Patrick Bet-David, Adam Sosnick, Tom Ellsworth & Vincent Oshana are joined by former Presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy! Vivek Ramaswamy is an American entrepreneur and politician. He founded... Roivant Sciences, a pharmaceutical company, in 2014. In February 2023, Ramaswamy declared his candidacy for the Republican Party nomination in the 2024 United States presidential election THE MINNECT LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP: Want your shot to win dinner with Patrick Bet-David? Win "The Minnect League Championship": https://bit.ly/4aMAar8 MINNECT: Connect one-on-one with the right expert for you on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3MC9IXE Connect with Patrick Bet-David on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3OoiGIC Connect with Adam Sosnick on Minnect: https://bit.ly/42mnnc4 Connect with Tom Ellsworth on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3UgJjmR Connect with Vincent Oshana on Minnect: https://bit.ly/47TFCXq Connect with Rob Garguilo on Minnect: https://bit.ly/426IG0R CHOOSE YOUR ENEMIES WISELY: Purchase PBD's Book "Choose Your Enemies Wisely": https://bit.ly/41bTtGD BET-DAVID CONSULTING: Get best-in-class business advice with Bet-David Consulting: https://bit.ly/40oUafz VT.COM: Visit VT.com for the latest news and insights from the world of politics, business and entertainment: https://bit.ly/472R3Mz VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: Visit Valuetainment University for the best courses online for entrepreneurs: https://bit.ly/47gKVA0 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! YOUR NEXT 5 MOVES: Want to be clear on your next 5 business moves? https://bit.ly/3Qzrj3m ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
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Hey, how did your doctor's appointment go, by the way?
Did you ask about rubellsus?
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Order up for Rebelsis. All right, we're about to go live here with the one and only Vivek. homie look what I become
All right, we're about to go live here with the one and only Vivek while I'm taking a picture with them by the way
We got a lot to cover I don't know how many times we've done this three four or five times, but every time we talk to Vivek the
Conversations always lively we talked about a bunch of different issues. Let me kind of give you some things we want to talk about today
one is you know a We talk about a bunch of different issues. Let me kind of give you some things we want to talk about today. One is an exchange that he had with a recent podcast that he is too brown to become a president.
We got to get a reaction on that, which we will.
And then the other part is the position job.
Is he going to be getting the Homeland Security job?
That freaked a lot of people out.
Is he going to get the Secretary of Commerce? Is freaked a lot of people out? Is he going to get the Secretary of Commerce?
Is it VP?
Is it AG?
Is it nothing?
What is the conversation going to be about?
We'll talk about that.
The trial in New York.
Jersey, what Trump did.
Jerry Seinfeld, who's a speaker at Duke graduation, and all of a sudden a bunch of people walk
out.
You got to see this.
Aside from that, there's the Michael Cohen thing going on right now with Stormy Daniel and Michael Cohen, I think, may have wanted to get
sponsored by Nike when you hear what he talked about based on a quote that Trump
told them back in the days. Scaramucci said some stuff about Trump saying he's
a very, very dangerous man and should be nowhere near the White House. Queers for
Palestine, pro-Palestine protesters, stop traffic at Walt Disney World in Florida.
You'll see what that's all about.
And then we got a couple of the stories here.
Let me still continue with this.
North Dakota governor, former presidential candidate Doug Burgum, front and center at
Jersey Rally with Trump.
What's he doing there?
That's a whole conversation that's being brought up lately. RFK says he will qualify for presidential debates as the issues challenge to Trump. Cohen
testifies and you'll see what he'll say here. Pelosi rebuked to her face during
Oxford debate about 2016 election. Very weird what she said and then what the
student and the person that was you know rebuking
her you just have to see what happens in this situation very interesting and then a couple
other things Trump just recently said I support Israel's right to win its war on terror then
CNN's Zacharia by which is by the way he's he's he has an owner and the owner is on our
panel here because without him nobody well I, I mean, without Adam, you know Vinny, nobody would have ever known about Zucari without Adam because it's all-
Never.
Yeah.
I promoted it.
So CNN, Zucari, Biden should go back to Trump's immigration policies.
Then numbers just showed up, a record-breaking number for the number of people with full-time
jobs and part-time jobs.
Wait till you see this.
A couple things here in the economy we'll talk about. There's a stat that get just came out from Wall Street Journal. I want to get the Vegas take on this
Suddenly there aren't enough babies. The whole world is alarmed with not enough babies being born
Kristi no
There's a restraining order on her and all the dogs in South Dakota, which is kind of deeply concerning
We're gonna see what our friend here has to say.
And then last but not least,
I thought this was kind of an interesting story by Forbes.
I don't know who wrote it.
I'm just curious with this title.
Discrimination may cause people to age faster
and affect white people most.
Who the hell would write that?
No wonder why people feel like that.
This is a Forbes article, guys, that we're talking about. Forbes article. So, but I have to start off with this. Can I just say write something like that? This is a Forbes article guys that we're talking about.
Forbes article.
So, but I have to start off with this.
Can I say one word on that?
Do you think if the article's findings were that discrimination would cause people to
age slower, would they have published it?
I don't think so.
No, this is a great opportunity for them to write something like that.
Rob, can you pull this up?
So Ann Coulter, who we've had on the podcast
before. Ann Coulter, I think you and her are, you know, on a show together. You're doing something
together. And she asked this question. I just want to get your reaction on. Rob, go on and play this
clip. That's why I brought on today somebody who I think has some thoughtful perspectives on the
future direction of our country, of our conservative movement. And on this question of nationalism and
national identity, somebody who have been fascinated
for a long time.
Can you fast forward to when she says it right?
And interact with on social media,
but for the first time we're having a
live conversation in the offline sense of it.
It's Ann Coulter.
So Ann, thanks for coming on
and I'm looking forward to our conversation today.
Me too, thanks for having me.
That was a fantastic opening monologue. I too am a fan of yours.
I'm going to make a point of disagreeing with you so that it will be fun. You are so bright
and articulate and I guess I can call you articulate since you're not an American black.
Can't can't say that about them. That's that's derogatory. And that was a great opening segment.
Lots of things to talk about there. Oh, agreed with many many things you said during in fact probably
more than than most other candidates when you're running for president but I
still would not have voted for you because you're an Indian we'll get back
to that just skip over the racism have a first of all, what was it?
Did you know she was?
Because it seems like when you guys are starting, there's a little bit of tension.
I don't know if there was like pre getting started with there was tension or not.
You're pretty good at picking that up, man.
So actually, so so to give you the context here.
So I ran this podcast during the presidential campaign.
It was called Truth.
Yeah, I took some time off after the campaign and now, you know, getting back into showing
the things. So we relaunched the truth podcast just law relaunched it officially last week
So you know get that up on the ground you have good conversations, right?
And I wanted to I wanted to pick on some people who had
Poked me a little bit on social media or in other ways to be able to you know
It's kind of boring to just talk about everybody who agrees with the same right right
But let's get a little bit of tension from the left from the right
So I'll bring in Coltrane because during the campaign
I don't remember what exactly she said but a numerous instances would comment on
Different ways in which I might not be quite qualified to be president, right?
So let's get her on and have a conversation and both of us are interested in the theme of nationalism
I did not expect she would just kick it off right there get right into the business
And I think it actually made for a really good conversation, believe it or not.
Of course, I disagree with hell like her on that being a criteria to be the US president
is her description of whether or not you're an Indian.
I'm born in the United States.
I'm as American as they come.
But I thought it actually formed a really strong basis for an honest conversation that
we otherwise don't have.
Because her view is that in order to actually be a US president you got to be even more
American right so you're not fully American if your parents weren't from
the United States of America and in order to trust somebody the more
generations they've been here let's say you've been here six or seven
generations you have more of what she would call I think she did call during
the podcast a security policy it's like an insurance policy that you know that if you're going to put somebody in that
high office, at least you know that they've really, really soaked up what it means to
be American.
Now, I disagree with that.
I disagree with that because you have people in the seventh generation Americans who are
the kids of some, I've known many of these people, grow up in the Upper East Side, some
daughter who lives in Brooklyn thinks she's a hippie,
talks about hating this country.
Well, I don't think that that person's any more American than I am just because my parents
happen to have been legal immigrants to this country.
I've got two questions for you.
But it made for a good conversation.
I've got two questions for you with this, okay?
On one end, how many people you think are like, if you were to say, of the voters' block,
what percentage of the voter block agrees with her?
So say in the Republican primary?
In the Republican primary to say you know what I'm not going to even if it's 1% 2%
3% what do you think it is?
So I will tell you this with confidence it is a lot higher than I believed it was a year
ago.
Interesting.
It's a lot higher than I believe you would think it is to interest which is
why and i said this on social media and some people hit me on the left from it
i said i respect her for saying it even though i disagree right right because at
least she has the spine to say
in public
what many other people not a majority not even close to a majority
a lot of people she's not alone she is voicing a view that i think is widespread and you know actually I what the hell we're here we're just
gonna you know let loose a bit I had I had somebody text me who had run for
position you guys might know her Harmeet Dillon you know her me Dylan
yeah absolutely our meets super cool so I hope she's fine with me saying this
because I think it's important to the public no we can't just have these
conversations behind closed doors.
Now having the open so that when she ran for her position of being the chairwoman of the R.
M. C., she had many people tell her the same thing, too, which is interesting to me
because most of the grassroots was in a lot of the grassroots with me.
A lot of grassroots with people like Karmic.
But there are people who believe that if you're electing people to positions of
leadership, how American you
are is a spectrum.
When you were out there campaigning, did anybody face you, confront you and say, I would totally
support you, but you're too brown for me?
Did anyone say that?
So I had many of those for religion.
So I didn't have anybody come up and say that because of, well, there were people on social
media who would make an argument.
It wasn't on ethnicity.
And this is part of Anne's point, too. It's the point that your parents were immigrants to this
country, and so you are truly not at the highest level of being American to be president of the
United States. So we had a number of people that would say that occasionally. A much more common
one, though, for people to my face was, I would love to vote for you. It's difficult for me to
vote for somebody else because I agree with you more
But I can't do that because you are Hindu that came up a lot
Especially in Iowa even the town hall when we did somebody asked you one of the ladies got up and remember that
Yeah, I thought your answer was fantastic. She I remember her she was she was I was standing on stage
She was standing right there very thoughtful. Yes. I don't think she was in the category saying I can't vote
No, she didn't say she asked a very legitimate question. She did. She said, tell me about your faith.
That's right. Because if you're running for president, I got to know who you are. Right.
And if your faith is important to you, then in order to know who you are, I got to know
your faith. That's different from, I'm telling you though, I will face people in Iowa, there's
pastor in Iowa who wrote an extensive Facebook post, I spent two hours with him on the back
of a bus talking it through and he still came out on the other side as he said, if it is
God's will for you to be the US president, I will accept it. Respect. But I can't vote for you
myself because I can't vote for somebody who doesn't share my vote. Let me stay on this here. So first of all
strategically I don't know if Ann Coulter wants to sell you some product that Sammy Sosa used. I don't
know if you're familiar with Sammy Sosa. He had the skin whitener. I don't know if you're familiar with Sammy
He got a skin to be lighter so you can go couple shape, you know lighter Rob I don't know why you're laughing. I'm trying to make a solution here to make and happy. I'm not I'm not gonna be a customer
I'm sorry, but he was
This guy hits 66 home runs and he saved MLB in 1998. Let me go back to the question here with this one here
Okay, what do you think's more extreme? What do you think's more extreme? Tell me how your argument is on the other side
So one side you know what I don't think
America because you know back in the days what was JFK was Tom you said Roman Catholic
It was a Roman Catholic where the headlines when Nixon was running. It's a Roman Catholic
We're not ready for a Roman Catholic president. Okay, and then America said nah, we're okay with it, right?
You cool with that. Okay, we're okay. We actually cool with that. Do you think?
Give me which of these are more extreme
So do you think and Coulter's position of saying, no, not only do I want you to be
a natural born citizen, but I also want you to be white, to be a true nationalist, to
be a president here, how about the opposite side? What about somebody that wasn't born
here but has lived here for 35 years? Should this person have the right to run for office
one day in America if they've paid their taxes, they've paid their dues, they've lived in America for 35 years, should they have the right to run for office one day in America if they've paid their taxes? They've paid their dues. They've lived in America for 35 years
Should they have the chance to run for office should they have the chance to run for US president?
No, you don't know why because the Constitution says so so if you want to change change the Constitution
And would you have two-thirds of this country and two-thirds of the state ratify that that's a separate conversation, right?
But what the Constitution says now is you have to be a natural-born citizen
Sure and a natural-born citizen as it's ever been read by courts, as it's ever been read through
American history for the last century and a half, is you're born in the United States
of America.
And so I think the Constitution is a beautiful thing.
We don't have to relitigate these questions every generation.
Go with what the Constitution actually says.
And if Ann Coulter is watching, maybe Ann Coulter wants to amend the Constitution and
say naturally
born white citizen, right?
With a skin tone that is, you know, maybe we put tears in the skin tone to please Ann
Coulter.
What do you think?
I'm just trying to get some creative ideas here.
I mean, Biden's father's father's father's father are all born in America.
I would much rather vote for somebody like this than somebody that's family's family's
family's been here and ain't doing shit. Well my opinion is this
when it comes on to Vivek and I told you this last week I think in you know how
we were going to the GOP debate we went to all the debates and we'd watch Vivek
and we're like did this guy should crush it tomorrow on the you know what do you
call it the polls right and you'd go you're like six and a half percent, seven and a half
percent. How can this guy not jump it up to 22 percent, 18 percent? And you realize,
because there's a guy in the way of that. Not in the way, he is what majority of
Republicans want to run at this year. 2024 in his name is Donald J. Trump. By
the way, rightly so. He's earned the right to be the lead dog of 2024. There's
no question about it. There's a lot of people that want him to go back and do that. What I'm very
curious about, very, very, and by the way, I want to ask the audience's question. Rob, if you want to
run a poll for this, is in my opinion, you know how an NBA or college basketball, a guy skips,
like the other day we were with that basketball
player that was at the Derby with us, a tall guy, the center for Kansas. I think he left
the team to go to Kansas, tall guy, good looking guy. And we're having a conversation with
him. And he said, I think this guy's going to be the number one draft pick of next year,
Hunter Dickinson. Yeah. Shout out to him. Really nice guy. 7-2. But so to me, my opinion of 2028 presidential candidate, number one draft pick, number one
draft pick, 2028 is Vivek Ramos.
I agree 100%.
I'm convinced it's number one and in a most curious way of just trying to do case studies,
I am so curious to know where, let's just say, whether Trump wins or loses.
Likely him running in 2028, I don't think he's going to run in 2028.
He wins, okay?
A lot of, he even thinks in Jersey, he said, I think we can win all 50 states, is what
he said.
I don't know if you heard his speech.
Say he wins.
2028, where's MAGA going to want to go today?
Can fill that void.
I don't know.
I think it's going to be, what do you think about that?
The fact that a lot of that audience,'t know. I think it's gonna be a way. What do you think about that? The fact that a lot of that audience, you know?
I will say this is I
Understand why the Republican base went for Donald Trump so handily this time around it because it makes all the sense in the world, right?
It's not just about policy vision. It's that this guy's actually done it, right? So he's tried and true and I hadn't done it, right?
I'm 38 years old. I'm an entrepreneur. I've lived the American dream
I have a vision that very closely aligns with Donald Trump's
America First Division there's some small differences here and there in the
campaign but this is a guy who rarely in American history do you get this
opportunity it's a once-in-a-century opportunity actually the once-in-a-century
opportunity in this election is usually you get to measure an incumbent versus
somebody who's challenging him who says hey I'm gonna do all of these things
that I've never done.
Rat, last time you got it with Grover Cleveland, this time you have it this time around, where
you get to say, hey, I've got four years of Trump of action, not words, four years of
action and then four years of action with Biden.
Compare and make your choice.
So I think the Republican primary base in retrospect, it was never going to be anyone
other than Donald Trump because that is a rare and unique opportunity to vote for actual action
Now MAGA and America first does not end with Donald Trump in some ways. It didn't begin with Donald Trump
It began in 1776, but Donald Trump revived it
But the question is who's going to carry that forward and it's not just gonna be the president
It's gonna be people all the way from school board to governor to state legislator to city councilman
But also to us president as well.
And so I'll tell you this, I'm not one of these guys who makes elaborate plans to say,
okay, well, if this happens, then I'm going to do that.
And if that doesn't happen, I'm going to do the next thing, because it never goes according
to plan anyway.
But I'm not going anywhere is what I'll tell you is we're going to stay with this fight
for the country and wherever it leads, I'm going to do it.
I have a technical question for you, but I'll stop to ask the question because Adam's got a question but this technical question is a very
heavy question. Go ahead. Well, I will say what I think but I also give a more of a macro opinion.
I agree with Pat that you should be the leading candidate in 2028. You have style, you have
substance, you have policy and you have personality. You got pizzazz and you also know your stuff.
I've said openly and loudly Vivek is literally the smartest guy I've ever sat down with I've also said the following
There's no chance that the Republican base is voting for a brown guy. I've said it on this podcast
multiple times hear me out
because Ann Coulter
Said out loud what many people are thinking.
And you said yourself, and this is going to be my question, oh, I didn't realize that
the base actually wasn't ready for all this.
Now you're born in America, you're from Ohio.
I want to say more presidents have come out of Ohio than any state in the union, right?
It's up there seven.
Right.
Okay.
So as far as I go, I would vote for you in a heartbeat.
If you were a Democrat, if you were a woke progressive DEI guy checking all those boxes being being being you'd be the next Obama
No doubt, you know, you know, you've been said before skinny kid with a with a weird last
Riffing around with that same thing, but it was great
But with a conservative you are the perfect candidate on the left on the right
There there is a challenge there.
And I'm not saying that you're going to go left here.
What did you learn that you admittedly said, I had no idea that this was going to be more
of a challenge than I thought?
Well, look, I think a couple of things.
First of all, to be clear, to state the obvious, I think the reason I did not win the Republican
presidential nomination has nothing to do with my skin color.
It has to do with-
He thinks so.
It has to do with it.
There's a part of it. The reason I didn't win it. I think that it has to do with Trump skin color. It has to do with think so It has to do with there's a part of the reason I didn't win it I think I'd have to do with Trump 1 million exactly you have but it's hard to be to that
You know somebody's been fighting true. Yes, but then you look at a lot of the data of the people who are loving me at these
See, I thought my support in Iowa on the ground. I mean the people were drawn the energy level so high
Compared to you see a lot of other candidates campaigning in Iowa very dull
Yet many of those people with a lot of energy come to my stuff went in there and voted for Donald Trump. They love me and
what I had to say, but they love Donald Trump as the next US president more.
Number one draft pick.
And I get that. So that's, I think, where it comes from. Now, did I learn something?
I think I did underestimate the trust factor overall. See, I put all of these into a broader category of build and
trust. You're somebody new, somebody who's young, somebody who, yes, is a little different
in a number of ways. You could put ethnic lineage, religion in that category. You got
a guy who, you know, isn't known to most of the American public. Yes, I actually, I mean,
different people have different gifts, and I'm bad at a lot of things.
But one of the things is I do like to explain
my views in detail, and sometimes people like that,
but sometimes people find that skeptical, too.
They're skeptical of somebody who's gonna explain something
in the way that I do.
Is he just selling me on something
that he doesn't really believe in?
So all of that, I think, came together to say that
they got to know me this time around.
Many people, many of our supporters, once they became staunch supporters, didn't go back. I mean
these are people who even to this day are running through vault walls to try
to advance my vision for this country. But I think unambiguously the reason why
I wasn't the nominee this time is because there was a guy who was proven,
who had done it, who I am supporting fully by the way, and who I hope is the
next president. And I think that's actually the most important takeaway and so I'm not of the view that somebody
can't win a Republican or a Democratic nomination for that matter based on their skin color. If the
white guy can win the Democratic nomination for a race obsessed left certainly a non-white guy can
win the Republican nomination for a party that stands fair own terms stands for. Fair to say, and I agree with Pat, like number one candidate, 2028.
Is it fair to say?
I know you don't want to probably look ahead too far.
When do you make a decision like 2028, Vivek's running it back?
I'll tell you, here's what I will say is I hope that I'm not in the position to have
to run for president, consider running for president for this country.
If we're in good shape as a country, that's not a job I need to do.
I really don't.
I enjoy doing, I mean think about the kind of stuff I've taken up till after the campaign,
re-engaging the creative side of my brain, taking on a lot of projects in the private
sector.
I'm an entrepreneur at heart.
I'm a father of two sons.
I enjoy nothing more in this world than raising those two boys.
If this country, I don't believe this country requires somebody to step up and actually make that sacrifice if we're back to normal times
Hell no, I'm not running for president
But the only reason I would do it is if I believe this country actually required it
So I'm hoping this as one man
I'm hoping that we're not there and if we are there that means there's a job that needs to be done because I'm doing it
As a father, right?
I want my kids to grow up in a country greater than the one that I grew up in and that
my parents came to. I hope that's not the position we're going to be in in 2028. After four successful
years of Trump's presidency, I hope that this is a job that somebody else can do to carry forward.
But if it's required, that means it's going to be urgent.
And you mean to tell me the $400,000 a year salary doesn't
You mean to tell me the $400,000 a year salary doesn't attract you? You didn't mention that part.
Now I got to rethink that.
I got to rethink this, buddy.
Last question with that.
The amenities in that White House.
Let's say hypothetically, Trump does lose?
Hypothetically?
Does that mean all but certain you're going to throw your can?
I think if Trump loses, this country's in deep trouble.
Right.
And my work for this country, all of our work for this country, can't wait for even four loses, this country's in deep trouble. Right. Right.
And my work for this country, all of our work for this country can't wait for even four
years.
That's got to start immediately.
And so that's the way I'm approaching it.
Even right now, I think we're skating on thin ice as a country.
Every one of us has to look ourselves in the eye and say, how are we going to make a difference
now?
Not going to plant who knows a four years from now is going to look even the way it
does today.
You got to start right now.
And so that's the urgency with I'm approaching this year.
I think politics is not the only way to drive positive change in the country.
People forget that.
A lot of this is going to happen through the private sector, through our educational system.
I've lived the American dream, be smarter through philanthropy even.
I think there are a lot of different ways that we must be required to drive that change
in the country.
And so, as I said, the only chance I would run for president
in the future is if I felt like the future of the country
depended on someone like me stepping up to do it,
and let's hope we're not there.
So let's talk about current jobs.
Let's just say the president calls you,
former president who's running right now.
Trump calls you, he wins.
Vivek, I want you to be the VP. I want you to be
After he wins the AG I want you to be
Secretary of Commerce I want you to be is there any job you would say no to if he called you to say
I want you to help me with XYZ job. Hmm. Well, look, I think I think it would be work more like a conversation
to help me with XYZ job? Well look, I think it would be work more like a conversation, right? In terms of where am I going to have maximal impact? And if he proposed a job where
I thought I wasn't going to be effective, I thought I wasn't going to make best use
of my skill set, I've got a relationship with Donald Trump who I respect immensely,
where we're going to have a conversation about that and actually set up for maximal impact
for the country. If he knows who I am, and we've got to know each other really well,
if after knowing all of that, he would ask me to be vice president, or, you know,
you brought up that example, as a chance to really honestly, anybody who cares about this
country who's aligned with his vision in the Republican Party today, if they're asked to
be vice president is going to say yes, and has a responsibility to say yes. And so I
think that that goes without saying. Then you go one by one through the other positions.
I think we know each other well enough that I'm not going to get some suggestion that
wouldn't match up with my skills or my interest. But I do think that one of the things I'm
going to be looking at is how do I maximize impact for the country? Every one of us has
our own unique God-given gifts. We've got five of us here, six of us including our...
Rob? Rob? Rob. All right, six of us in this room. Blown up on the neck, Rob. Every one of us here, six of us including our... Rob? Rob? Rob?
All right, six of us in this room.
Blowing up on my neck, Rob.
Every one of us has different skills.
And by the way, he has different skills than I do.
God knows I couldn't be doing what he's doing, and I'll tell you that for sure.
Every one of us has our own unique God-given gifts.
And we got to look ourselves in the mirror and ask ourselves, how are we going to use
those gifts to do what is right for this country in the short time that we're given?
And so I'm going to do that. Think about things that I talked about during the campaign that were very important to me.
I think fixing this issue of illegal immigration and border security in this country, fundamental.
Draining the swamp. Actually, that's got the mass deportation, number one, of a million illegals
who have already been given their final orders of removal and millions more who are in this country illegally.
That's the first mass deportation.
But the second mass deportation I care about is the mass deportation of three million federal
bureaucrats out of Washington, D.C.
So I think those are both pretty important areas that the next administration and the
next president can score some pretty quick wins on.
Actually draining the swamp, actually gutting the bureaucracy, and actually fixing this border crisis and the illegal immigration problem. Those are things
I've been focused on over the last year.
So there's no job he calls you and you're going to say no to?
Well I think that, I think there's probably, if he called me with the job that I didn't
think I was well suited to help this country through, I would tell him that. And I think
that we would have a conversation moving in a different direction.
Okay, so let me ask you another question. Have you ever technically killed a dog?
Not only...
Write about it.
It's important.
I mean, people nowadays...
I never thought people would ask this question, but it's a qualifying one.
I've not even non-technically killed a dog.
I'm a vegetarian man.
I know that.
Peace love.
Let me stay on this here.
Let me stay on this here.
So here's another question for you. So we had a guy in Dallas, billionaire,
and one of his former CFOs ends up working for us. And this guy's like, you know, everybody that was ever his CFO,
they always got fired. He says, but I knew when to quit before he fired me because I didn't want to be part of
the list of getting fired, right? And I was like, you know, what a way of processing the issue, you know quit before you get fired
When you think about guys that went and worked for him that accepted a job
How do you feel about the fact that say he gives you a job and then a month three months six months nine months later
He fires you how do you process that with your chances of 2028?
Does that you know you're at all it consume all consume your mind? No, not at all. I mean, Patrick, I gotta tell you something, because you're an entrepreneur
too, but first of all, it's been a long time since I've been in an employment situation,
right? I've been, I, were it not for serving this country and particularly Donald Trump
in the presidency, I couldn't imagine working for somebody period again in my life sure told myself
I wasn't this would be working for a guy
But this this is working for the country and this is it's what Donald Trump is doing. He's working for the car
That's what he's doing to you know who the ultimate boss is in this job taxpayer
It's the people right citizens of this country actually taxpayers, but the citizens of the United States of America. That's the ultimate boss
So that's who Donald Trump's going into work for. And in serving and helping him do a good job, that's who I'm going to go in and work for
if he'd like to have me in that administration and if he's successful in winning this election.
So that's the way I think about it. And so, no, I'm not, maybe it'd be more successful
if I were this way, but I'm not wired this way where you make these nested charts and
say, okay, well, there's this scenario and that thing could happen. one of the things I've discovered is every time I've earlier phases of my life
Tried to do that it never went according to that plan anyway your plans are stupid
Actually you got to have a you got to have a broad strategy
You got to have a broad purpose
But it once you sort of get into the different tactics and try to pretend like you know everything that's gonna happen
When in fact you have no idea none of us has any idea what's gonna happen
I mean, I don't mean to say this in a in a morbid
way but we're at greater risk of something terrible happening in this
country in the next year, in the next seven months, then probably we've been in
any time in our adult lifetime, probably in our lifetime. Maybe we'll agree with you.
Ten million people have entered this country illegally so we're sitting here, I
can't be pontificating about oh oh, here's the position that I would
like versus a different position and that's the job I'm going to do, that's going to set
me up for 2028.
I'm worried we're going to have serious bad stuff that goes down in this country of a
scale we haven't seen in 20 years.
And how are we going to prevent that from happening?
They've warned us every week.
Christopher Ray's warning that something's happening, Anthony Blinken.
It's like, guys, get ready, get ready.
They keep showing all these movies of leave the world behind,
Civil War.
They're prepping us for something big and they're going to say we told you so.
What's important about what you just said is the fact that whatever the president chooses
to hire you for, when you guys process it together, your game, because it's America
first, whatever America needs me today, I'm willing to do it.
It's not me first, it's not Donald Trump first, it's America first.
That's what I love about Trump and I think I'm going to try to spread that across this country.
So while we're on this topic, both of you guys have a reputation, okay?
He has a reputation of firing a lot of people.
He had a show called Apprentice that he was firing everybody.
In Jersey, he said, I can't wait to go to president. Have you seen this clip Rob or no?
I can't wait to type in Trump, Biden, you're fired.
Type in Trump, Biden, you're fired, right?
And I'm going somewhere with this.
If you can find it, I think that's the one right there.
Yeah, that's it.
If you can zoom in and play this clip,
Vinny, watch this, this is good.
Go ahead.
I'm sure nobody ever saw the apprentice.
That was a big hit.
That's a big hit. That's a big hit.
That was a big, powerful hit.
But I'm going to look at that guy and I'm going to say, Joe Biden,
you're the worst ever Joe Biden.
You're fired. Get out of here.
You're fired.
So he wants to fire Joe Biden.
How does it feel knowing you're the one that fired Ronna McDaniel?
So I'm a big fan of move forward right you got a goal if somebody's in a job they shouldn't be in
and it's causing net negative results I believe in accountability but you know
what I made a promise which is I got nothing against her personally zero
nothing gets her personally I just think she was not the right person for the job
but you so now that she's out of the way,
we're gonna move forward.
I got nothing personally.
It's that it was wrong.
Vivek, in the history of debate,
can you please play this real quick?
This is the most epic opening ever.
We're here, right?
Forty years from now,
a kid is,
a professor is teaching poli science, some university, they're
going to show this as a case study.
Is this the one or is it a shorter one?
This is two minutes.
Can you find, is it?
I have the shorter one where he just offers the remainder of his time.
That's what I want you to do.
Play that one.
We were here.
Right there.
Go ahead and play this clip.
Go ahead.
The Republican establishment.
Let's speak the truth.
I mean, since Ronald McDaniel took over as chairwoman of the RNC in 2017, we have lost
2018, 2020, 2022, no red wave that never came.
We got trounced last night in 2023.
And I think that we have to have accountability in our party.
For that matter, Ron, if you want to come on stage tonight, you want to look the GOP
voters in the eye and tell them you resign I will turn over my my time to
you and by the way I mean you know you realize you indirectly I mean you hurt
unemployment rate because somebody lost a job that day that was a publicly to do
it the way you did it VV so I am I am unsparing when a job needs to get done and somebody's
standing in the way I will stop at nothing I'm a dog with a bone until we
get the job done but after that I'm not looking back at the at the at the person
we moved out of the way I'm looking moving on yeah exactly because we got
we got bigger obstacles along the way so that's the way I'm wired but yes you can
count you have my commitment that whatever I do in the future I'm not
going to I'm not going to play with on this topic on this topic. I've asked Kobe this guy best Shaq this question on this topic
You can't vote for yourself right brings like hey put a starting five together. Can I include myself? No, you can't count yourself
I don't know if you can answer this question or not out of all the people can't Rob
Can you pull up the the the Vegas odds that Adam invented? Can you pull that up?
pull up the Vegas odds that Adam invented. Can you pull that up?
The Vegas odds because this is a qualifier.
Now, do you know what I'm talking about?
Is this the one Adam or?
There's a better one.
But this is fine.
This is fun.
So you got Tim Scott, Doug Burgum, Tulsi Gabbard, Alisa Stefanik, Rubio Carson, Vivek, Haley
DeSantis, Huckabee, known.
Out of those, who do you think would be a, if President Trump is asking a question saying,
you know, give me counsel, who do you think would be a good VP selection?
What would you say?
Look, I mean, in fairness, I'm not going to be with Trump for much of the rest of this
week, right?
And so I'm not going to publicly air what my private counsel is to him, just as somebody
who's asking me for actual advice. I'm not going to- So maybe not Trump asking, maybe I'm asking you, like I'm going to Vegas, I'm not gonna publicly air what my private counsel is to him just as somebody who's asking me for actual advice
I'm not maybe not Trump. Maybe I'm asking you like I'm going to Vegas. I'm saying hey V vague
Who would be a good you know person to bet on if I'm going to Vegas?
I'll say a few good things about a couple of people on this list right somebody I got to know pretty recently is Ben Carson
He is somebody who?
So he came to Columbus, Ohio. It's my hometown. I got to I met him for the first time there
We're doing podcast and everything together.
But I will tell you that he is somebody who, my wife, she's a physician.
She is a throat surgeon.
When she was in undergrad, there was somebody who visited her when she was at Yale and gave
an inspiring talk to a small group on why he became a surgeon.
That man was Ben Carson.
Get out of here.
Right. So I mean, my wife, she's excellent at what she does. She's one of, I can only
imagine how many people that man's actually given inspiration to. And the funny thing
is he wasn't supposed to be a good student, right? He was a guy who never victimized himself
based on his skin color, but he wasn't the best in his class, he told me for a while,
until he actually studied and got the heck ahead. And so I like that spirit. And I like the fact that there's a role for everybody. Would
I have voted for Ben Carson over Donald Trump in a presidential primary when they ran against
each other? No, that's a different story. But what do I believe that he is somebody
whose heart is in the right place and who is learned a lot and has a level of wisdom
and could actually provide a level of counsel to somebody in executive position?
Absolutely, I do. And has he given inspiration to a lot of people, including
my wife, including to me? I think I would say that about him, right? Now
who's gonna be the best vice president? There's some other people on that list
too. I hadn't seen that list by the way, so it's interesting that you brought it up.
I think that's up to each chief executive to decide. You don't say, okay, who's the CEO going to hire in a role and then somebody armchair
quarterbacking that decision. So I've got good things to say about a number of people
on this list, but I just picked Ben because I met him recently and he's a truly goodhearted
man who loves this country and I think is different. I also have a love of outsiders.
I don't like people who grew up in the, I don't like when people who grew up in politics remain in that festering swamp of politics. So I think
it's good when you got somebody who's been a surgeon or somebody who's been a
businessman coming in from the outside to shake things up. What do you think about Tulsi?
I like Tulsi because she's an independent thinker actually. She's
somebody who, tell you a funny story about Tulsi, we had, we were at a dinner recently.
I'm sure. I hope
all these people don't mind me just sharing these stories, but whatever, it's kind of
fun. We were at a Mexican restaurant in Texas, and the funny thing about Tulsi is, so I'm
usually in this position, okay, where we go to Mexican restaurant, I told you I didn't
kill the dog you asked me, but I'm vegetarian, right? So we've done this, we've done this
when you and I have had lunch together, right? So somebody will come by and I was like, oh is this you know, is this thing vegetarian?
Is this thing it's kind of holds up the whole table. It's a little bit inconvenient, but whatever I'm raised that way
It's part of my conviction. And so I do it anyway
This time we're going around the table and we're in a Mexican restaurant and there's all the usual questions
Oh is your rice vegetarian or your beans vegetarian? I'm not the one asking the questions
It's Tulsi Gabbard. And so I got to just say okay good. She did all the hard vegetarian. I'm not the one asking the questions. It's Tulsi Gabbard. And so I got to just say, okay, good. She did all the hard work. I just said, you know, I'm
just going to have what she's having. Which is funny, but I respected that because it
was, it still showed somebody who say what you will about the conviction, at least has
some conviction. I also love the fact that she has been outspoken against a lot of the
foreign intervention that hasn't best served this country. and I think that she is in her heart as best
I can tell somebody who is against unnecessary war I share that in common I
think Donald Trump shares that in common I get the beautiful thing that we could
use more of in both parties frankly and so you know I've got positive things to
say about a lot of people on that list in terms of who's as a vice president
role that's a decision that one man gets to make, and that's the
person who's the president, which is hopefully not a whole lot.
Let me ask you a question though.
So with the Ann culture and the position that you said about the MAGAs and the people, the
7% low percent, how much, if Vivek, if Trump picks Vivek to be the vice president, how
much does that help him for the 2028 election?
Does that crowd go, oh, if he's bringing them as vice
president then we're 100% going all in. Instead of the end quote. That's it. Like
I'm just curious how much you think that shifts if Trump actually puts him as
vice president and becomes the vice president and for four years they see
these two just go after the deep state, go after everybody, flip everybody off.
I'm like this is America first. What's up? How much do those people say? You know
what? I don't care.
He could be an from anywhere.
We're going for him.
Tom, what do you think?
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This is fascinating to me. I'm watching the analysts here.
No, I'd love to see him pick you
for all the reasons that I think I articulated once before.
And this is sincere.
That is a qualified list there.
Tulsi's been on the podcast.
We've talked to her.
We know some of these people.
And so we've been able to do a little bit more than just a, you know, inspection, watching them on
TV, we've met them.
And you know what?
You are articulate, you are stick smart, I would love to see.
My personal hope and dream was if you weren't VP, you'd be AG, because I think an attorney
general that just would
cut through it, would be strong. But I think you would absolutely be a benefit to the country
because you're no BS and you're really smart and you're driven on it. And that's what I
think. And I think right now America's just kind of playing a parlor game of who's going
to be where and Trump's hopefully taking really great counsel from really great people and I'm glad you'll be with him this week.
But what do you think, how much do you think helps?
Don't play diplomatic, Tom.
Yeah, I'm saying how much of that percentage that they said, what like 7% or whatever,
how much do you think that shifts and they just say, listen, Trump has them as VP, once
Trump is done, everybody's going to Vivek.
How much do you think that percentage goes of his chances to be the president
Oh, I think it goes a lot
I think I think it move it as much as 50% because I think any
Rational person has to look at both men that are currently the presumptive candidates and say the VP this time is very
important on an actuarial basis. Yeah, well the back
Just to cut through the clutter here,
the VP pick will be the next leading candidate
for the presidency in 2028.
Just to cut through that.
But on this topic.
I don't think so.
I just, yeah, I mean, I'm just in a camp where
I respect the people who have a lot of conviction
about telling something in the future.
I'm actually, one of the things I've found
is I'm very good at understanding what my convictions are
in the present. I'm not particularly good at understanding what my convictions are in the present
I'm not particularly good at predicting one-off facts in the future, right?
So I stick to the business that I'm best at which is identifying my own convictions and following them
But I'm finding the conversation fascinating on this list. You've shared the stage with you know, many people on this list
I know you're a vegetarian Vivek. There's only one person you had full-on beef with
and that is Nikki Haley.
You see her odds here.
Thoughts on Nikki, thoughts on her as a VP.
And was that beef actual?
Because she at one point, like, it got personal.
What was that experience?
Yeah, I think it was interesting.
I don't think I've talked about this one before either.
My first time meeting Nikki Haley was actually her reaching out to me proactively when very
few people in this country know who I was to set up a call with me.
I was just rolling out my book, Woke Inc.
And I got to give her some credit.
I mean, my understanding is apparently, I mean, I only know the excerpts that have come
out from Kristi Noem's book, but apparently she reached out to Kristi Noem too.
This is somebody who has been for a long time identifying who are going to be the potential
players in the future.
This is long before I thought of myself as even a player in politics.
And so she set up a half hour Zoom call, congratulated me on what a good job I was doing.
I said, this is interesting.
I wonder what's going on there.
So I think that it, I always had a, I will tell you, it left me a little skeptical,
actually, was the response that I had, because I was so flattered. A lot of things that were
said to flatter me. Someone proactively reached out to have a conversation. I'm a guy who
not many people have heard of. I said, what was the objective there? Right? I was a little
bit, I was a little bit cynical. And I think that one of the things I learned is this isn't
specific to her, but I have, I'm basically the opposite of what I've observed
many professional politicians to be, right? Many professional politicians are all about
trying to figure out what you want to hear and then telling you more of that. And I'm
in the business of identifying what my own convictions are as human beings have to have
some of those changed or everything you believe 10 10 years ago the same as you believe today? No. But what
are my convictions, what are my most deeply held convictions today and how do
I stand for them? And so when I look at people who have grown up in that sport
of professional politics and then embrace policies that sometimes align
with their own self-interest but the expense of the country, yeah that really
does get under my skin. And so you know I think a lot of the divide that you saw between me and Nikki on the debate
stage was grounded in deep-seated policy differences, deep-seated differences in what a politician
and a public figure and a leader of a country is supposed to be.
Is it somebody who has very carefully crafted and planned what they're supposed to say and
then carefully
rolls that out through careful rigors of poll testing and consultant vetting?
Or is it somebody who's sharing their honest convictions?
Is it somebody who believes the sole role of a public servant is to serve the public
or that it's okay to serve yourself along the way?
Those are fundamental ideological divides and I think that's what you saw spilling over
there a little bit.
You also saw, I think, a little bit of the chess game of candidates during the primaries, right?
You make alliances and you go after people that are perceptibly starting to roll up in
the polls and she and Chris Christie did that.
So there's also a little of that going on, right?
Yeah, we were watching it during the break, them talking to each other.
Yeah, and by the way, what do you think the Santa stance now?
Now that everything is over with and in the breaks I would watch you always go to him to speak with them.
I think we were standing by each other most of the time. That was sort of the...
But it was always you trying to find a way to engage him. He wouldn't really engage.
Yeah, but I think there's one or two instances. I think there was, I mean, I try to be polite,
right? I think he was saying something like MNRA vaccine.
I just wanted to be respectful.
I don't wanna call him out on stage for it,
but I told him it's MNRA.
I mean, just small stuff, right?
It's friendly, you know, friendly little tip here and there.
I remember that was one of the instances where-
Are you guys good?
Do you guys communicate or not at all?
I don't think we've communicated since the campaign.
I saw him at NASCAR, I remember that.
I went to Daytona 500.
We were both in the pregame routine they had.
Maybe I've seen him once or twice, but I think I've got no particular beef with Ron.
I think that he's been-
No relationship either.
Like you guys haven't broke bread, had dinner.
There's other people I'm on text message relationship with.
Nothing.
But not him.
We never exchange numbers.
But I will say that backstage it was always it was always relatively
gorgeous it was relatively crudest they got kids the same age you know I think a
poor VanCasey sat next to each other at some of the debates and so we've got
we've got you know no beef there okay let's go to the next topic next topic
Michael Cohen Rob if you want to put I don't know if you got any the clips or
not Michael Cohen testifies Trump's backed payments
to suppress news that could hurt 2016 campaign.
This is a Reuter story.
And then he comes out and he says what he says.
Adam, if I'm not mistaken, what's the phrase that he used?
He said, just do it,
regarding the hush money payments.
He can punch in on that.
Trump told him to just do it.
He used the Nike slogan.
Yeah, so this must have been going on.
So Michael Cohen testified that he, Donald Trump, National Enquirer publisher,
David Pecker collaborated to suppress negative stories, damaging Trump 2016 campaign, exemplified
by $130,000 Stormy Daniels to silence her about a sexual encounter.
She alleged Cohen recounted Trump's directive to prevent the release of Karen McDougal's
story of an affair with the Trumps asking.
So what is he going to be testifying tomorrow too?
Apparently he's going to.
He's just like-
I'm going to be there tomorrow.
I'll be there tomorrow.
Really?
In the courthouse?
I'm going to the courtroom tomorrow.
Fantastic.
Yeah.
So by the way, what do you think about all of this?
With everything that's going on here, how much of this is helping?
How much of this is hurting?
How are you processing this?
Yeah, I mean, I'm not following the day to day, obviously, as the trial's running, but
I read about the summaries in the evening and I wanted to go tomorrow more just as a
friend and now supporter of Trump to be able to actually show support by being present,
not you know, any other capacity other than my own. But I will say that every day this
trial proceeds, the trend that I've seen, I didn't follow today's but up to today all we've seen is one more layer of the onion of how the whole
thing's a charade right if you think about this imagine a good way to imagine
whether something's a politicized prosecution is right because everyone's
gonna be you know MSNBC has their histrionic points and then they would
look at people who are defenders of Trump like myself as being
Partisans on the other side. Here's a good litmus test. Okay, if the prosecution's theory of the case said you did something wrong
What if you had done the exact opposite thing? Okay. Okay. Let's play that out
Then that would should mean you did not do something wrong, right?
Let's let's try that on this set of facts on this set of facts
The basic theory of the case is the prosecution says, in order
for them to charge this as a felony, that Donald Trump's payment to Stormy Daniels
should have been recorded as a campaign contribution.
That's the heart of the case.
Without that, they couldn't charge this as a felony.
It would only be a misdemeanor that's outlived the statute of limitations.
The falsifying business records is outside the statute of limitations, it's a misdemeanor, not a
felony.
The only basis for this being a felony is if there's a different underlying crime, which
what they allege is that he made effectively a campaign contribution without it being recorded
as such.
So now apply my test.
The prosecution says that's the thing you did and it's wrong.
Imagine you did the exact opposite.
What would the exact opposite be? The exact
opposite would be Donald Trump using campaign funds to make a personal hush money payment.
In that scenario, I have no doubt these people would be going after him and they would have
a much stronger case in that scenario. So now think about it. If he did thing A, right?
This is going to break the stuff. He did thing A and you said that's wrong.
Let's say he did the exact opposite of thing A and did thing B and you would have an even stronger case for him.
Then that means you were gonna get him no matter what. So that is the proof that this is a politicized
persecution through prosecution. I think everybody kind of knows it in their own, but you got to just see it.
Damned if you do damned if you don't. Literally they're gonna get
him going or get him coming. And that, I think, is the airtight proof that this
thing is a sham. It's been a sham since day one. It's revealed itself to be a
sham throughout the course of this trial. And I think it will be a stain on the
history of our country if this man is convicted in the middle of a
presidential election on the back of these bogus charges, that's what I believe
It's so embarrassed. Here's what CNN was saying to go ahead and play this Rob
But I've never seen a witness who's lied to Congress who's lying court who's lied to the IRS who's lied to the Southern District
Of New York who lied to his banker
You know the entire prosecution witness team has been lied to by Michael Cohen. I mean, this is CNN
Yeah, you're not Fox News saying this I'm shocked
Can you imagine like your friends with Michael Cohen you go out to dinner? Hey Michael what I'm about to tell you right now
You can't tell anybody. Oh trust me. I'm not telling nobody. Well. He's the worst half the world's gonna find out what you're doing
So and they're using Michael Cohen. What type of credibility does he have left to even get up there where they're like, yeah
This guy's incredible doesn't that actually hurt them instead of help them you would think but you know
What that you could say that about this whole trial?
That's exactly the effect it's had wouldn't that hurt them rather than help them to levy false charges against a former US president
And that has been the effect that it's had
I think a lot of people are saying that you know what do I agree with everything Donald Trump has ever said in his life?
No.
Did I vote for him in 2020?
Some of them may say no.
But do I believe that it is wrong for a party in power to use the powers of prosecution
to try to lock up their political opponents in the middle of an election?
That's foundational stuff.
That's the stuff of tearing down our democracy.
And so a lot of those people are actually coming Trump's way this year and for good reason and I think that's good for the
country. And so wouldn't this be expected to work against them? That's
effectively what you've seen it every step of the way. So yes, no surprise it
would apply to this one too. Yeah. Were you gonna say something or no? No, well if
Trump did go to jail, I think 80% of Trump's base said they would vote for
him no matter what.
Four percent said that it would change their vote.
16% would reconsider.
How much would it help Trump for him to actually go to jail?
Because Pat made a very impassioned case a week ago.
Send him to jail.
Lock him up.
See what happens.
What are your thoughts?
I think it would be devastating for the country.
I think it would be embarrassing for the country. I think it would be embarrassing for the United
States of America that other countries would look at us and see a party in power and a
regime that locks up a political opponent on spurious charges if this had happened in
any other country. We'd call it a banana republic and autocracy. So I would be ashamed as an
American as a citizen of this nation. I would be ashamed if that's what happens.
But electorally, I think that it would have the effect of doing the thing that we're already
on the trajectory to do, which is to elect Donald Trump with a decisive mandate.
And I do think this has to be a decisive mandate.
50.1 isn't going to cut it this time.
A decisive win minus some shenanigans is still a decisive victory, right?
And so I think that's why a landslide is required.
And I think a landslide is very well what they're setting us up for this time around.
And the other case, Vivek, the one that the FBI planted documents,
Amaralago, Jack Smith, an FBI agent involved, apparently they took photos
of secret document, the cover letters on top of them.
And then the case was suspended indefinitely.
It's like every single one of these is a sham. It's all it's all BS
So in fact my thing is this let's say God willing he beats all these, you know, he doesn't get arrested
He gets in that same swamp the effect those same people these same judges these same they're all still gonna be there
I understand trying to drain the swamp, but that swamp you drain it that's getting filled right back up
You know, I mean, how do you how does he fight that? I mean the way I look at it is it's like a eight-headed hydra
Okay, it's like a monster and you cut off one of the heads it grows right back
You got to slay the beast at its core, right? And so this is gonna require
Doing the hard thing
The easy thing to do is to say I'm gonna fire Christopher Wray and replace him
I'm gonna fire the head of this agency or replace him.
I think the harder thing is to say we're actually going to get in there and shut it down actually.
And is there some risk to doing this?
Of course there is, right?
There's efficiency risk.
There's going to be some inconveniences from shutting down agencies that are presumably
doing at least some important work.
Many of them aren't, but even if you presume there's one iota of important work
they're doing.
Is there some inconvenience?
Yes, but you're always taking a risk.
Sometimes the risk is that you don't cut enough fat.
Well, the opposite of that risk can't be,
oh, I'm just going to cut exactly the amount needed.
No, you can't say you're going to do that.
The opposite risk you're taking is you cut so much
that you cut some muscle.
So which risk are you going to take?
I take the risk of now, the point in
our country's history that we live in, things have gotten so dire. I will take the risk
of cutting some muscle and building back what we overcut, then the risk of not cutting enough.
Why do I say that? Because we've seen what the other model looks like. The thing just
grows right back. And this is where I think the Republican party struggles a little bit,
right? We talk big game as a party about the weaponization of government, but push comes to shove.
What do you do?
Reauthorize FISA 702.
Not even reauthorize it.
That's a mistake.
Expand it.
That's what they did.
To give that very government the tools of greater weaponization that you were once going
on cable television on evening to complain about.
Okay?
You have Republicans that will complain about the growth or growth of the administrative
state yet actually vote to authorize the expansion of those same agencies.
And so I think that the partisan jockeying here, the partisan jousting is really a little
bit of theater.
I don't think that Republicans, most of them at least, have been overly serious about actually
draining the swamp, about actually gutting the bureaucracy. I don't think they've even been very
serious about actually sealing the border or dealing with mass migration in this country.
Because if you had a party that does have a majority of the House now and has had majorities
of the House and Senate for a lot of the last 20 years, we would not be where we are right now.
And so, yeah, I know a lot of people in the business of just claiming the radical Biden
agenda and I complain about that plenty myself as well.
But if we want to actually have the result in 2024 that we should have, we can't just
be complaining about the other side.
We got to stand for our own vision and what we actually stand for.
That's why we didn't have the red wave in 2022.
It wasn't because of abortion. It wasn't because of Trump. It was because the Republicans got lazy,
and all we would do is complain about the radical Biden agenda. That's not enough.
We got to actually stand by our own convictions and say, here are the risks we're willing to take
to save this country. Because if we don't, we're not going to have a country left. This is what
we stand for. Right. And I think for cutting those agencies for three million federal
bureaucrats being firing for actually moving our own military to our own
southern border in completing the wall and ending birthright citizenship for
the kids of illegals
and yes it's logic if you've had the largest mass influx of illegal migrants
in american history then it makes sense that you would have the largest mass
deportation in american history those are the kinds of things we've got to stand
by which, you know what's funny? Some people may say, are those extreme policies? To the
contrary, you go to places like the South Side of Chicago, you go to the inner cities
across this country, talking about those border policies, talking about actually funding American
causes versus foreign interests in places like Ukraine, most people actually even on the left in the
inner cities are actually sympathetic to Republicans who are willing to stake out those actual
positions and so that's the opportunity I see and I hope we don't squander it.
I got a question I want to get to because one of the things you're noticing with the
Democratic Party, they seem to be very united, where Republicans, they seem to be competing against each other because
there's an element of them, I can do it on my own, I don't need you, you know, versus
Democrats, like, no, no, no, we need against each other because the enemy is on the other
side.
Sometimes you see a little bit of a civil war on the left, but you see more of it on
the Republican side than the Democratic side.
Trump just recently said, this is a part of a
speech, Donald Trump, I support Israel's right to win its war on terror. Okay? So
this is a, do you have the video Rob? Is this a, go ahead and play this clip. I support Israel's right to win its war on terror. Is that okay? I don't know
I don't know if that's good or bad politically. I don't care. You got to do what's right
You got it was a terrible attack October 7th was a terrible attack. I don't know
It's probably bad politically, but I don't care you have to do the right thing
They would there would have been no war in Gaza with me in the White House
There would not have even been a chance.
You know, Iran was broke when I was president.
I said, if you buy oil, anybody buys oil from Iran, they can't do business with the United
States.
They were totally broke.
Now they have $250 billion.
They made it all in three and a half years.
Do you agree with them?
So look, I think every nation has an absolute right to defend itself, and Israel does too.
I think that that's a different point from whether or not the United States should be
meddling in other people's business around the world.
You take a look at what's going on in Armenia and Azerbaijan, right?
Where's the United States tackling that crisis, right?
It's selective, selective myopia here.
You've got, I don't know how deep you want to go into this, but here you've got the United States staying seemingly silent as you've got Azerbaijan displacing 120,000
Armenian Christians from the Nagorno-Karabakh region, which since the early 1990s has been
agreed, this is exactly where they're allowed to be.
But it's not just that the United States is staying silent, because that would be hypocritical
relative to the intervention in other parts of the world.
It's that the United States is funding
Azerbaijan to actually commit those atrocities. The United States has been
funding this behavior. So I could go on for just a list of hypocrisies in other
parts of the world that we ignore, but we go into certain areas where we say, hey,
the US has to intervene here, when in fact it's all, I think it's all
been a product of incoherent foreign policy coming out of both political parties.
And so I come back to first principles.
Every nation has an absolute right to defend itself and its own borders.
The United States of America is failing to do that right now.
I think the United States of America is patently failing to defend our own borders, and that's
a big problem for us.
But on the flip side, Israel had a breach of its own borders. And by the way, people aren't focused on this question, but I think it's a
legitimate one. What the hell happened there? I mean, that was ridiculous. It was
a ridiculous failure of border security. If that could happen in
Israel, that could happen right here in the United States of America. That should
be our wake-up call. But if they did have their border security breached, if that
was us in the United States, I wouldn't want some other country telling me that
I can't actually defend my own nation, while
I don't think that Israel should be taking slack from other people who say that they're
going to micromanage how Israel responds to its own attack as well.
That's the way I look at it.
Did you think this was going to be a, you know, we're looking at the dates of when George
Floyd happened.
I think it's May 25th of 2020
We've been talking about that a lot lately where the day he got shot
You're not the shot the day he got killed the horn
What is it eight minutes and 46 seconds or nine minutes and 46 seconds? Whatever the time was that happened May 26th of I?
Think he died May 25th, but the protests start on May 26th if I'm not mistaken
So if you go to it the four-year anniversary is coming up is two weeks from now. Yeah, how much it is?
Pro Israel pro Palestine Jerry Seinfeld if he can show this he's simply the keynote speaker graduating class of
Duke right and he's up there. He's about to get up there on stage
You just had the video a minute ago Rob if you Jerry you, Jerry Seinfeld, he's at the,
it shows as one of your yellow videos.
So I think you may have it.
No, the walkout right there.
So this is him.
This is Duke, if you can play the audio.
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And the pro-Palestine students get up and they're simply walking out. Now this is Duke University.
This isn't Berkeley.
This isn't, a lot of times like, who's the guy that played here?
Grant Hill played for Duke, right?
Yeah.
What was one of the nicknames they had?
Christian Lay.
Christian Lay. You know what nicknames they had for Grant Hill when he played for Duke, right? What was one of the nicknames they had? Christian Lake? You know what nicknames they had for Grantel when he played for Duke? And I think it was Jalen Rose that said, black kids that play
at Duke, they gave him a nom. I don't know what name they gave him, but there was something
like that. And I don't know if it was Jalen Rose, but that was the reputation. Anybody
that goes to Duke, you're a Republican or you're a conservative. So this has happened
on a campus like this. So pro-Palestine, pro-Israel, how much of this division you think is intentional? How
much of it is real? How much of it is divisive? How much of it is manipulation? You know,
because it's bleeding into businesses, it's bleeding into universities, it's bleeding
into families, it's bleeding in media network. Is it real? Is it fake? Is it intentional?
So I think a couple things there. This is such an interesting topic here. One is, I
like to start with just facts. When I heard about the description of this video, I was
like, hey, let me watch the video. The video actually surprised me, right? I imagined like
when it was this student walkout from Duke, I was imagining like many of those students
flooding out. What do you see there? You see like a small trickle of people holding a flag?
They probably don't even know what it is walking out and most of them are being booed as they're doing it for interrupting the commencement
You saw the same thing at University of Michigan actually
Fringe minority as they're being removed from disrupting the proceedings you have uproars in the audience
So I think this is the first thing to observe is
What you're seeing first of all is not some tyranny of the majority. It is a tyranny of the fringe
minority. Actually, that's the first observation. The second observation is now let's double
click on that minority, right? That fringe minority. It'd be one thing, Patrick, if we
talk to those people, they had a deep historical understanding of dating back to
not only 1960 or 1940, but dating back to zero or 200 BC and make a historical case for why this land
does not belong to Israel and deserves to be autonomous and from the river to the sea,
could they name which river and which sea? That'd be one thing. That's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about a group of students, and it's not just students,
but it's a generation that is largely lost. And I don't say that insulting anybody. I
say it in some ways regretting our own failures as the generation that came before them to
give them purpose and meaning in this country. The very people who were protesting after George Floyd's death, and by then what were
we talking about, violent riots?
I mean, that was actually one of the interesting things is you're seeing a lot more media attention
here.
You didn't get a lot of media attention in 2020 when they were bashing in storefronts
in the inner city across and burning down cities in places like Minneapolis and Wisconsin. That didn't make the news in the way that this is
right now, which is interesting, but it's many of the same people or the same
kinds of people adopting this cause as their latest cause du jour. And so what
do I think is going on? It's a tyranny of the fringe minority. Most of the people
in that fringe minority aren't actually against what they claim to be against.
It's just that they don't even know what they actually stand for. They are lost.
Some of them on these campuses, you could even
listen to some of the tapes in the last few months, they were chanting Intifada.
That's what they thought they were chanting, but they were actually
chanting Infetada, which is not even a word, right? So they're chanting stuff
they don't even know what it means. Right? They're hungry to be part of something
bigger than themselves, yet they can't even answer what it means to be an American.
And one thing I will say is, one thing that, I gotta be honest, annoys me a little bit,
is I was calling a lot of this stuff out back when I wrote my book, Woke, Inc., several
years ago.
My publisher and the people who were advising me at the time were wondering whether people
would even know the word woke, actually.
Like, certainly friends before I submitted it to the publisher said, that might be your biggest problem, they don't even know the word woke actually like certainly friends before I submitted to the publishers said that might be your
biggest problem they don't even know what that title is and I had people who
are opposed to what I was saying then friends in New York City okay would say
way isn't that a little bit too controversial actually being too
dismissive of concerns about systemic racism now many of those same people are
the ones losing their minds over the context of these campus protests where
for me my question is where were you asleep at the switch three years ago?
Now, in fairness, as we said, people can change their minds and different people can wake
up to things that they didn't see before.
So I'm never going to fault somebody for evolving their views.
But I do think that there is something odd going on where people are refusing to get
to the root cause here.
When it touches a cause that they care about, then you know, you might see certain people up in arms, but
we got to get to first principles where this woke stuff was wrong. When it was driving
the bashing in of stores in the interstate in 2020. It's wrong now when you have college
commencement proceedings being being disrupted and Jewish students not feeling safe to go
to their classes, but do it grounded in the first principles in the first place.
And I think we can all do a better job of that in this country.
What would President Vivek Ramaswamy do to create a ceasefire at this point?
Because they're shouting ceasefire, they're shouting ceasefire.
A lot of these kids river to the sea, they have no clue what it is.
They can't spell antifada.
I know this very well.
There was a ceasefire October 6th, October 7th Hamas broke that ceasefire.
And you said yourself, every country has a right to defend themselves.
Yeah.
Israel, it seems, is the only country that can actually execute and win a war.
We see what's going on in the college protests.
I fully agree with you.
Nobody can tell you what's going on in Azerbaijan.
Nobody can tell you there's been a 10-year civil war in Yemen, zero protest.
Syria, Lebanon, Sudan, two million people killed, not a peep.
Israel, 30,000 people killed, half of them Hamas terrorists.
So what would you do to create a ceasefire?
Because Biden's trying to play both sides to win Michigan.
Trump, he said himself, it's not politically helpful, but I'll stand for what's right.
What would you do?
Yeah.
So I would stand for Israel's right to defend itself.
And I would further block any UN micromanagement or EU micromanagement of what Israel can and
cannot do to provide the level of diplomatic backing, what I would call a diplomatic iron
dome for Israel to be able to defend its own sovereignty.
Israel has a right to exist.
Israel has a responsibility to exist.
As an ally, we defend their responsibility to exist.
That's different than just starting random preemptive bomb campaigns in Iran or whatever.
I'm not making this up.
People advocate for this stuff right now.
Lindsey Graham.
So I think that, to name one, right? But I think that the way I look at it is you got to be rational
You got to be cool-headed. You got to actually stick to first principles. What's the first principle?
We believe in here national sovereignty and just as we wouldn't appreciate it if Israel or any other country
We're telling us that we couldn't defend ourselves against a breach of our own southern border
We could debate what's happening in this country right now Just as I wouldn't want another country telling us we can't defend ourselves against a breach of our own southern border and we could debate what's happening in this country right now just as I wouldn't
want another country telling us we can't defend against that well we shouldn't
have Israel be told by another country including our own what they can and can't
do to defend their own national boundaries as well and that's different
from saying oh then yeah the United States to somehow get involved in some
preemptive strike on Iran which I do think would be a drastic mistake.
And so I see, you know, voices in both directions that I think have lost their ability to engage
in cool-headed rationality.
And I think one of the things I would do is, you asked me if I was in the position of president,
rational first principles.
They're sovereign, they have a right to defend themselves, stick to it.
But not give them money.
But Ukraine.
Well, look, I don't think we should be intervening in specific wars that aren't directly related
to the United States.
But if you think about in the Israel case, one thing to say here is their rate limiting
step is not money.
Israel's not running out of money.
They're running out of diplomatic air cover, diplomatic support to do what they need to
do. So it's sort of this silly thing, which, oh, they're short on diplomatic support to do what they need to do. So it's sort of this silly thing which, oh they're short on diplomatic support, let's send over cash
versus what we're not doing enough of, which is actually diplomatically standing
for the principle that Israel absolutely has right to defend itself.
Go to Ukraine, similar sort of first principle. We have to recognize that
Ukraine, yes, had a border that was breached by Russia
at the same time the United States has not kept its own commitments from the
early 1990s to support the expansion of NATO so do a deal that restores those
first principles NATO is not going to expand to include Ukraine say that
explicitly rather than the opposite which is what we're saying today which is
that NATO will definitely admit Ukraine at some point in the future use that to
pull Russia apart from China get some extract some concessions from Russia to be able to say
they're no longer to be able to do joint military exercises with China. So I do
think it's not to say foreign policy is just like running a business, but just
because you don't trust just because you don't trust somebody doesn't mean you
can't trust them to follow their own self-interest. So understand the
self-interest of each of the actors,
use that to our own advantage to advance American interests,
and peace is in America's interest.
And that's exactly how I would...
And I appreciate you kind of giving some detail to this,
because Netanyahu isn't coming here hat in hand asking for money.
He's literally saying, can we just do what we need to do
to defend ourselves and win this war?
Meanwhile, Zelensky is over here literally fundraising and shaming Congress if they don't pass
Hundred billion dollars of aid to Ukraine. It's totally different
Yeah
I don't love it when somebody is coming here shaming us for not giving us the next hundred billion when they can't tell us what?
He did with the first hundred billion. I do a problem with that any you look like you want to say something
Well, yeah, well, I mean I think I I agree 100 percent. Nobody should, you know, tell
them how to defend themselves. But I think the fact that people can't criticize. You
mentioned, Vivek, which was one of my biggest things that I was standing on, was two weeks
after October 7th, John Kirby stood in front of America and the reporters are like, can
you tell, what happened? And he goes, you know what, there's going to be a time. Now
is not the time.
It's almost been seven months, still no answers.
Israel's doing what they have to do.
Some people are saying it's a little bit overboard.
Especially, Adam, you said half the people that were killed
at 30,000 are Hamas soldiers.
I haven't heard that number.
I heard it was way less.
The majority of the people that have been killed
are women and children.
I get it.
They want to kill Hamas.
They want to get after them
But in regards to BB Netanyahu, he was supposed to be on trial on October 7th for bribery fraud and breach of trust
How can we trust somebody that's not giving us the answers were we're already all the way over here
We still don't know fundamentally how could the most secure place on the planet?
Adam's been to Israel multiple times.
All I keep hearing from people that have been to Israel is, Vinny, everybody's walking around
with a gun.
The security is top notch.
How did this failure of intelligence happen so bad?
For six hours, these freaking terrorists got to do whatever they did, and there's still
no answers of how it happened.
When the same people are still in charge, right, is another question to ask.
So I think these are hard questions to ask that I would ask as an American in my own
country and you know what?
Israelis are asking in Israel.
But the weird thing is you can't actually ask those questions in the United States.
That's what true friends actually do.
True friends treat their friends in the way they would treat themselves.
And yet if that happened here in the United States, I would absolutely be asking those
questions.
You saw, I mean, you put some of those clips of me on the debate stage.
I don't hold back in my criticisms of the United States of America good because our country is stronger when we hold ourselves accountable
So I don't think that we're doing our friends any favors when somehow you play with your friends with kid gloves either
There was a major breach of security failure there and I think that the Israeli press is not carrying Netanyahu's water
Good, I think right the job of a press in a nation is to hold its own government accountable.
But it is a weird dynamic that if the United States, even the United States, you have actors
that do the same thing, particularly on the American right. Even saying the same things
that even the pro-Israel press in Israel would be saying, it's a weird dynamic here that
I find to be condescending. And I reject that. I think we should have honesty. I've also
traveled a lot to Israel. One one of things I love about Israel is
And I found a lot of commonality with the people is you have radically candid people right even the business deals I've done candor
That's actually why a lot of them like me and vice versa we had a great relationship because we could be very candid with each other
And I think that that's what I would bring to our diplomacy as well as this radical candor not a strategic ambiguity
That frankly not only Biden, but even even leaders from both parties pre Trump and the Republican Party diplomacy as well as this radical candor, not a strategic ambiguity that frankly,
not only Biden, but even even leaders from both parties, pre-Trump and the
Republican Party would practice this strategic ambiguity. I believe in, you
know what, here's who we are, here's what we stand for, here are the red lines, we
draw them, you mess it up, you're gonna have consequences to pay, and if not,
we're gonna actually focus on our own nationalities. The challenge is,
it's almost like you can't question and ask any questions, right? You've got to be able to ask questions.
If you look at Daily Wire, right? What happened between them and Candace Owens? Candace Owens,
Ben Shapiro, face of the Conservative Party, I think you can probably put those two names
with Tucker. Those are three of the biggest
faces of the Conservative Party. I don't know if I put a name above them. I think
they're top three. Digital. Top five all together. Yeah. I think they're in the top
five altogether. And all of a sudden you see Daily Wire, they're gonna be the one
that's gonna compete with Fox. Here's what Daily Wire is doing. Daily Wire is
doing this. Daily Wire is doing that. And they're growing. And next thing you know,
while you can't, Candice starts asking some questions, she starts calling out certain people, she
has the schmooly gun, all these other people, like, hey, what about this and what about
that? And the next thing you know, no, we chose to fire her because we're a publisher,
we're not a platform, so they chose to take the position as a publisher. And the rift
was this specific topic. How closely are you following what happened between Candace, Daily Wire, Ben Shapiro?
And when you look at that, do you have any thoughts where you say, I think it should
have been this way or I don't know enough about it?
What's your position on that?
So peripherally, yes.
What I've been following more closely is the public sector response, right?
So I mean, I'm not in the business of running for the president of Daily Wire, but I was
recently in the business of running for president of the United States.
So I take a look at what Congress is doing, for example, it's parallel, parallel topic,
but in a domain that I think more people will be familiar with than the inside base.
We're on a podcast in the world of podcasting.
You know, that seems like a big deal.
Let's talk about what's happening in the country.
Is what happened Israel wrong on October 7th?
Was that wrong?
Absolutely was.
Does Israel have a right to defend itself?
Absolutely it does. Is a lot of the anti-Semitism that we see in response in
the United States wrong? Yes it is. But it is beyond idiotic, it is dangerous that
we see an act passing Congress. This is not like some sort of theoretical bill
that's been proposed. That would be bad enough. We've seen that one. You got it up right there. The anti-Semitism awareness act that has now passed, been passed by the US
House of Representatives, that literally says there are certain opinions you cannot express
in the United States of America. You cannot, I think different definitions that have been
adopted in this bill, you cannot compare the actions of Israel to Hitler.
You cannot question the dual loyalty of Jews in the United States. Do I agree with these claims? Of course not.
I think it's ridiculous to compare Israel's actions to those of Hitler. I think it's disgusting.
But the United States of America is the quintessential country
where you get to express an opinion. And one of the things that I think we've lost in this country
in the last five years is we've had so much mumbo jumbo about all the exceptions to free
speech. I mean, if one more person tells me, oh, you can't yell fire in a crowded theater,
it's just like, okay, you trite truism machine. Of course, Oliver Wendell Holmes said that.
Yes. You can't threaten to kill somebody. You can't sell you, you know, this and claim to be medicine when in fact it's snake oil. That's commercial
fraud. But here let me boil down the First Amendment to one thing and it's
sad that I have to say this because everyone's forgotten it but I'm gonna
make the First Amendment 101 right here, okay? The First Amendment means one thing
in the United States. It means this. You are free to express any opinion, period. That doesn't
mean you're free to lie about what this contains, telling you this is medicine
when it's poison. Doesn't mean that I'm free to threaten to kill you. That's not
an opinion, that's an action. But you are free to express an opinion no matter how
heinous it is. And that law, right up there on the screen right now, the
Anti-Semitism Awareness Act,
that has passed the US House of Representatives,
including with Republican support,
is a disgusting anti-American response
to disgusting opinions that are best defeated
through more speech, not less.
And so that's the kind of thing where,
if you see that in our government,
can you expect that people in other institutions are going to lose their minds too?
Of course.
Do people stop having the ability to think straight when certain questions come up?
I think it's human nature.
There are certain questions for certain people, and they're different for different people,
where there are certain questions you lose your commitment to your original principles.
But that's where the rest of us who can see it with clarity deserve to remind them to
say, hey, here's our principle, here's what our first amendment says.
It says no matter how disgusting the speeches, you get to express the opinion that's different
from threatening violence.
That's different from a lot of the stuff we're seeing in the country.
That is not the expression of free speech.
Even on campuses, you don't have the freedom to disrupt somebody else from going to class.
No, that's not the first amendment.
But to say that you are,
what does this say? You know, calling for aiding or justifying the killing of harming of Jews in
the name of radical ideology or an extremist view of religion making a manate. Accusing Jews of being
responsible for real or imagined wrongdoing. Well, that'd be that'd be disgusting. But it's a
disgusting opinion. But it's an opinion. And all opinions under the First Amendment are and with that bill so if
you can't criticize a certain group a certain country a certain people then
they can literally do whatever they want and nobody could say anything if it gets
to that point then who are you to stop me you're gonna you're gonna get in
trouble for me saying wait a minute Benjamin Nanyahu kind of weird don't
know this don't know that all your anti-semitic. you're anti-Semitic. Now, here's the thing.
That's not really what's happening in the country.
You got college protests, you got people going to school.
So, I'm just calling it like I see it across the board, is say a few things.
One is, what happened to Israel was wrong.
Number two is, most of these campus protesters have no idea what the hell they're protesting
about.
Number three is, I think it's disgusting to disrupt somebody's ability to attend class
or express their own opinions.
I agree.
But the response to that by saying that you can't express opinions or ask certain questions
or express certain opinions in response is also disgusting.
And this is the stuff of how countries end, right?
Both sides lose their anchoring to their principles and are willing to use force to suppress the
other side.
That's the end of the United States of America as we know it. If we get to the point where the left tries to use force through bullhorns,
protests and violence to silence those they disagree with, which we're seeing some of
in this country, that's a bad sign. But what really takes us down a dirty road is when
the right then tries to use the police power and that's what this is, the police power
of the federal government to stifle them from expressing their opinions. That's not America. And we need the principle to stand for bingo
because this is the Republicans that are putting this out there because I agree with you when
this thing came out, what was it two weeks ago that was sort of announced that it passed.
I said, actually, I'm actually not a fan of this, because it's sort of dictating what
free speech should be. Nobody who loves free speech in this country, and then they'll come
up with all these other examples with misinformation and disinformation and libel. No, if you ever, if this ever comes
up in a discussion, even if people were watching this, let me just give you the dinner table sound
bit because you're going to hear a lot of the mumbo jumbo, especially during COVID. We heard
about all the exceptions to free speech on a boiler down the free speech clause of the first
amendment means you get to express any opinion. You take one thing
away from this time we've spent together, let it be that any opinion is fair game. And
I think that's what this country was founded. So here's the only question that I guess I
agree that just like capitalism is a marketplace for goods and services, I believe that free
speech is a marketplace for ideas and opinions, however wrong you might think they are totally
with you on the same page. But where does hate speech or calls for genocide or entafada or the river to the
sea, where do you draw the line of distinction of that? We remember in Congress, the hearings
when Elise Stefanik grilled the presidents of your former alma mater, Harvard, I want
to say, of calling for genocide. Well, it depends what kind of actions. So here's where
is the hate speech and action end?
Well here's my issue with those university presidents, right? Because right now you're
seeing people put pressure to say, well you've been applying speech codes as it applies to
black students and gay students, why aren't you protecting Jewish students the same way?
That's been the direction of it. I actually look at it the other way, why have you been
having these speech codes at all over the course of the last five years? The university should prize free speech. So
I think the right criticism of those university presidents should be and should have been
that you haven't really meant it. When you say you're an institution committed to free
speech. There's nothing at Harvard today. Harvard was the worst school for free speech. Look at the staff. I mean, yeah, pretty
bad, too. I mean, it's all pretty bad, right? And so there are certain viewpoints about
the climate, about race, about religion, about gender that you absolutely cannot express
on a Harvard or Yale. Here you go, Harvard. Right. So that I think is the bigger issue.
But I think that it would be a mistake to say oh really because we have been
Disrespecting free speech and all of those other contexts. Let's also prevent it in this other context, too
I think that's the wrong direction. I think the right direction to go is to say all opinions are fair game to express them
Disruptions or physical intimidation. No, that's not the expression of an opinion. That's out of bounds
No matter which side you're coming from we got the right we got 18 minutes and I want to go through a couple different clips.
Rob, can you pull up this clip? Nancy Pelosi, Oxford, she has an exchange and you just,
this is like she got in trouble the moment she decided to go here.
Watch how this thing gets. Go ahead and play it.
Before COVID, intelligence services colluded with Big Tech to have Trump suspended off
Twitter.
Yes, the same platform which hosted the Taliban and Ayatollah, deaf to Israel Khomeini, they
fought the president across the line when he tweeted on Jan 6th, quote, remain peaceful,
no violence, respect the law and our great men and women in blue.
That's a quote.
You may be thinking now that Trump is a populist.
You are right.
He didn't accept the 2020 elections and he should have.
So should Hillary in 2016, so should Brussels and so should Westminster in 2016 and so too
should Congresswoman Pelosi, instead of saying the 2016 election was
quote hijacked. Quote hijacked.
It was. Look, boom. Look at that.
Is Pelosi in the room?
Yes, she's in the room.
Get out of here.
Couldn't have paid her to do better.
She probably left body of jack Daniels with her.
That doesn't mean that we don't accept the results of it.
What does that even mean?
What about the mainstream media?
Let me read you some mainstream media headlines.
The New Yorker the day before the 2016 election.
The case against democracy.
The Washington Post the day after the election.
The problem with our government is democracy.
The LA Times June 2017. The British election is a reminder of the perils of too much democracy. Vox June 2017. The two eminent political scientists
say the problem with democracy is voters. New York Times June 2017. The problem with participatory democracy is the participants.
Mainstream media elites are part of a class who don't just disdain populism, they disdain
the people. If the Democrats had put half their energy into delivering for the people,
Trump wouldn't even have a chance in 2024. He shouldn't
he shouldn't have a chance. You've had power for four years from the fabricated steel dossier
to trying to take him off the ballot in both Maine and Colorado.
The Democrats are the anti-democrat party. All we need now is the Republicans to come out as the pro
monarch. Introducing Tim's new flatbread pizza. Served hot out of the oven in
four delicious flavors with simply cheese. Starting from $6.99 plus tax.
There's a new Tim's run in town. Try one today. Terms and conditions apply at
participating restaurants in Canada.
Johnson Canada. Time for dance.
That's the sound of fried chicken with a spicy history.
Thornton Prince was a ladies' man.
To get revenge, his girlfriend hid spices
in his fried chicken.
He loved it so much, he opened Prince's Hot Chicken.
Hot chicken in the window.
This is one of many sounds in Tennessee
with a story to tell.
To hear them in person, plan your trip at tnvacation.com.
Tennessee sounds perfect.
Ladies and gentlemen, populism is not a threat to democracy,
but I'll tell you what is.
It's elites ordering social media to censor political opponents, its police
shutting down the centers, be it anti-monarchists in this country or gender
critical voices here or last week in Brussels the National Conservative
movement. I'll tell you what is a threat to democracy. It's Brussels, DC, Westminster, the mainstream
media, big tech, big pharma, corporate collusion and the Davos cronies.
The threat to democracy comes from those who write off ordinary people as deplorable. The
threat to democracy comes from those who smear working people as racists. The threat to democracy comes from those who
write off working people as populists. And I'll say one last thing. This populist age
can be brought to an end at the snap of a finger. All that needs to be done is for elites to start listening to, respect it, respecting,
and God forbid, working for ordinary people.
Thank you.
Here, here.
With Pelosi.
Pelosi, you know she wanted to kill him the whole time.
You know she was like, I hate-
Wow.
What do you think about this, Yvig?
I like it.
I like 95% of it.
Which part do you not like?
Well, no, I got to start with the part I like first, then I'll get to the part I didn it. I like 95% of it. Which part do you not like? Well, no,
I got to start with the part I like first, then I'll get to the part I don't like. The
bow tie. The part I, well, it actually relates to the bow tie. It relates to it. But the
95% that I love, first of all, smart guy, I think we need more of that over here. The
threats to democracy are really posed by the people who profess the threats to democracy,
which is Orwellian, right?
You accuse the other side of the very thing, of the very sin that you're actively committing.
And he did a great job with documentation exactly pointing that out.
I mean, democracy is not just measured by the number of ballots you cast every November.
It's, do you feel free to express yourself?
Are you using technology companies or other tools to suppress speech in a country?
So it's beautifully said.
There's just one little tweak
I would I would suggest not only to this gentleman, but even there's a lot of people in the US who
Borrow some of this rhetoric is I
Don't love the use of the word
Elites right and the part that was just kind of hilarious is to watch this man and like a bowtie like a British accent
British Hall
Railing about like the elites
Yeah, but but I think that I think I'm not saying that to make fun of him
I think that we can actually do better because it almost seeds the ground of who is elite to the Nancy Pelosi
I think elite about Nancy Pelosi. I mean, I mean nothing elite about Joe Biden. He doesn't have a functioning brain
I mean, it might be a form of elder abuse. We could debate that but that's not there's nothing elite about that
And I think there are many kinds of elites. There are the bureaucratic managerial class, there are
the creators in the country, people like yourself, people like Elon Musk, people like, you know,
countless other entrepreneurs in this country who have created great things of great value
that are educated, either self-educated or at good universities or at no-name universities.
Every one of those can be a member of an elite,. So all I would say is he was hitting the nail on the head right until the very end when
he was close, but he veered a little bit to do this elite versus working class thing.
Whereas I don't see that divide at all. I see the rise of people, whether or not they've
been successful could be described as elite, could be described as working people, everybody
who says they're base principles of what it means to live in a free democratic society.
And so 95% of it he was spot on.
Tom, what do you think when you see this?
Nigel.
Nigel?
Yeah.
Yeah, Nigel.
They, I thought he did a marvelous job.
He constructed his argument and I was inspired by it.
And I just look forward to the day where you could see American students doing the same thing over here
rather than going out into the quad and protesting.
Because he was constructing the argument
based on truth, accuracy, and facts.
I can agree with you a little bit on using the word elites,
but to me that's small.
I still give him a 98 on the paper, you know,
and I thought it was.
Why do you think, how much of this do you think
is happening in our universities with kids?
Not. Not. How is it not? Why do you think, how much of this you think is happening in our universities with kids? Not.
Not.
How is it not?
Well, I think we need to introduce the study of a foreign language in this country called
English.
People in this country, especially young people, have lost the ability to use language to advance
their own ideas, and language carves the channel through which thought flows.
I do think English should be the national language of the United States.
I think that would be a good thing, actually, to have a grounding language. And I do think that part of what's
happening right now is people who talk like that in high school, I think things are changing right
now. But if you rewind about 10 years ago, at least what happened was people who were exceptionally
talented academically and ambitious academically were taught to hide their excellence, right? It
wasn't cool to be academically successful or articulate or mathematically advanced. And so we had this culture, a little bit of kids like
him being the kinds of kids who would be culturally labeled as gunners in class
or whatever. When I think it's actually a great thing where if you got somebody's
gonna throw a football you might as well get the guy who's gonna be able to throw
it the best pass. If you want a guy in an English class you might as well want a
guy who in high school is gonna be able to speak the language as well as he is. I mean, they're
in college now. And the same thing for somebody who's good at math. So that culture of excellence
is part of what we lost for a while. I think the boomerang is coming back a little bit.
Well, it depends on you define it. Elite. Nancy Pelosi, I think is the first or second
richest member of Congress, $250 million. There's an actual website.
He's very good at credit stocks. Yes, there's an actual website that tracks
our net worth. I think the only person that's richer than her is Rick Scott, who's the senator,
former governor of Florida. But I got to give Nancy Pelosi at least a little credit.
What? She's got more balls than Biden. She's shown
up to, she knows when she walks into Oxford, she's gonna get lambasted.
When either that or less of an elder,
a less intelligent elder care.
Well, when she said, when China said,
What's going on?
When China said straight up, Nancy, do not go to Taiwan.
She went to Taiwan.
We gave her praise on this podcast, straight up.
Biden's not going to Oxford.
Biden's not going to Taiwan. She,
for all her Nancy nervous craziness, at least has more balls to show up to hostile territory
than someone like Biden.
My handlers do.
Well, she's sitting there.
Yeah, I disagree with that. That was Paul Pelosi sitting right next to her. And if you
take a look in that, he looked hammered. They thought it was a pub. That's what they walked
in. They thought it was a pub
Make a point which would sort of joking and
Denigration of the other side notwithstanding put that to one side. I think Republicans got to get better at this
Actually, I mean I it's easy to criticize the other side self criticisms a little bit harder to engage in So let's do the self criticism as a party as a movement
I don't think we go to the other side and
actually engage in earnest, open debate where we confront the opposition. I try to do as
much of that as I can.
I think you do a great job of that. I think Trump does it.
Trump does it great. Trump does it well. I tried to do the best I could during the presidential
campaign. I went to great lengths to do it. I think it's missing. I really don't think
we see much of that in our movement. Where are Republicans going to college campuses? Where are Republicans going to the inner city?
I think it's an opportunity we have this year though. I think this is, and that's one of the things I'm trying to do this year,
and will try to do not only as I did during the campaign, but for the rest of the year,
show up where you're not supposed to. Actually, it's easy to show up where you're supposed to.
It's easy to preach to your own choir, but show up where you're not supposed to. And I think that's how you actually save a country. Like, but back when you showed
up, you started doing push-ups with those college kids. I mean, what's real? Last story, last story,
last story, last story. Rob, what I love most is that that was cool. And you jumping around that
jet ski guy to throw you and you were learning how to do water skiing. I was sick. Rob, can you pull up the CNN's Zikaria, Biden should go back to Trump's immigration policies.
This has to be so hard for him to be forced to say that. But go ahead and play this wonderful
clip.
Running towards law enforcement because they have figured out that all they have to do
is say the magic words.
I have a credible fear of persecution and bingo, you're in the country legally.
You get two court hearings.
They could take seven years.
Meanwhile, you slip into the shadows of the economy.
So the whole system is broken and Biden needs to confront that and say, you know, we are
going to have to reform the whole system.
I would, I would wish he'd do something much more extreme, like say the old asylum system
is dead.
No one is coming in through that process.
You have to apply from your home country.
Which was a Trump policy.
Which was a, you know, a Trump and also the Mexico, you know, you have to be in Mexico
to, to apply.
I think that's all correct.
So strategically, you think that if Biden would attack
Trump policies, he would have a better political chance.
And it's also the right policy because the old asylum system is being gamed by millions.
Vivek, thoughts?
Look, I think that once the truth becomes so obvious, it becomes undeniable.
So if you can't beat them, join them.
That's effectively what you're seeing here.
And I think they've tried to have their cake and eat it, too.
It's no accident that the very people who are most opposed
to the border wall or to strong border policies
are also the ones who are most in favor of completely open
voter ID laws, the lack of any voter ID laws.
So part of what they've been doing is for 10 years
or more, importing voters and opposing mass deportations, they're
opposing the export of voters. I know you're not supposed to say it that way, but that's
the truth.
Import as many long-run voters as you can, minimize the exports.
But now when that's coming back to bite them even with just the mainstream
citizen population of the country, now they're at least using their verbiage to say, okay, we imported all of those potential long run voters,
but now just pretend like we actually intend to do the opposite. So that's what I see going
on a little bit. And it's actually an interesting pattern, Patrick, because I wanted to comment
on this. I haven't actually haven't commented on this elsewhere, but it's sort of weighed
on me is you see a lot of this stuff now where who was the comedian was a John Stewart, you
know, going on the rant about COVID's origin recently was
that John Stewart Colbert yeah it's Colbert okay no it's not
Stuart it was on the right whatever but I think that I think that you see that
and you I see a lot of people cheering and saying oh yeah he did it yes how
bold of him when it comes to a lot of these admissions of failed
policies and reversals of conspiracy theories, the timing is everything, right?
If you already do it after the effect of that policy has been born and everyone's
already seen it for how terrible it is and the effect has already been negative,
I don't think there's that much courage in then coming around and saying what
you should have said three years ago.
And so I think we've got to be careful where a lot of these folks in the center left, they're
really trying to pack it in now with their anti woke commentary on the DEI agenda on
admitting bad COVID policies.
You could think about even some of these immigration policy failure admissions that are now coming.
And you'll have a lot of people who charitably say hey give him credit. You can maybe give him like an iota of credit maybe. But it's
the easiest thing to do in some ways it's even more devious where after the damage has
already been done you feign vulnerability and pretend to admit it when in fact all of
the negative consequences have already been had. So timing is everything on some of these
things and we can't lose sight of that.
Better late than never though, right?
I would say better late than never if it's earnest. And in Feridze Caria's case, it looked
like it was earnest, right? I think there's a cynical version of it where you actually
would rather have it late and pretend like there was some kind of admission, but there's
no consequence to you and you're just using it to build a fake credibility. So better
late than never, yes, as long as it's sincere and if it's sincere fine
I'll give you points for that not a lot of points, but I'll give you some I
Love it. Okay be vague great to have you on every time we're here. We enjoy the conversations
So this week you said you're gonna be at the trial with him tomorrow with the president. Yeah, I'm flying from here
I started my morning in Ohio. I'm here now. I'll be in New York by tonight.
Fantastic.
How much sleep do you get every night?
It's not one of my bigger hobbies.
That's why your number one draft pick 2020,
in my opinion.
By the way, go follow the man's podcast,
Truth, the Ann Coulter podcast
that he did his live on here.
Go check it out.
Rob, make sure we put the link below in the chat
and the comment section.
Gang, take care.
I think we're doing a podcast, home team tomorrow.
Lots of stories we didn't cover.
And I'm about to announce the next live,
who it's going to be.
It's going to be explosive.
And nobody here knows,
because I just locked it up during this podcast
while I'm texting these guys.
They agreed it's gonna be insane.
I'll announce it tomorrow.
Tickets will sell out within the second I announce it. going to be insane. I'll announce it tomorrow. Not Britney Spears?
Tickets will sell out within the second I announce it.
Take care everybody.
We'll see you guys tomorrow.
God bless.
Bye bye.
Thank you.