Pod Save America - “SCOTUS Gives Trump Notice.”
Episode Date: July 9, 2020The Supreme Court rules on Native rights and Trump’s taxes, the President bullies schools to re-open, Joe Biden and progressive Democrats find common ground, and Kanye West flirts with a presidentia...l bid. Oklahoma journalist Rebecca Nagle talks to Jon about the legal victory for tribal nations, and Color of Change’s Rashad Robinson talks to Dan about Facebook’s handling of hate speech and misinformation.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
On today's pod, Dan talks to Rashad Robinson from Color of Change,
one of the activists leading the fight against Facebook's handling of hate speech and misinformation.
I also talked to Rebecca Nagel, host of Crooked Media's This Land,
about this morning's Supreme Court ruling about Native rights.
Before that, we'll talk about why Donald Trump is bullying schools to reopen this fall,
whether or not it's safe to do so,
how Joe Biden is consolidating support among the progressive left. And yes, we're even going to
briefly touch on Kanye West's latest flirtation with running for president. But first, check out
this week's pod. Save the world. It has everything. The Brazilian president catches covid mysterious
explosions at an Iranian military site. And our good friend and chief domestic policy advisor for Barack Obama, Cecilia Munoz,
explains Trump's latest efforts to punish immigrants and how the next administration can fix it.
Tomorrow, we also have our third and final installment of That's the Ticket,
Dan and Alyssa's bonus series on the vice presidential selection process.
Dan, what's in the finale?
We're going to reveal who Joe Biden's going to pick.
Wow, what a perfect finale.
I'm so glad they decided to do it right here
on Pride Save America.
This is what they've been waiting,
this is why we haven't gotten the Biden interview.
We've been waiting.
It's going to come as a surprise to Joe Biden,
but no, in all seriousness,
Alyssa and I talk about the factors that Joe Biden
in every previous nominee looks at when they make
their decision. And we're going to talk about how those announcements are made. And Alyssa's got
some really good ideas for Joe Biden on how he could make his announcement, hopefully soon.
Excellent. Everyone check it out. It has been fantastic. I've loved every episode. I'll miss
it when it's gone. Finally, now that Adopt-A-State organizing trainings are all wrapped up, we need
you to check your email, which is where your friends at Vote Save America will be sending you state-specific volunteer opportunities.
If you haven't already signed up, it's not too late.
Go to votesaveamerica.com slash adopt and join the thousands of volunteers out there looking to flip some swing states.
And, you know, maybe you adopt Arizona.
Maybe you think that's important.
I mean, you could do that. You could also adopt North Carolina and elect a senator or governor, flip a statehouse, all kinds of cool things.
Look, you can do that. You can do a lot of that in Arizona as well. Anyway, anyway.
All right. I want to start with some pretty big news from the Supreme Court this morning with a ruling that upholds the treaty that says nearly half the land in Oklahoma is a reservation that belongs to Native Americans. To give us a little more insight about
what this means, we're joined now by Rebecca Nagel, an Oklahoma journalist and citizen of
the Cherokee Nation whose podcast, This Land, tells the riveting story behind this case and
what's at stake. Rebecca is releasing a bonus episode of This Land next week, where she'll
talk more about all of this. But for now, welcome to the show.
Yeah, thank you so much for having me.
So big day, good day.
For those of us who haven't had a chance to dive into This Land yet,
can you give a quick summary of what this case was about and what was at stake here?
And what was at stake here?
Yeah, so the case was brought by a man named Jim C. McGirt, who was convicted of crimes by the state of Oklahoma.
He is a tribal citizen and his crimes happened on the reservation of Muskogee Creek Nation. And so he appealed his conviction all the way to the Supreme Court, arguing that Oklahoma did not have the jurisdiction to convict him because his crimes happened on a
reservation, a reservation that Oklahoma for the past century has acted as if it no longer existed.
And so that was really what the thrust of this case was, is does Muskogee Creek Nation,
and by extension, a total of five tribes in eastern Oklahoma still have their
reservations or because, you know, so much time has passed or it'd be extremely inconvenient for
all the white people who live there. Is there some other conclusion that the courts can come to?
And in a decision that did not hold back at all, Gorsuch wrote that basically, you know, this land was promised to Muskogee Creek Nation and that the Supreme Court was going to hold the government to its word.
Can you give us a little bit of your reaction when you when you read the ruling this morning, since you have been investigating this, researching this,
following this for so long? Yeah, I mean, I woke up this morning very emotional and not like with a
sinking stomach in my gut, you know, I mean, I think throughout history, you know, indigenous
people in this country, you know, the government has just invented new reasons and new
ways to take away our land. And so I was like crying. I was brushing my teeth. I was, I was
ready. I was already full of rage and sadness. And then the second the decision came out, I,
the first thing I looked for actually was who wrote it. And when I saw that it was written by Gorsuch, I just, I started crying.
And yeah, it was, it was really emotional.
It's been really dry here.
And for people who know Eastern Oklahoma, like we, we get a lot of rain.
And, you know, like all of the grass in my lawn is dead.
It's just been very dry.
And right around the time that the decision came out, it just started pouring.
And I'm going to start crying, but it's just, you know, over the course of history, you know, we have really just asked for the United States to follow its own laws, you know, its own constitution, its own set of laws that govern our rights and our land rights.
And so, so rarely it does.
And so it's just such a big win when people in power, you know, use that power the right way.
For those of our listeners who haven't yet listened to This Land, could you explain a
little bit about why when you saw that Gorsuch, a usually very conservative justice, was writing
the majority opinion that that was what made you realize that the ruling went the right way?
the majority opinion that that was what made you realize that the ruling went the right way?
Yeah. So, I mean, I think that when it comes to Indian law, like you, you can't, you can't talk about parties. I mean, you know, Native Americans tend to be Democrats and Democrats tend to support
Native issues. But, you know, like I think a really good example is that we got four, we have
four Native people in Congress right now. Two of them are Democrats and two of them are Republicans.
And so Gorsuch is what people call a textualist.
So he looks at the law, he looks at the plain text of the law,
and he interprets that.
And the plain text of the Constitution,
the plain text of these treaties,
says that this land is still reservations.
And a lot of textualists don't apply the plain text of these treaties says that this land is still reservations. And what's, you know,
a lot of textualists don't apply that to treaties and to laws governing Native rights. But Gorsuch does, and he does it uncompromisingly. And so, yeah, I think that him being added to the Supreme
Court, if we can keep Ginsburg, if we can keep Ginsburg on our side,
we might actually, for the first time in U.S. history, see a court that tends to rule in the
favor of Native rights. We, throughout history, have basically lost the majority of time that our
rights have gone up against the Supreme Court. Well, on that note, I mean, what, if anything,
will change as a result of this ruling?
And what other cases involving Native rights do you have your eye on now?
Oh, that's a really good question. So, I mean, what's funny about this historic ruling and
what's going to change on the ground is that the answer is actually very little. So the Supreme
Court has actually really limited tribal jurisdiction over both non-Indians on
reservations and land on reservations that's also owned by non-Indians. And that's, you know,
the majority of the residents and the majority of land on these reservations. And so, you know,
for folks who, you know, live in Jinx, Oklahoma, like their life is going to go forward without
much difference. I think what it really changes for
the tribes is that we have been losing land and losing restricted status on our land for over a
century. It's just been the slow bleed of the laws that Oklahoma set up when it was created as a
state. And so I think that this really affirms our sovereignty and lets us rebuild. You know, I always talk about, like, in Cherokee history, everyone points to the Trail of Tears as, you know, the most traumatic moment in our history.
But from that moment, we rebuilt.
Actually, the period of Cherokee history right after the Trail of Tears is called the Golden Era because we flourished in our new land.
But then when Oklahoma was created on top of our land, it was divided up. We were
preyed upon. Our land was stolen. We have never fully recovered from that history. And so I think
of this decision as an opportunity for our tribes to start to rebuild with our sovereignty and our
land rights finally being recognized. So one last question before I let you go. What are some of the
things that people can do right now to ensure that this national focus on systemic racism and injustice includes Native rights?
erasure, right? And so it's like, you know, to everybody listening to this podcast, I would challenge you to name the people whose land you live on, you know, name an important Supreme
Court decision throughout history that's not this one that impacted Native rights. Like,
you've probably never heard of, you know, Oliphant or the Marshall Trilogy, you know,
these like foundational things. And so I think that that invisibility is absolutely why we get Supreme Court decisions
that make no sense and rule against tribes all the time. And so I think it's really an opportunity
for people to both educate themselves and also to, you know, consistently do that for it to not just
be, you know, this moment or this flashpoint, but for it to be something that is an everyday part of the media and the news that people are consuming.
Very good advice. Rebecca, thank you so much for joining us. Thank you for making this land.
Everyone go check it out if you haven't already and be on the lookout next week for a special
bonus episode of this land. You can subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Rebecca Nagel,
good day. Thanks for being here for part of it. Thank you so much. Okay, so Dan, the other major
piece of news from the Supreme Court this morning that we should just briefly mention,
the justices rejected President Trump's argument that he has, quote, absolute immunity while he's
in office and opened the door for prosecutors to obtain his financial records. The court actually
ruled in two cases, one involving Manhattan's district attorney, the other House Democrats.
While the ruling clears the way for Manhattan's DA to pursue a subpoena for the records, the case is
going back to a lower court and Trump's records are probably going to be kept secret under grand
jury rules until after the election. In the other case, the one that involved the congressional request from House Democrats, the court basically pushed things back to a lower
court and ruled that the House can't have access to the same records for now, citing some issues
that have been unresolved about the separation of powers. Trump took the news very well this
morning, rushed to Twitter to complain about how unfair the court was to him, threw in some other
grievances about the Mueller hoax and Obamagate.
He wrote, this is all a political prosecution.
I won the Mueller witch hunt and others,
and now I have to keep fighting in a politically corrupt New York.
Not fair to this presidency or administration.
Dan, you have any reactions to the other rulings from this morning?
Well, I think these rulings are good for the rule of law over the long term.
We shouldn't have to point out that presidents are eligible for criminal prosecution if they
are suspected of committing crimes, and we shouldn't have to point out that they are not
immune from congressional oversight. But I think these rulings are a loss in the sense that the way the Supreme Court very specifically wrote this, it is going to deny voters the ability to know what, if any, conflicts of interest Donald Trump has before they have to vote in November.
Spoiler alert, he has some.
Yeah.
I mean, you can just presume.
I guess the real political upside is-
Plenty of evidence.
Plenty of evidence points to the idea that, yes, he does. He has plenty of conflicts of interest. He is plenty corrupt.
Yeah, it's a blank canvas. Thanks to Supreme Court. That's the other way of thinking about it.
I do think it and, you know, it does leave him open. Hopefully, if Joe Biden wins and he leaves office and Donald Trump leaves office, it really does open him up to prosecution in the Manhattan DA case, I think.
Which is something that, you know, we can all look forward to.
Because we care about the law.
We care about justice being done.
That's why.
All right.
Let's get to some other news of the day.
Dan, on last week's episode, we answered a listener question about schools reopening this fall.
You know, it's a very challenging issue for kids, teachers, parents, the economy.
Kind of issue that, you know, really, really deserves thoughtful debate grounded in science.
But we live in Donald Trump's America.
So shortly after the CDC released guidelines for
safely bringing students back to school, the president jumped on Twitter on Wednesday and
accused the agency of asking schools to do very, quote, tough, expensive and impractical things,
threatened to cut funding for schools if they refused to just open and accused Democrats of
wanting schools to remain closed for political reasons. Later in the day, Vice President Mike
Pence said that the CDC would be issuing new guidance for schools and that the
White House would be, quote, looking for ways to give states a strong incentive encouragement
to get kids back in school as Congress takes up this next round of pandemic relief.
So, Dan, here is just some of what the CDC proposed in their original guidelines that
sent Trump spiraling. Desks at least six feet apart and facing the same direction.
Lunch in classrooms instead of a cafeteria.
Staggered arrival times.
Cloth masks for staff and daily temperature screenings for everyone.
What's Trump's problem with all that?
It's not clear what his problem is.
It's very common sense. This is a very complicated issue where we have
very little information. And so I want to try to separate various parts of it. One, the things that
the CDC is asking are not on paper hard. But because we have been underfunding public education for decades in this country, there
is many classrooms overcrowded.
And so six feet apart is not an option in many, many, many classrooms, right?
Because we are in the middle of a pandemic and the economy has gone through the floor,
there is not money for testing, right?
There is not money for testing, right? We have not, and I think perhaps most importantly, and there's nothing to do. So he just wants to shove kids into schools without a plan to make it safe for both the students, but also the teachers and everyone else who works in a school.
So I guess the threat of cutting funding for schools from the Trump administration is not really going to help this situation in any kind of way.
Well, it's also not real, right? 90% of funding for
schools is state and local. And Trump has... Right, that's what I was going to say. So there's
a question he can't really do. I mean, there is the, I guess we should say that the, in terms of
pandemic relief, and there is some money for schools in the last round of relief, and there
has been money proposed for schools in the current relief that they're going to be debating over the next
few months. So there is some thought that the Trump administration could play around with that.
But certainly most of the money that schools get is from state and local governments.
Right. Like the overwhelming majority of Trump threats. This one is not based in reality.
Right. Why do you think Trump's picking this fight right now?
He's desperately looking for a fight, right? Like he is a man who he only thinks of politics in the
context of wedge issues. And this is a really, really hard thing for parents, right? You know,
people who have been working from home with kids, that is essentially an impossible situation, right? And if you talk
to any parent of young children, the idea that their kids will still be home doing distance
learning throughout the fall is devastating. And it's devastating for their ability to be
functioning adults and to do their jobs. And it's devastating for their children because
the distance learning thing is basically impossible. It is very limited impact,
you know, depending on the age of, you know, certainly for, you know, the age of the children.
And I think unlike previous fights that Trump has picked about the opening of the economy and masks
and things like that, he has some backing on his side, right? The Academy of Pediatrics have
recommended that schools open, right? If, you know, with some caveats about safety, but there is a belief that schools need to open both
for the well-being of children, both in the short term and long term, and for the economy,
because the economy cannot open if people's kids can't go to school because people can't work.
And so he's looking for a wedge issue. I think he's making the same mistake he's made on every
part of this, which is just by looking for the issue, he's simply revealing that he has not done the work it takes to solve the problem.
So, I mean, thinking that like, you know, it's obviously not just Trump that wants schools open.
You know, the American Academy of Pediatrics also issued guidelines on how to safely reopen schools.
issued guidelines on how to safely reopen schools.
I guess the question is, I always like to play the game of like,
what if we were in a normal administration that was not Trump and we had this challenge of opening schools safely
in the middle of a pandemic that has not died down?
Like, what would it look like to open schools safely?
And where should Joe Biden and the Democrats be on this one?
Well, I think that just like with the economy, Joe Biden and Democrats should work to avoid
Trump sort of bifurcating the issue on he's for opening schools and Democrats are for
closing schools.
Because that's not their position, right?
It's open without a plan or open with a plan.
And so having a plan is the way to do it.
I mean, and Democrats do.
with a plan. And so having a plan is the way to do it. I mean, and Democrats do, you know,
they have taken steps in Congress to have funding for testing, for schools to help them do this.
There are a number of other ideas out there. So like having a very specific plan helps with that challenge. In a normal world, I mean, this is like, this is complicated by the fact that we know so little about this virus.
We don't really, you know, there's been like, I have read so much about this because
our daughter who there's only two, but like under the normal course of business was planning to
start in two weeks to go to a, you know, a several day a week program for two-year-olds. And so you see
all these studies about how kids have gone back to school in Europe and Asia, and there have not
been transmission of COVID. But also, and Trump made that point in his tweet, he said, the schools
are open in all these countries, but those countries did the work to contain the spread
of the virus. And they're having a couple hundred cases a day. We're setting new records on a daily basis
of coronavirus infections. And so what it looks like is, I think, ramping up testing,
ramping up contract tracing, ramping up resources for schools. Emily Oster, who is a
brown economist and writes a lot of books for parents, you will soon read a lot of Emily Oster.
I've been reading Cribsheet to prepare.
Yes.
And, you know, she has an idea where you take, you know, young people, particularly college students who may be taking a gap year because their schools are not coming back in a full session and hire them to work in schools.
They're not trained teachers, but they can help facilitate, you know, activities and other things
in order to, you know, sort of separate kids. So, you know, you can reduce the number of kids in a
classroom at one time because the limits on how you do social distancing are both room in the class
and number of adults who can watch the kids safely. And like, there's a whole host of
things you could do to get people to do it. You could surge funding to get, you know, surge,
Teach for America and things like that. But none of those things are happening. We did
nothing, right? It's like we, as a country, we made two fundamental errors, which is the whole
point of flattening the curve is to prepare. And if we had really thought this through, we would have worked backwards from the opening of
school. Because that is the thing. Because when the virus started, it was a couple months,
then summer. And you could manage that both from a kid's learning perspective and an economic
perspective. And then you could, and so you would say, everything we're doing is to reduce the
spread to a manageable level and to prepare in terms of infrastructure and funding and teachers for opening of school.
We did none of that.
And then we did incredibly stupid things, which was we prioritized opening of bars and indoor dining over risk management to make it more likely that schools can open safely. And so like it is it is a gigantic mess. And we have lacked any federal
leadership as evidenced by the fact that Trump is tweeting at his own CDC about their guidelines,
as opposed to picking up the phone and calling them. It's such a mess. I mean, look, you know,
and this is in the American Academy of Pediatrics statement and guidance to like, you know, there is evidence that obviously kids don't contract this virus as
easily or pass it on as easily. Younger children, especially. But of course, there are people with
sort of underlying conditions that you have to think about. There are teachers, there are older
teachers. This is this is not an easy thing to figure out, even when
you stipulate that distance learning is not only hard, but not nearly as effective and not doable
for many middle class and lower class families. And so we do have this challenge. It's not an
easy solution, but it does seem like you said that a normal working government would adequately
resource schools, would have also made sure that we don't have sort of out of control outbreaks in a lot of places where we have out of control outbreaks right now, because sort of having communities with lower transmission is probably the best way to guarantee that schools are safe.
You could do, like you said, frequent testing of all students and teachers constantly.
You could do, like you said, frequent testing of all students and teachers constantly.
And then a contact tracing program where you isolate people who do catch the virus as fast as possible to cut down on the spread.
You could have classroom outdoor.
You could open windows.
You could do all these things.
But, you know, we are, because of Trump and his mismanagement, in the situation we're always in where it's going to become some political fight.
Right? In the situation we're always in where it's going to become some political fight, right?
And it's just going to be like they want to have one side be for opening schools and one side for not being open for opening schools. When the reality is a complicated debate that takes science and education experts and parents and everyone to like sort of come together and figure out the best solution to a very difficult challenge.
And that is where we are right now.
And it is fucking infuriating.
I get the sense, John.
It's only been three and a half years,
but bringing in data, science
as a way to solve complex problems
is not necessarily in Trump's skillset.
Yeah, right.
He's just, it's fucking brutal all right let's talk about the democratic party which may be on the verge of becoming
at least for this election one big happy dysfunctional family not even that dysfunctional
not even that dysfunctional well there's always dysfunction, so I had to throw that in there.
First, some evidence from data guru Nate Cohn of The New York Times.
In their most recent poll, voters in the battleground states who said Bernie Sanders was their top choice for president said they backed Joe Biden over President Trump 87% to 4%. Democrats who said Elizabeth Warren was their top choice in the primary
backed Mr. Biden over Mr. Trump by a staggering margin of 96% to zero.
Not a single Elizabeth Warren supporter to be found who's not backing Joe Biden.
Dan, how did we get from all those contentious primary debates and Twitter wars to this?
how did we get from all those contentious primary debates and Twitter wars to this?
Well, I think it is safe to say that the panic over a divided Democratic Party was even overstated at the time. And that is born of, you know, just, you know, we laugh about it, but the press is
obsessed with the Dems in disarray narrative. And certainly, there are some particularly loud voices on Twitter who drove that conversation in the run up to the ending of the primary, I would say. backdrop has changed, which is that this was always going to be an incredibly consequential
and serious election, but it feels exponentially more with what's happening right now, right?
The time to play around and, you know, sort of try to make, you know, make a statement or whatever
else with your vote feels so disconnected from what is happening. And the idea, you know, and
the people who, you know, this was a common refrain among a very small percentage of people, but a consequential percentage of people in 2016,
which is Trump and Hillary are not that different, right? Just when you look at what has happened in
this country since coronavirus hit, even if you had ignored everything that happened previously
since Trump was elected, you just cannot, like the consequences of having Trump and uniquely Trump
and uniquely a Republican who hates government in charge of the government at a time of a pandemic and historical unemployment is so obvious that
it, you know, it pushes for unity. And I think the other thing is, credit should go to Joe Biden.
I was gonna say, yeah.
And his campaign and all of his opponents, most notably Bernie Sanders, for working incredibly
hard to unify the party
after this. There's a few things going on. And so it's hard to sort of cite any one factor as to
what has changed, right? Like, we can't sort of rerun 2020 with Hillary Clinton as the nominee
and say, okay, would it be different this time? Because people have seen what Trump is like for four years. And so they would be backing Hillary right now, much like they are backing Joe Biden.
Like we can't do that. But that could be a factor. Trump obviously could be a driving factor in all
this. You know, Nate points out in his piece in The New York Times how it wasn't quite like this
in 2016. You know, some research suggests that up to 12 percent of Sanders primary supporters ended up backing Trump in the general election.
But then Nate points out that these voters tended to be relatively conservative, white and rural and didn't actually come back to Bernie in the 2020 primaries.
What did you think of that point?
I think that is certainly right, that there may be some number of people who were in,
you know, that we thought of as Sanders supporters in 2016 that we as Democrats have not seen since, right?
Sanders' coalition was different this time.
And it was a coalition that was much more liberal, much more uniformly liberal, and
therefore more willing, it seems, to back the Democrat over the Republican.
Yeah. And like you said, I think there are, you know, there are differences in how
the candidates and their supporters acted in 2020 versus 2016. You know, and there was two
big examples of sort of this interparty dynamic of coming together has been playing out. Both
happened on Wednesday. The first was when our good friend and activist
Adi Barkan announced he'll be endorsing Joe Biden after finally landing an interview with the former
vice president for Adi's series where he interviewed all the candidates in the primary.
Here is a clip of that conversation between Adi and Joe Biden.
Vice President Biden, I can't imagine there isn't a moment that this campaign is not in some way
bittersweet. Even though it sometimes feels impossible, I keep fighting for health care
and doing the work I do for my son, Carl, and my daughter Willow. I just want them to be proud of
me. From everything I have heard and read, your son, Beau, was an exceptional man i am so sorry for your loss if he were with
us today what do you think he would be saying that my father
is totally authentic.
Whatever he says he'll do, he will try to do.
He'll never mislead you.
When he makes a mistake, he'll tell you he made a mistake
and take responsibility.
And even if it's not popular,
he will push things that he feels are a matter of principle responsibility. And even if it's not popular,
he will push things that he feels
are a matter of principle.
That relate to our values.
I hope that's what he would say.
Because it is
my dad used to have an expression.
He would say
you know your success as a father
if you turn
and look at your child
and realize he or she turned out
better than you.
When Beau died,
he said Beau Biden was Joe 2.0.
That's the whole thing.
To be objective.
Have objective standards. I's the whole thing. To be objective. Have objective standards.
I've been fairly successful, but my children have done better than I have done.
Every day I ask, and I said, honest to God, truth, and you'll be asking yourself too.
How are my kids going to remember me? Are they proud of me?
That's why I do the work I do,
to make sure that Willow and Carl are proud of me.
Thank you, Mr. Vice President, for this conversation.
I am eager to do everything I can to help you win in November.
And I look forward to having you as our president next year.
Dan, what did you think of the interview and Adi's endorsement?
I mean, like I had to take a moment to collect myself before we could do this part
because I mean, obviously we've talked about Adi a lot
over the last few years we've been doing this
and he is one of the most inspiring people
that we've ever been around
and listening to him talk about
how he is spending the last parts of his life doing this work for his kids and for every kid
like gets me every single time and it's and then listening to to joe biden um talk about what
drives him and how he has dealt with the loss of Beau, which
is something that I think is unimaginable to anyone, but particularly to any parent
about what losing a child would be like, no matter how old they are, whether they're young
or adults like Beau.
And it's just hard and inspiring all at the same time. And I think listening to Joe Biden there,
what it makes me think about him and why I think he is uniquely positioned to lead this country
at this time is, you know, like Joe Biden sort of describes him as like a regular guy, right?
Like that's how politicians like to do it. Like I'm from Scranton and I'm middle-class Joe. And like,
I think that is certainly true. And having known Joe Biden for a long time, like Scranton and his
neighborhood of Claymont, Delaware, which, you know, near where I grew up, like, I think those
values are part of him, but it's not like Joe Biden, regular guy. It's like Joe Biden, regular human. He's a human who has his emotions
and his flaws on his sleeve at all times. And they're there for the world to see. And he does
think and wrestle with his own flaws and his own imperfections in a very public and I think reassuring way that is different
than the way a lot of politicians handle it. And that came through in that interview. And
obviously, we're doing this in the context of a unified Democratic Party and having
one of America's most important and most prominent advocates for Medicare for all
endorsing Joe Biden on this day means something, but I think that conversation also
revealed a lot about what is great about both of those men.
Yeah. And look, you know, he says a regular person, but there's nothing regular,
at least there's nothing typical about the sheer amount of tragedy that he has faced in his life, losing so many immediate family members
and doing so while living a very public life as a public figure. And I, you know, I think in a
moment where the country's going through such tragedy and such loss, that does make him uniquely qualified in one way.
Look, I love the interview for all the reasons you said.
I had always told Adi that I thought he would connect with Biden on that level, even as they disagreed.
And what I also liked about the full interview, which you should all go watch, it's on Now
This, and go to Adi's Twitter feed and you can see all the clips is, you know, they both stood their ground
on what they believe, too. And they weren't they didn't afraid they weren't afraid to disagree with
each other. And we know this because Adi's done this on the pod so many times. Adi was not afraid
to press him. It was not just some softball interview where they pretended to get along
and agree on everything. You know, they went back and forth on Medicare for all. And, you know,
Biden said how much he hated insurance companies,
too, and has had to deal with insurance companies. He's not he's no fan of private insurance, but
also thinks it's sort of the best way right now to get to full coverage. Talked about his public
options, said that he'd be going further than he did in the primary, sort of nodded at more ideas
to come, especially around providing for the option to have home care paid
for and elder care paid for, not as part of Medicare, but just as a basic right. Also,
when they were talking about criminal justice, you know, Biden talked about banning no-knock
warrants, which he's mentioned before, but also talked about redirecting some funding for police,
even though he said he does not agree with defund the police. He's open to redirecting some police funding.
And, you know, there was one moment when I think, you know, Biden talked about how he wants to propose like $50 billion for the National Institutes of Health.
Adi said that wasn't enough.
And then Biden said, well, if it's not enough when I'm president, you come to me and we'll talk about it.
We'll figure it out. And I do think that sort of reveals the kind of presidency that Joe Biden would offer.
Like it's not going to please progressives all the time, but there's always going to be a seat at the table for them.
And he's always going to listen. And there are times when he's going to change his mind and agree with them.
And there are times when he's not, but he's open and he listens, you know, which I think is really important.
not. But he's open and he listens, you know, which I think is really important. And that sort of speaks to, I think the other big news on this front yesterday was the release of the Biden-Sanders
unity task force recommendations. They were on six issues, the environment, criminal justice,
the economy, education, healthcare, and immigration. The document with the full statements and
recommendation is 110 pages long, so we won't go through it all. But here are some of the highlights on health care.
Biden now supports all low income Americans would be automatically enrolled in either Medicaid or a premium free public option government health care program. On climate, a commitment to carbon
free power by 2035 instead of his original 2050. on criminal justice, automatically expunging marijuana
convictions. Didn't go so far as to favor federal legalization, but does leave legalization up to
the states and decriminalizes. There's plenty more. But here's what Bernie Sanders said about
the recommendations. This is from Bernie. He said, quote, if implemented, they will make Joe Biden
the most progressive president since FDR.
That is from Bernie Sanders. Dan, what did you think of the recommendations? And are there any
big ones that I missed that you found notable? No, I don't think there's any big ones you missed.
I think those are those are right. And I mean, those are the most important ones. I think
it's the point you just made, which is the progress that was made
demonstrates that Joe Biden is A, willing to listen, and B, he can be moved with activism.
And so I think it is a message to everyone who cares about climate, Medicare for all,
legalization of marijuana, that the work doesn't end on the day Joe Biden is sworn in.
You can keep pushing him and keep engaging with him in good faith, and there is a real
opportunity to make progress.
And I think it is to the credit of everyone involved, both the Biden side and the Sanders
side, that this process worked out the way it did.
There were 1,000 potential pitfalls here where people could be unwilling to move on issues and people were willing to compromise on both sides. And you
end up in a world where you have Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tweeting about support for Joe
Biden's climate agenda and what happened. You have the activists on side understanding,
like sanity reigned here. And I think it's really important progress and people
should feel good about it. Because I think so often, you know, when these working groups are
first started, it's like, oh, it's a working group. It's going to be about as consequential
as the platform, which doesn't really matter. But actual real progress was made. So the starting
point on what Joe Biden's public option looks like when he gets to Congress and introduces it
has moved, has become more progressive and more bold because of this work.
The starting point for the conversation around what we're going to do on climate,
both from his executive actions within his government to what happens in the House and
the Senate, has moved to be more progressive because of this work. And I think that progress
should not be discounted
by anyone, even if people didn't get everything they wanted. Yeah, I mean, look, I think that,
you know, some of the folks from the Sunrise movement were tweeting about this yesterday.
And I think so often we talk about these sort of unity task forces and coming together in terms of,
you know, building a coalition that can win the election. But it's clear that progress was
made on a real substantive policy front that if Biden wins, will sort of pay dividends in a Biden
administration. And when the Sunrise folks were tweeting about this, they said, you know, we're
really hopeful, not just because Joe Biden was a nice guy and accepted recommendations, but because
we have built a movement that is powerful enough to compel potentially the next president of the United States to adopt some of the goals of that movement, which is a real.
And, you know, AOC sort of said the same thing. It's a it's a real recognition of the power of activism and the power of electoral politics.
Because I think we're at a moment right now where there's a lot of young people who are very progressive, but sometimes they are cynical for good reason about politics and public life and electoral politics.
And this is another example. And, you know, Adi proves this as well.
This is another example that when you that when you mix activism with electoral politics, good things can happen and you can actually make progress.
And it doesn't happen quickly. And there are setbacks, but it can happen. The conversation we just had about
the policy working groups and the polling are not disconnected, right? Which is Joe Biden is in a
commanding political position, both within his party and in the electorate. And so there could
have been a world where he said, look, I won the primary. I won it by a lot. I am winning. I don't have to make any concessions. But there was compromise there. And there avoided that, that potential trap and actual progress
was made that if Joe Biden is elected, we'll make people's lives better. And that's all you can ask
for. Or by the way, they could have said, we're for Medicare for all and we're for the Green New
Deal. And those are our plans. And if you're not for those plans, we don't have anything else to
talk about. And they didn't say that. They didn't say that. So it's good on them as well.
One more point on consolidating the Democratic coalition before we move on. It's not all optimism.
Dave Wasserman from Cook Political Report noted that even though Biden is doing better among progressives and young people than Hillary did in 2016, he's actually doing slightly worse with non-white voters than she did, particularly with Latino voters, almost even with black voters,
although not quite. But especially with Latino voters, Biden's winning them by an average of 30
points instead of 40 points. What's your reaction to that? What's going on there?
Well, as you know, I like to find things to worry about. So I know that's why you added that in the
outline. Yes, I feel it makes me feel more comfortable to sort of end this good news parade that I get from the rest of Crooked Media.
I mean, I think we should all be concerned about it.
Right. Like, I mean, this is something I've written about recently, but this is Trump's strategy is to shave Biden's margins with these elements of the Democratic base, right? And they're running ads right now. They're running ads in Spanish in Arizona and Florida and elsewhere in the country
that accuse Biden of cognitive decline and not up to the task. They are running ads in Philadelphia
and in other markets with a high proportion of African-American voters about Joe Biden's
criminal justice record in the 90s. Now, the Trump campaign is not super smart. So they're
also running ads accusing Joe Biden of defunding the police in those same markets in those same newscasts. So
they don't really have a true strategy. But it is something that is concerning. And look,
if the margins stay the same where they are right now, it's not gonna make a huge difference. But
there's a very real chance that Trump will, you know, stabilize some politically, if not emotionally. And if that happens,
then this can matter. Because we talk a lot about Arizona, we talk a lot about Florida,
but if you are significantly underperforming Hillary Clinton with Latino voters, you're going
to have real troubles in those states. Because the difference between Hillary Clinton's loss
and a Joe Biden win in Arizona is not just white people in the suburbs. It's also an effort to organize, register, and turn out
Latino voters. Same situation in Florida. And Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin
are states that went red in 2016, in part because of lower turnout among African-Americans in those states.
And so there is work to do here.
There is time to do that work.
But we should not take comfort in the fact that Joe Biden is doing so well with other groups that he may not need these voters.
That would be a fatal error in my view.
may not need these voters. That would be a fatal error in my view. And I'll just say from doing the wilderness and talking to a lot of these voters myself in some of these states, you know,
these are not necessarily voters who are saying Joe Biden's too moderate for me. These are voters
who and this is what Stacey Abrams told me. this is what Cornell Belcher, who you've talked to for
Campaign Experts React, had told me, this is what a lot of the organizers who are working with
Latino communities in Florida told me, and this is what the voters themselves told me,
is that these are voters who are very cynical about politics in general and distrustful of
the system. And part of the reason they're distrustful, especially black voters, is because they know their votes have been suppressed in the past,
that their voting rights have been restricted. And, you know, the thing that always sticks with
me is is Cornell telling me that a lot of voters who who voted for Stacey Abrams in Georgia in 2018
think, you know, she won that race and she's not governor. Why should I even bother again?
And reaching these voters, a lot of and a lot of them are black and Latino and young.
Reaching these voters is really going to require the sort of, you know, close, I would say in
person, but it's in the middle of a pandemic, but really sort of intense organizing and relational organizing
and talking to people one-on-one and talking to people who are friends and friends of friends.
And this is really going to be the work of both the Biden campaign and their organizers, but sort
of all of us, all of us who are working on Vote Save America and Adopt-A-State, and we're going
to have specific calls to actions that were given to us by some of these groups that are working to organize black and Latino voters in some of these states.
I think that's going to be the real work of the next couple of months ahead of 2020.
Yeah, I think that's right. And it's also going to be it's obviously organizing is a huge part of any and all political success.
But you also have to give voters these voters a reason reason to believe why this time is going to be different. And that is certainly about how you're going to deliver
on the promises that you make after decades upon decades of politicians not delivering on those
promises. But it's also convincing people their vote's going to count. That's the big impact.
That is the part of voter suppression that we don't pay enough attention to, which is sometimes you see just how explicit Brian Kemp was in Georgia in keeping people from voting.
You're like, these guys are the least subtle criminals in history.
But the lack of subtlety is a feature, not a bug.
They don't want to just make sure your vote doesn't count.
They want you to know your vote's not going to count.
The more explicit the voter suppression, the better, because that means the next time, why would you stand in line for hours upon hours, particularly
at the risk of getting coronavirus, if we're probably just going to throw your vote out anyway,
right? Or your machine's not going to work. And for all the insanity we see around Trump's crazy
vote by mail tweets, there is a purpose in that, right? And that is to convince
Democratic voters, particularly African-Americans and Latinos,
who are skeptical of, for good reason, of voting and whether the votes will count,
that they're unlikely to do so.
And so there are a lot of elements of this, but this is something that all of us, right,
this is not advice for Joe Biden time.
This is for everyone up and down the ballot, every volunteer to think about how we can
combat this because this election has a very real chance of
being very, very close. All right. One last item we were initially reluctant to talk about, but
people have asked. So here we go. We're going to cover it really quickly. Just answer your
questions. Kanye West has once again floated a run for the presidency. He was immediately endorsed by Elon Musk.
This is the world we live in, Dan.
In a wide-ranging interview with Forbes, which is putting it very generously,
we have learned that Kanye would run as part of the birthday party,
that he's never voted before, that he's an anti-vaxxer,
that Planned Parenthood, he believes, is a white supremacist organization that does the devil's work, and that he's OK with siphoning off black votes from the Democratic
nominee, even if it means helping Trump. Look, I don't want to sit here and analyze Kanye.
Let's just answer the question. At this late point, can he get on the ballot in every state
as a third party candidate? Can he? In every state?
No.
Can he get on the ballot in some states?
Yes.
Is it easy?
No.
Is it possible?
Yes.
Let me give you an example, right?
So Michigan, the deadline for an independent candidate in Michigan has not yet passed.
We need to get 12,000 signatures by July 16th, which is in one week. And so that seems possible,
but not probable. Some states are easier. Some states it's quite easy, as you may remember from
Tiger King, Joe Exotic got on the ballot. So it is very possible that you can do that, but
it's unlikely, I think. And he's not someone who has shown a ton of organizational follow through in recent years. So, well, it looks like as of as of this recording on July 9th, it still doesn't appear that he is registered as a candidate with the FEC.
D's nuts West registered as a green party candidate in 2015, but has not reported raising any funds.
You know,
he did already miss the deadline in North Carolina,
Texas,
New Mexico,
and Indiana.
And the States that have July deadlines,
like Michigan are some big ones,
Colorado,
Florida,
Michigan,
Missouri,
Oklahoma,
South Carolina,
West Virginia,
Maine,
New York,
all have July deadlines.
So,
and if he doesn't make those deadlines,
then,
you know, you're, you have write-in options,
a write-in campaign,
though that's quite difficult to impossible
to pull off as well.
So that's where we are on this.
I mean, like, here's what I would say.
Do not pay a lot of attention to this yet.
Do not worry about this.
If all of a sudden Kanye starts hiring,
if he registers as a candidate
without the middle name Deez Nuts, or like starts hiring, if he registers as a candidate without the middle name Deez Nuts,
or like starts hiring organizers, then like now it's time to at least pay attention to it. Before
that, this is just sort of clickbait for people stuck at home. You know, I would say that a plan where Kanye runs for president to siphon off black voters from Joe Biden
is the exact sort of plan that Trump and Joe Kushner would come up with
because it's so obvious and so stupid and so likely to fail.
But this seems to be more like Kanye sort of popping off as he is wont to do.
And it potentially could be related to some sort of
music project, sneaker line dropping or something like that. Because usually when he gets very
engaged in the world publicly, it's because there's something that he wants to promote
coming down the pike. You know, and we should say one last serious point on this related to
third parties in general. And we've sort of made this point before, but, you know, the New York Times had another piece based on their poll about sort of third party candidates in 2020.
A lot of pollsters are finding much less appetite for third party candidates this time around.
A, that tends to happen during elections where there is an incumbent on the ballot.
tends to happen during elections where there is an incumbent on the ballot. In 2004, when it was Bush versus Kerry, in 2012, when it was Obama versus Romney, the third party share of the vote
in both of those elections was way, way down around 1%. It's much different when it's an
open election, like in 2016, then the third party share goes up. And I think also because so many voters have such
strong feelings about Donald Trump, this incumbent particularly, pollsters are finding that when they
give people the option to select a third party candidate in a lot of polls, they are not doing
so. They are actually choosing between Trump or Biden, or at least saying they're undecided between
those two. So that's sort of the larger third party landscape for everyone.
That's a real point to make within this Kanye silliness.
Do you feel less good about yourself now that we've talked about this?
Yeah, of course.
Of course.
Of course.
You know, on Sunday morning, I was texting with Tommy about whether we should talk about
it Monday.
And we were both like, this is ridiculous.
And then after a week of some of this coverage and it lingering out there,
I was like, let's just answer it for folks and just, uh, and then we can move on.
I've had a lot of people tweet at me asking them if this is something they should worry about.
I kind of want to be like, we are in the middle of a pandemic. You can probably find something
else other than this to worry about. But as we say here, at least as I say, worry about everything,
panic about nothing.
And that is true for Kanye as is true for anything else.
All right.
When we come back, Dan talks to Rashad Robinson from Color of Change.
He's the president of Color of Change, an online racial justice organization.
Rashad Robinson, welcome to Positive America.
Thanks for having me.
You and Color of Change have been spearheading a campaign called Stop Hate for Profit,
targeting hate speech on Facebook.
Can you let our listeners know what it is you guys are trying to get Facebook to do
and sort of help them understand what the problem is?
So we have a list of 10 demands, and they are really rooted in years of back and forth with
Facebook, not just by social justice organizations and users, but by the corporations themselves who
have joined us in this campaign. Nearly a thousand corporations at this point have signed on to stop
hate for profit. You know, one of the kind of ongoing areas of problems at Facebook is an incentive structure
that's focused on growth and profit over civil rights, security, integrity.
And so what I mean by that is that the decisions about what type of content stays up or comes
down, particularly when it relates to politicians and political speech,
voter suppression, things like that, runs directly through their government department,
not sort of in a separate sort of entity. And so as a result, Donald Trump gets to lie about
voter suppression on the platform. Donald Trump can post something about looters and shooters, which is clearly a cry and a call for vigilantes to sort of show up and push
back against protesters, as he's sort of alluded to and then posted. And they will leave that up.
In fact, Mark Zuckerberg will call Donald Trump to have a conversation. Over the years, we've
pushed on Facebook around their advertising, their targeting advertising that would allow you to target a job just at men or target housing just at white people, avoiding
previous civil rights laws that we've won and fought for. Over the years, we've been able to
get them to change those things. But every single change over the years have come with like fights and campaigns. In fact, those changes around the marketing,
you know, came after the ACLU and others
had to sue Facebook.
And finally, we had to demand Facebook
settle those lawsuits
when they were still fighting them in court.
You know, there are white nationalist organizations
currently on Facebook with groups
that are talking about a
second civil war and are posting and putting up content. And then advertisers ads are showing up
next to their content, unbeknownst to these advertisers. All of this, right, is a kind of
climate and a context where the profit motives and the growth motives of this platform run up against sort of the decency
and all of the sort of real clear ideas around freedom of speech, which doesn't allow MSNBC to
run ads that are full of lies, doesn't allow, you know, Fox News to run ads that directly call for
the killing of folks, even if I may disagree with a lot of things on Fox News.
And Mark Zuckerberg will say things like our AI catches 89 percent of this, but not give us transparency around his AI.
We know that the content is all over the place. And so in many ways, when they tell us these stories, we see the hurricane that's happening outside on Facebook.
And then Facebook hands us an umbrella and expects us to think that that's going to be enough.
So you were in a meeting. I would normally say, take us inside the room, but
take us inside the Zoom, I guess. But yeah, you were part of a meeting via Zoom with Mark
Zuckerberg and Facebook executives earlier this week. Can you tell us about what, A, what do you expect going into that meeting? And what,
if anything, came out of it? So, you know, I've been, you know,
meeting with the Facebook folks for the last five years at different levels. And since 2018,
really meeting with folks at the senior level, because in 2018, the New York Times revealed
that Facebook had hired a PR firm called Definers
to attack color change and run sort of negative stories against us. And so at that point,
we ended up, you know, kind of moving from meeting with, you know, government relations staff and
others about our demands to meeting directly with Sheryl Sandberg and others. And so, you know,
we met this week, which was for me a follow-up on a
meeting that I had with them on June 1st, also on Zoom. And in both those meetings, you know,
Facebook has had our demands. They've had sort of the things that we've wanted. And walking into
this campaign with the other members of the Stop Hate for Profit Coalition, we wanted Facebook to tell
us what they were going to work on. Because to be clear, they asked for the meeting. We didn't ask
for the meeting. They reached out and said, we want to meet with you. So I was like, let's go
to the meeting and let's hear what they've got to say. And they, you know, wanted to walk through
our demands and have us walk through them and explain them more.
And we were like, well, no, you've had these demands for years. Some of these demands are
right out of previous iterations of your civil rights audit that you funded and has been out
in the world. But, you know, I think the meeting ended up with a lot of sort of back and forth, a lot of trying to get into the nuances.
I think the one thing that they did sort of speak to is the hiring of a vice president sort of connected and dealing with civil rights.
We were asking for someone in the C-suite. They put someone who's going to be a vice president.
It remains to be seen how much power and reach and
budget this person will have. But that, I think, if anything, is one sort of step forward.
All of these social media platforms have real challenges when it comes to hate speech.
Facebook is unique in their sort of, I think, obstinance here, like Twitter and YouTube,
for as small as these steps may be, have taken some steps.
What is it you think that is unique about Facebook that is making them so difficult? here, like Twitter and YouTube, for as small as these steps may be, have taken some steps.
What is it you think that is unique about Facebook that is making them so difficult?
So the company is, first of all, so much bigger than these other companies. When you think about the sort of size of YouTube and Twitter, you can combine their users and it won't get you
anywhere near really Facebook in terms of its reach with 2.6 billion followers, more
kind of followers than Christianity. And so just in that regard, they have insulated themselves
from a lot of public pressure, the public pressure around ads. They have so many advertisers that no single advertiser represents even a kind of
percentage of the final sort of $70 billion ad profit. And then you've got sort of a whole set
of other things working at Facebook where they are really worried about regulation. And they
are really worried about government oversight. And they are really worried about new rules, because they should be, because they are currently
operating under rules that were created before these platforms even existed. And so because of
that, right, they have created an infrastructure inside of Facebook that once again, allows for
the folks who are supposed to be dealing with government relations, global government relations, and they're the folks who the decisions
about how so much of this content is dealt with,
those decisions flow through those people.
And so what's happened in this current political era
is this idea of conservative bias
has been weaponized inside of Facebook
so that every time they sort of deal with something
that is hate towards LGBT folks or women or black folks or other folks of color, they
have to put it through the lens of, well, what are we doing about conservative bias?
Now, we live in a country that has laws, rules, and regulations about protecting protected classes, why we call them protected classes. You don't get protected because you're a liberal or you're a conservative. You get will be sort of pushing back on some of the decision trees inside of Facebook.
And Mark will say to me, like, you just don't want us to hire Republicans.
And I will say this is not about right or left. This is about right or wrong.
And this is really clearly about, you know, who makes the decision and what their job is every day. And if I, and if you have someone
like Joel Kaplan, which, and so I've said, I don't want someone who's a Democrat, who's like
in charge of being with the administration, having this job, but I also don't want a false
equivalency that Joel Kaplan, who sat behind Brett Kavanaugh during the hearings and threw a party
for him afterwards would be the type of person that would make it harder for my grandparents to be
able to vote when they were fighting to be able to get access to the ballot. And that right there
is the person who then gets to decide whether or not something is voter suppression or not,
because this stuff runs through him and the policy department.
I mean, there's obviously a world in which, you know, we wake up in 2021 and Donald Trump is no longer president.
And so we no longer be in a situation where we have a politician whose hate speech is being protected by Facebook.
But hate speech is a much bigger problem than just Trump on Facebook.
Can you talk a little bit about that and particularly what's happening with some of, you know, in the list of the things you're asking Facebook for?
You talk about what's happening with white supremacy and within Facebook groups? Yeah. So first of all, before I get to the white supremacy and
Facebook groups, I know when we talk about politicians, we spend a lot of time without
Trump. But like, I'm also talking about the sheriffs in Arizona, who may say, like, don't
show up to the polls, because we're going to be collect, we're going to be collecting papers,
the council person in Mississippi, who, you know, is saying he's going to be collecting papers, the council person in Mississippi who is saying he's going to be
checking criminal records at the polls and making sure no one is voting illegally because they've
been incarcerated. I'm talking about a whole range of politicians who have been incentivized in the
history of voter suppression and the history of tactics that get supercharged in this platform, but you're right. There are all sorts of
groups on Facebook that continue to pop up and are allowed to flourish. There are white nationalist
groups that are invited to set up new properties once they get on. And then their properties,
the Facebook closed groups, the Facebook pages, then, you know, get spread and amplified. Because,
right, the incentive of Facebook is profit. And so if a kind of closed group is getting a lot of
people joining, and they are sort of calling for a second civil war, then Facebook will start
running ads against that, right? And so, you know, we've had to show, and members of the coalition have had to show, like, major corporations, their corporate logo
and brands, their ads sitting right next to the, sitting right next to white nationalist content
that not only has been sort of allowed on the platform, but is given sort of permission
to flourish because the sort of algorithms, the rules of the platform incentivize this type of
content, incentivize the growth of it, because it all serves the bottom line of Facebook.
Hate for profit, essentially, as you say. Color Change has also spearheaded a campaign
for justice for the murder of Breonna Taylor.
And none of the officers involved have faced any criminal charges and only one has been fired.
What does justice look like in that situation?
And how can our listeners continue to put pressure on officials to do the right thing here?
So a couple of things.
One, you should go to colorofchange.org and you should sign our petition, which is working to translate that energy both locally to build power around call tools that we've created to send calls directly to folks there, to build energy in the media more publicly. doing over the last several years is building kind of a platform around district attorneys.
70% of DAs in this country run unopposed. 90% of DAs are white. We have a real problem with
district attorneys actually prosecuting police in this country because the incentive structures
that have been set up means that district attorneys have to work with police every single
day and they believe
that they serve police, not the public. And I recently wrote about this in a New York Times
op-ed piece, where I really talked about all the challenges that even progressive district
attorneys who are elected into office and get all sorts of challenges to any type of changes,
from judges, from the towns who will see a decrease in jail size,
to the fraternal order of police. And the police unions and fraternal order of police are just
incredibly powerful forces right now that protect police. And so we also have to hold politicians
accountable that say that they are working with us, but are taking money from police unions.
There are a lot of barriers that are standing in the way of justice for Breonna. And I want people just to sort of think about this for a second. With all the attention,
all the celebrities, all the energy, all the rallies for justice for Breonna, and those police
officers still have not been arrested. Think about all the other incidents around the country where
not as much attention gets onto it, where not as much energy gets focused.
And think about sort of all the ways
in which we have very different tiers of justice
in this country, very different systems of rules.
And that all relates back to power.
And so part of what we are really trying to do
is rewrite the sort of rules of power.
I talked about that sort of the
fraternal order of police constantly standing in the way of power. And this all connects, right,
to how we're thinking about justice for Breonna. Signing that petition is one thing, getting
involved in work to hold DAs accountable, and then challenging police unions and challenging
the forces that stand in the way in progress. In Cook County, Chicago, Kim Fox, who's the
district attorney that was elected
by a lot of movement organizations
who helped power her race in,
and she went in and has lowered jail sizes,
has reduced jail size,
has done a number of things
to kind of advance criminal justice reform,
along with Larry Krasner in Philadelphia
and the district attorney in San Francisco
and others are really ushering in a new
era of DA reform and DA accountability. Well, Kim Fox decides she's not going to prosecute low-level
crimes anymore. It's going to reduce some overtime for police. They decide to march on her office.
Everything's fine here, right? Police unions marching on the DA's office, that's First
Amendment rights, right? They then, they're marching though, according to the Chicago Sun-Times,
with four white nationalist groups, one being the Proud Boys. So they are marching on the first
black woman DA's office because she does something that she is absolutely allowed to do. They take
out pictures of Kim Fox's face and they rub them on her on they rub her face on their crotch
the pictures of her face and then they do it in plain sight newspapers their media that they've
invited there they feel totally comfortable the next day those same police officers put on their
uniforms their badges and their guns and they go back into our communities to protect and serve
and so part of why people are hearing calls
about defund the police or downsize policing
or invest divest is because we actually have to deal
with the fact that we have been investing in the wrong thing
and that police officers have not been at the table
to actually make fundamental changes
because they're not interested in fundamental changes
to safety and justice. And so all of this is really connected. So yes, justice for Breonna,
but part of how we really, really, I believe, serve the long-term goals of justice for Breonna
is that we undo all of the barriers to justice for the next Breonna Taylor as well. And we make the system right by changing the systemic challenges
to any type of justice
and freedom for our communities.
Rashad, thank you so much
for all of your work.
And thank you much for joining us
on Pod Save America.
Everything you're doing is so important.
Thanks for having me.
Appreciate you.
Thanks to Rashad Robinson for joining us. Thanks to Rebeccaad Robinson for joining us.
Thanks to Rebecca Nagel for joining us and everyone have a fantastic weekend
and,
uh,
and we'll see you next week.
Bye everyone.
Hot Save America is a Crooked Media production.
The executive producer is Michael Martinez.
Our assistant producer is Jordan Waller.
It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Kyle Seglin is our sound engineer.
Thanks to Tanya Sominator, Katie Long, Roman Papadimitriou, Caroline Reston, Jordan Waller. It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick. Kyle Seglin is our sound engineer.
Thanks to Tanya Sominator, Katie Long, Roman Papadimitriou, Caroline Reston, and Elisa Gutierrez for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Narmal Konian, Yale Freed,
and Milo Kim, who film and upload these episodes as videos every week.